Non-Ferrous Metals 25 March 2026 20 min read

Titanium and Titanium Alloys: Alpha, Alpha-Beta, and Beta Alloys — Complete Guide

Titanium occupies a unique position in structural engineering: a density of 4.51 g/cm³ (57% that of steel) combined with high-temperature strength, exceptional corrosion resistance, and specific strength exceeding any other metallic structural material makes it the defining material of modern aerospace, biomedical, and chemical process engineering. Yet titanium’s dominance in these sectors also reflects its metallurgical complexity — the alpha/beta allotropic transformation at 882°C, the profound effect of interstitial and substitutional alloying on phase stability, and the multiple microstructure morphologies achievable through thermomechanical processing mean that titanium alloys demand a depth of metallurgical understanding that exceeds most other material systems. This article covers the complete technical basis: crystal structure and the alpha-beta transformation, alloy classification by molybdenum equivalent, the five major alloy families, Ti-6Al-4V microstructure evolution and heat treatment, STA processing, corrosion behaviour, and industrial applications from compressor blades to biomedical implants.

Key Takeaways

  • Titanium undergoes an allotropic transformation from HCP alpha (α) to BCC beta (β) at 882°C for commercially pure Ti; the beta transus temperature Tβ is the most critical single parameter in titanium alloy processing — everything from forging temperature to heat treatment temperature is defined relative to Tβ.
  • Alloying elements are classified as alpha stabilisers (Al, O, N, C — raise Tβ) or beta stabilisers (Mo, V, Nb, Fe, Cr — lower Tβ); the molybdenum equivalent (Moeq) provides a single quantitative index of an alloy’s beta-stabilisation level.
  • Ti-6Al-4V (Grade 5, 6% Al + 4% V) accounts for ~50% of all titanium alloy production; its alpha-beta microstructure achieves UTS 900–1,170 MPa depending on heat treatment condition, with specific strength exceeding all steels and most aluminium alloys.
  • The STA (solution treat and age) cycle at approximately Tβ −50°C followed by ageing at 500–560°C maximises strength by precipitating fine alpha laths from the beta matrix; the bimodal/duplex microstructure (equiaxed primary αp + fine lamellar αs) gives the best combination of strength, ductility, and fatigue life.
  • Titanium’s corrosion resistance derives from an instantaneously re-forming TiO2 passive film stable from pH 2 to 14; it is immune to chloride pitting unlike stainless steels, but fails in reducing acids (concentrated HCl, H2SO4), dry chlorine >150°C, and liquid metal environments.
  • All titanium welding must be done in an inert atmosphere (GTAW with Ar trailing shield and backing purge, or in an enclosure): oxygen contamination above ~0.3 wt% causes severe embrittlement through interstitial oxygen dissolving in the alpha phase lattice.

Molybdenum Equivalent (Moeq) Calculator — Titanium Alloy Classification

Enter alloy composition (wt%) or select a preset to calculate Moeq, alloy class, estimated beta transus Tβ, and STA heat treatment window.

Enter %Al 0–10
Enter %Mo 0–20
Enter %V 0–20
Enter %Nb 0–20
Enter %Fe 0–5
Enter %Cr 0–10
Enter %Sn 0–10
Enter %Zr 0–10
Mo equivalent
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wt% Mo equivalent
Alloy Class
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type
Est. Tβ range
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°C
Moeq classification scale
02.5 near-α48 α-β / β1220+
Step-by-step calculation and processing guidance

    
Titanium α/β Transformation & Microstructure Development in Ti-6Al-4V 1100 995 950 800 600 450 RT Temperature (°C) Tβ ~995°C STA: Solution treat 900–950°C (Tβ−50) Age: 500–560°C, 4–8 hr Fine αs precipitates β phase (BCC) α + β two-phase region Beta forging > Tβ Widmanstätten / colony α High KIc, lower fatigue α-β forging below Tβ Bimodal: equiaxed αp + lamellar αs. Best fatigue. STA processed Max UTS 1,100–1,170 MPa YS 1,000–1,100 MPa Mill annealed UTS ~930 MPa Good ductility, tough BCC β HCP α β ↔ α CP Ti Tβ = 882°C. Alloy Tβ shifts with Al (+10°C/wt%), Mo (−7°C/wt%), V (−4°C/wt%), Fe (−15°C/wt%). Values shown for Ti-6Al-4V.
Titanium crystal structure transformation and microstructure development in Ti-6Al-4V. Above Tβ (~995°C) the alloy is fully BCC beta; below Tβ both alpha and beta phases coexist. Processing temperature relative to Tβ determines the microstructure morphology and therefore the balance of strength, ductility, fracture toughness, and fatigue resistance. © metallurgyzone.com

Titanium Crystal Structure and the Alpha-Beta Transformation

Pure titanium exists in two allotropic forms: below 882°C it is hexagonal close-packed (HCP) alpha (α), and above 882°C it is body-centred cubic (BCC) beta (β). This transformation — the highest-temperature allotropic transformation of any engineering metal — is the entire basis of titanium alloy metallurgy. The c/a ratio of the alpha phase is 1.587, close to the ideal 1.633 for HCP but slightly less, which influences the relative critical resolved shear stresses on basal, prismatic, and pyramidal slip systems. This asymmetry, combined with the transformation texture inherited from thermomechanical processing, creates strong crystallographic texture in worked titanium — a major consideration for components loaded in specific directions.

The transformation from beta to alpha on cooling follows the Burgers orientation relationship: {110}β ∥ (0002)α and <111>β ∥ <11̅20>α. This geometrically constrains the variants of alpha that can nucleate from a given beta grain orientation, creating the characteristic Widmanstätten lath morphologies and the colony/basketweave microstructures that are central to Ti alloy property optimisation.

The Beta Transus Temperature

The beta transus temperature Tβ is the most important single number in titanium alloy processing. It is the temperature above which the alloy is entirely beta phase, equivalent to the Ac3 temperature in steels in its role as the reference point for all heat treatment and forging specifications. For commercially pure titanium, Tβ = 882°C; alloying elements shift Tβ in proportion to their alpha- or beta-stabilising effect. Aluminium raises Tβ by approximately 10°C per wt% Al; vanadium lowers it by ~4°C/wt% V; molybdenum by ~7°C/wt% Mo; and iron by ~15°C/wt% Fe — the most potent Tβ depressant among common commercial additions.

Alloying Elements: Alpha and Beta Stabilisers

Titanium alloy chemistry is designed around controlling the relative stability and volume fraction of alpha and beta phases. Alloying elements are classified by their effect on Tβ:

Alpha Stabilisers

Aluminium (most important): The primary solid solution strengthener of the alpha phase. Aluminium raises Tβ, expands the alpha phase field, and strengthens alpha through lattice parameter changes and short-range ordering. At compositions above approximately 7–8 wt% Al, the ordered Ti3Al (α-2) phase precipitates, causing embrittlement — hence commercial alloys are generally limited to ≤7% Al. The Al equivalent concept accounts for the combined alpha-stabilising effect of Al, O, N, and C:

Aluminium Equivalent (for alpha embrittlement assessment):

  Aleq = %Al + %Zr/6 + %Sn/3 + 10×%O + 20×%N + 40×%C

  Limit: Aleq < 9 wt% to avoid Ti₃Al (α-2) ordering
         and associated ductility and toughness degradation

  Ti-6Al-4V example:
    Aleq = 6.0 + 0 + 0 + 10×0.20 + 20×0.05 + 40×0.08
           = 6.0 + 2.0 + 1.0 + 3.2 = 12.2  (NOT above 9%!)
  
  Note: oxygen content specification is critical. ELI grade (Grade 23)
  limits O to ≤0.13% vs 0.20% for standard Grade 5, significantly
  reducing Aleq and improving toughness.

Oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon: Interstitial elements dissolved in the alpha HCP lattice. Oxygen has the largest strengthening effect per unit concentration of any element in titanium (∼300 MPa increase in YS per wt% O). Commercial grades are defined primarily by oxygen content: Grade 1 (0.18% O max) to Grade 4 (0.40% O max) for unalloyed titanium, with progressively higher strength as O increases. Above approximately 0.3 wt% O the alloy becomes susceptible to ambient temperature embrittlement.

Beta Stabilisers

Beta stabilisers lower Tβ and expand the BCC beta phase field. They are divided into two sub-classes:

  • Beta isomorphous (complete solid solution in beta Ti): Molybdenum, vanadium, niobium, tantalum. These elements lower Tβ without forming intermetallics at room temperature. Mo is the reference element for the Moeq formula; V is the most commercially important (Ti-6Al-4V); Nb is used in biomedical alloys for biocompatibility (Ti-6Al-7Nb, ISO 5832-11).
  • Beta eutectoid (form intermetallics at low temperature): Iron, chromium, manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper, silicon. These are strong beta stabilisers per wt% (Fe is the most potent common addition, with Moeq coefficient of 1.43) but are limited in amount because the eutectoid transformation produces brittle intermetallics (TiCr2, TiFe) at low temperatures or on prolonged ageing.

The Molybdenum Equivalent

Molybdenum Equivalent (Moeq) for titanium alloy classification:

  Moeq = %Mo + %V/1.5 + %Nb/3.6 + %Ta/4.5
         + %Cr/0.6 + %Fe/0.7 + %Ni/2.0 + %Mn/0.6
         + %Co/1.0 + %Cu/3.0 + %Si/3.3 + %W/2.5

  Classification thresholds:
    Moeq < 1.0   : Near-alpha or alpha (very little beta stabilisation)
    Moeq 1.0–2.5  : Near-alpha (traces of beta at temperature)
    Moeq 2.5–8.0  : Alpha-beta (significant beta fraction below Tβ)
    Moeq > 8.0   : Beta-lean / near-beta
    Moeq > 10.0  : Metastable beta (retains beta on air cooling from SHT)
    Moeq > 20.0  : Stable beta (cannot be aged to precipitate alpha)

  Example: Ti-6Al-4V
    Moeq = 0 + 4.0/1.5 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 = 2.67
    → Alpha-beta alloy (near the lower boundary)

  Example: Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al
    Moeq = 0 + 10/1.5 + 0 + 0 + 2/0.7 + 0 = 6.67 + 2.86 = 9.52
    → Metastable beta alloy

Titanium Alloy Families: Alpha, Near-Alpha, Alpha-Beta, and Beta

Commercially Pure (CP) Titanium — Grades 1–4

CP titanium (ASTM B265 Grades 1–4, UNS R50250 through R50700) contains only oxygen (0.18–0.40 wt%) as the primary strength-controlling variable. Grade 1 (lowest O) has the highest ductility and corrosion resistance; Grade 4 (highest O) has the highest strength of the unalloyed grades (UTS ~550 MPa). CP titanium is 100% alpha phase at room temperature. Applications: heat exchanger tubing, chemical process equipment, offshore risers, pressure vessel cladding, surgical implants, and any application where corrosion resistance is the primary requirement and higher strength grades are not needed.

Near-Alpha Alloys (Moeq 1–2.5)

Near-alpha alloys contain small amounts of beta stabilisers (typically 1–2% Mo, 0.2–0.5% Si) that provide some beta phase for improved creep resistance while retaining the microstructural stability of a predominantly alpha structure. They are the alloys of choice for gas turbine compressor discs and blades operating above 450°C, where creep and oxidation resistance outweigh the need for maximum room-temperature strength. Key grades: IMI 685 (Ti-6Al-5Zr-0.5Mo-0.25Si), IMI 834 (Ti-5.8Al-4Sn-3.5Zr-0.7Nb-0.5Mo-0.35Si-0.06C), and Ti-1100 (Ti-6Al-2.75Sn-4Zr-0.4Mo-0.45Si). These alloys are used up to 540°C in sustained loading — the highest service temperature of any commercial titanium alloy in current aerospace use.

Alpha-Beta Alloys (Moeq 2.5–8.0)

Alpha-beta alloys are the most commercially important group, dominated by Ti-6Al-4V which alone represents approximately 50% of all titanium alloy production. The combination of alpha (high strength, good creep resistance) and beta (hardenability through STA, toughness through Widmanstätten morphology) phases enables a wide range of strength levels through processing and heat treatment. Major alloys in this family: Ti-6Al-4V (Grade 5, AMS 4928), Ti-6Al-4V ELI (Grade 23, biomedical), Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-2Mo (Ti-6242, creep-resistant variant for aeroengine), Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo (Ti-6246, high-strength), and Ti-6Al-6V-2Sn (higher strength than Ti-6Al-4V).

Beta and Metastable Beta Alloys (Moeq > 8)

Beta alloys retain the BCC beta phase on air cooling from solution heat treatment temperatures above Tβ. This metastable beta can then be aged to precipitate fine alpha, achieving the highest strengths available in commercial titanium alloys (UTS up to 1,400 MPa). The key processing advantage of beta alloys is that they can be cold-rolled, bent, and formed in the solution-treated (soft) condition before age hardening — enabling thin strip, complex formed parts, and spring wire not achievable with alpha-beta alloys. Key commercial beta alloys: Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al (landing gear), Beta-C (Ti-3Al-8V-6Cr-4Mo-4Zr, springs and offshore coiled tubing), Ti-15V-3Cr-3Al-3Sn (cold-formable strip), Ti-17 (Ti-5Al-2Sn-2Zr-4Mo-4Cr, fan discs), and Ti-35V-15Cr (extremely stable beta for cryogenic applications).

Ti-6Al-4V: Microstructure, Heat Treatment, and Properties

Ti-6Al-4V (Grade 5, UNS R56400) has Tβ of approximately 995°C (±15°C depending on exact composition, particularly oxygen and iron content). Its Moeq of approximately 2.67 places it just above the near-alpha/alpha-beta boundary, meaning it contains a relatively modest volume fraction of beta phase (∼10–15% at room temperature in the annealed condition). This modest beta fraction is responsible for the alloy’s hardenability through STA, while the predominantly alpha microstructure maintains the high specific stiffness and excellent corrosion resistance characteristic of alpha-rich titanium alloys.

Microstructure Morphologies and Processing Routes

  • Equiaxed (“mill annealed”) microstructure: Produced by working well below Tβ and annealing at 700–800°C. Equiaxed alpha grains in a transformed beta matrix. Best ductility and fatigue crack initiation resistance. UTS ~930 MPa.
  • Bimodal (duplex) microstructure: Produced by working in the alpha-beta field (typically Tβ −50 to −100°C), solution treating at Tβ −30 to −60°C, and ageing. Equiaxed primary alpha (αp, ~20–40%) in a matrix of fine lamellar secondary alpha (αs) in retained beta. Best all-round fatigue, fracture toughness, and strength combination. The standard condition for aerospace structural applications.
  • Widmanstätten (lamellar) microstructure: Produced by processing above Tβ (beta forging) and controlled cooling. Parallel alpha lath colonies growing on prior beta grain boundaries. Highest fracture toughness (KIc up to 100 MPa√m) and crack growth resistance; lower fatigue crack initiation resistance. Used for fracture-critical components where toughness and fatigue crack propagation rate are the design drivers.

STA Heat Treatment Protocol

Ti-6Al-4V STA (Solution Treat and Age) — AMS 4928 / AMS 2801:

Step 1 — Solution treatment (ST):
  Temperature:  900–955°C (Tβ −95 to −40°C; “sub-beta”)
                Higher temp: more beta, more αs on aging → higher UTS
                Lower temp:  more αp, higher ductility, lower UTS
  Time:         30–60 min (section ≤50 mm); up to 2 hr (heavy section)
  Quench:       Water quench (sections <50 mm)
                Fan-air or compressed-air cool (heavy sections; prevents quench cracking)
  Result:       αp + metastable β (supersaturated in beta-stabilisers)

Step 2 — Age:
  Temperature:  500–560°C (peak age for standard Grade 5)
                480–500°C (over-age slightly for higher toughness / lower UTS)
  Time:         4–8 hours
  Cooling:      Air cool
  Result:       Fine αs (acicular 50–200 nm) precipitates from β

Typical STA properties (Ti-6Al-4V AMS 4928):
  UTS     = 1,100–1,170 MPa
  0.2% YS = 1,000–1,100 MPa
  Elong.  = 8–12%
  KIc  = 45–65 MPa√m
  Hardness = 36–42 HRC

Compare mill annealed:
  UTS = 900–950 MPa;  YS = 830–880 MPa;  Elong. = 14%;  KIc = 65–90 MPa√m

Key Commercial Titanium Alloys — Quick Reference

Gr1
CP Ti Grade 1
UNS R50250 / ASTM B265 Gr1
Class: Alpha (Moeq < 0.1)
UTS: 240–340 MPa
Tβ: ~882°C
Key property: Highest ductility and corrosion resistance of Ti grades
Use: Chemical plant tubing, heat exchangers, implants
6-4
Ti-6Al-4V
Grade 5 / UNS R56400 / AMS 4928
Class: Alpha-beta (Moeq 2.67)
UTS: 930–1,170 MPa (MA to STA)
Tβ: ~995°C
Key property: ~50% of all Ti alloy use; optimal strength-weight
Use: Airframe, fan blades, biomedical (ELI), fasteners
834
IMI 834
Ti-5.8Al-4Sn-3.5Zr-0.7Nb-0.5Mo-0.35Si
Class: Near-alpha (Moeq ~1.5)
UTS: 1,000–1,100 MPa
Tβ: ~1,045°C
Key property: Creep-resistant to 540°C; compressor disc material
Use: High-pressure compressor discs (Trent, GE90)
6246
Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo
UNS R56260 / AMS 4981
Class: Alpha-beta (Moeq ~5.5)
UTS: 1,100–1,240 MPa (STA)
Tβ: ~940°C
Key property: High-strength alpha-beta; better hardenability than 6-4
Use: Compressor blades, discs, structural airframe
1023
Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al
UNS R54010 / AMS 4986
Class: Metastable beta (Moeq ~9.5)
UTS: 1,150–1,250 MPa (STA)
Tβ: ~800°C
Key property: High toughness + high strength; excellent hardenability
Use: Boeing 777 main landing gear beams
B-C
Beta-C
Ti-3Al-8V-6Cr-4Mo-4Zr / AMS 4957
Class: Stable beta (Moeq ~22)
UTS: 1,300–1,450 MPa (STA)
Tβ: ~730°C
Key property: Cold-workable; excellent spring properties; corrosion-resistant
Use: Springs, offshore coiled tubing, fasteners

Mechanical Properties Reference Table

Table 1. Mechanical properties of principal titanium alloys (representative values per AMS/ASTM specifications).
Alloy Class Condition UTS (MPa) 0.2% YS (MPa) Elong. (%) KIc (MPa√m) Density (g/cm³)
CP Ti Grade 1AlphaAnnealed240170304.51
CP Ti Grade 4AlphaAnnealed550480154.51
Ti-3Al-2.5V (Gr.9)Near-alphaAnnealed620520204.48
Ti-6Al-4V (Gr.5)Alpha-betaMill annealed9308601475–904.43
Ti-6Al-4V (Gr.5)Alpha-betaSTA1,1501,0501050–654.43
Ti-6Al-4V ELI (Gr.23)Alpha-betaAnnealed8607951590–1104.43
Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6MoAlpha-betaSTA1,1701,1001050–604.65
IMI 834Near-alphaSTA1,0509501270–854.55
Ti-10V-2Fe-3AlMeta-betaSTA1,2001,1001065–854.65
Beta-C (Ti-3Al-8V-6Cr-4Mo-4Zr)Stable betaSTA1,3801,310830–454.82
Specific Strength (UTS / Density) — Titanium vs Competing Materials 4340 Steel (Q&T 1500 MPa) 316L Stainless steel 7075-T6 Aluminium CP Ti Grade 4 Ti-6Al-4V (mill ann.) Ti-6Al-4V (STA) Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al (STA) Beta-C (STA) 0 50 100 150 200 Specific Strength (MPa / g·cm⁻³) — i.e. UTS (MPa) / density (g/cm³) 191 68 204 122 210 260 258 286 Ti alloys
Specific strength comparison: UTS divided by density (MPa per g/cm³). Ti-6Al-4V in mill-annealed condition already exceeds high-strength 4340 steel and 316 stainless; in STA condition its specific strength substantially exceeds 7075-T6 aluminium and all common structural alloys. Note that 7075-T6 Al has similar absolute specific strength to Ti-6Al-4V MA but at lower density — aluminium remains competitive for lower-stress applications where absolute stiffness is not critical. © metallurgyzone.com

Corrosion Resistance of Titanium Alloys

Titanium’s exceptional corrosion resistance stems from its TiO2-dominated passive film, which forms instantaneously on exposure to oxygen-containing environments (air, water, dilute acids) and is thermodynamically stable across a very wide pH range (approximately 2–14). Unlike stainless steel, which relies on a chromium oxide film that can be broken down by chloride ions, titanium’s passive film is not destabilised by chloride concentration — titanium is effectively immune to pitting corrosion in seawater, saline solutions, and chloride-containing chemical process environments at moderate temperatures. For context on passive film breakdown mechanisms, see the MetallurgyZone article on pitting corrosion in stainless steels.

Environments Where Titanium Excels

  • Seawater and chloride solutions up to boiling point (no pitting, no crevice corrosion above ~70°C)
  • Wet chlorine and chlorinated process streams (unique resistance not shared by Ni alloys or stainless)
  • Oxidising acids: concentrated nitric acid (HNO3), chromic acid, hypochlorite solutions
  • Bleach plant environments in pulp and paper: chlorine dioxide, sodium hypochlorite
  • Body fluids and biological environments (hence biomedical implant use)

Environments Where Titanium Fails

  • Reducing acids at concentration and temperature: Concentrated HCl, H2SO4, and H3PO4 at elevated temperatures destroy the passive film. Inhibitors (small additions of oxidising agents such as HNO3 or metal ions) can restore passivity in many process streams.
  • Dry chlorine gas above 150°C: In the absence of moisture, titanium undergoes pyrophoric ignition in chlorine. The moisture in wet chlorine maintains the passive film; dry chlorine bypasses this protection.
  • Red fuming nitric acid (RFNA): Can cause pyrophoric ignition of titanium under some impact conditions; restricted from rocket propellant storage.
  • Liquid metals: Mercury, cadmium, and silver cause liquid metal embrittlement (LME) in titanium alloys. Titanium components must never be used in contact with cadmium-plated fasteners.
  • High temperatures in air (>600°C): Oxygen dissolution and oxide scale growth cause embrittlement (“fire hazard” in oxygen-rich hyperbaric environments).
Galvanic coupling in marine environments: Titanium is among the most noble metals in the galvanic series in seawater (∼+0.2 V vs Ag/AgCl), comparable to platinum. When coupled to aluminium, steel, or brass, titanium acts as an inert cathode and accelerates corrosion of the more active coupled metal. Isolation gaskets and insulating sleeves are mandatory when titanium is bolted to aluminium or steel structures. See the MetallurgyZone articles on corrosion mechanisms and cathodic protection for the electrochemical basis.

Welding and Fabrication of Titanium Alloys

Titanium welding requires complete exclusion of atmospheric contamination — oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen — from the weld pool, the solidifying weld, and the heat-affected zone during the entire cooling cycle through approximately 300°C. Titanium’s affinity for oxygen is extreme: above ~700°C it dissolves oxygen rapidly, and as little as 0.15–0.30 wt% dissolved oxygen causes severe embrittlement. This is visible as discolouration: bright silver = clean; light straw gold = marginal; dark blue = moderate contamination (typically unacceptable); white powdery scale = severe (structurally compromised). The AWS D1.9 structural titanium welding code provides workmanship and acceptance criteria.

GTAW (TIG) is the standard process for all structural titanium welding. Requirements: inert gas trailing shield extending at least 50 mm behind the torch to protect the solidified weld down to below 300°C; inert gas backing purge on the root side for pipe welding; weld chamber (glove box) or entire-joint purge for the most critical applications. Argon is the standard shielding gas; helium or Ar/He mixtures increase heat input for thicker sections. Filler metal grade must match or slightly under-match the base metal strength to ensure weld root ductility. See the MetallurgyZone welding guide for GTAW process fundamentals.

Industrial Case Study

Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al Landing Gear on the Boeing 777

The Boeing 777 main landing gear beam is one of the most demanding structural titanium applications in commercial aviation. The alloy selected — Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al (Ti-1023) — replaced the 300M ultra-high-strength steel originally considered, providing a 25% weight saving on one of the heaviest single forgings in the airframe (the main fitting weighs approximately 190 kg).

Why Ti-1023 rather than Ti-6Al-4V: The landing gear must meet a minimum fracture toughness requirement (KIc ≥ 66 MPa√m per BMS 7-26) simultaneously with high strength (min 1,138 MPa UTS). Ti-6Al-4V in STA cannot simultaneously achieve both; its toughness at peak strength is only 50–65 MPa√m. Ti-1023 in its STA condition (β solution treated at 760–800°C + aged 500–540°C) achieves UTS 1,170–1,240 MPa with KIc 66–88 MPa√m — meeting both requirements simultaneously.

Processing challenge: Ti-1023 has Tβ ~800°C, significantly lower than Ti-6Al-4V. Die forging must be done in a narrow temperature window (750–790°C) to produce the correct bimodal microstructure. Iron content (2 wt%) must be tightly controlled: iron segregation during VAR melting creates beta-fleck inhomogeneities (beta-stabiliser-rich regions with depressed Tβ) that can survive forging and degrade local toughness. Triple VAR melting and stringent chemical analysis are required. The landing gear is subject to 100% ultrasonic inspection and fatigue life substantiation testing before each production batch is accepted.

Aerospace and Industrial Applications

Aircraft Structures

Titanium accounts for approximately 14–15% of the structural weight of modern long-haul wide-body aircraft (Boeing 787, Airbus A350). The primary driver is specific strength: titanium saves weight versus steel for any component where strength governs design, and versus aluminium for any component operating above approximately 120°C or requiring high fatigue strength. Critical airframe applications: bulkheads, wing pivot fittings, floor beams, door frames, and nacelle structures. Ti-6Al-4V STA provides the standard high-strength condition; mill-annealed is used where damage tolerance (slow crack growth) is the design criterion.

Gas Turbine Engines

Titanium comprises 25–35% of aeroengine structural weight in the cold section (fan and compressor). Fan blades (Ti-6Al-4V or Ti-6Al-4V ELI for impact toughness), fan discs (Ti-6246 or Ti-17 for higher specific strength at 300–400°C), and compressor discs (near-alpha IMI 834 or Ti-1100 for service up to 540°C) are the primary applications. Titanium cannot be used above approximately 540°C in air due to oxidation, which is why nickel superalloys take over in the high-pressure compressor and all turbine stages. See the related MetallurgyZone articles on HAZ microstructure and grain boundaries for the microstructural factors that govern disc fatigue life.

Biomedical Implants

Ti-6Al-4V ELI (Grade 23, ASTM F136) is the most widely used metallic implant material for load-bearing applications: hip stems, femoral heads, knee tibial trays, spinal fusion cages, and trauma fixation plates. The ELI (extra low interstitial) designation reduces O (≤0.13%), N, C, and Fe to maximise fracture toughness (KIc 90–110 MPa√m) and fatigue life. Beta titanium alloy Ti-6Al-7Nb (ISO 5832-11) is used where Nb replaces the vanadium of Grade 5 for better confirmed biocompatibility. Ti-6Al-4V is not strictly osseointegrating (it must be coated with hydroxyapatite for bone ingrowth); unalloyed CP titanium Grade 4 has better osseointegration but lower strength, making Ti-6Al-4V ELI the compromise standard for most structural implants.

Chemical Process and Offshore

CP titanium (Grades 1–4) is used for heat exchanger tubing, reactor vessels, pump casings, and piping in the chemical, pharmaceutical, desalination, and offshore oil and gas industries where seawater corrosion resistance is the primary requirement. Grades 7 and 11 (CP Ti + 0.15% Pd) have significantly improved resistance to reducing acids (HCl, H2SO4) through a small but effective palladium addition that maintains passivity in mildly reducing conditions by increasing the cathodic current density. For subsea pipeline and riser applications, the cathodic protection considerations described in the MetallurgyZone article on cathodic protection offshore are relevant: titanium’s nobility means it must be isolated from cathodically protected steel to avoid accelerating steel corrosion.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the beta transus temperature in titanium alloys and why is it critical?
The beta transus Tβ is the temperature above which the titanium alloy is entirely BCC beta phase with no alpha present. For CP Ti, Tβ = 882°C; for Ti-6Al-4V, Tβ ≈ 995°C. All forging, heat treatment, and microstructure specifications are defined relative to Tβ because processing above vs below Tβ determines whether the microstructure is lamellar Widmanstätten (higher toughness) or bimodal equiaxed-alpha (better fatigue). STA heat treatment is performed at Tβ minus 40–100°C to control the primary alpha volume fraction and achieve peak strength after ageing.
What are alpha stabilisers and beta stabilisers in titanium alloys?
Alpha stabilisers (Al, O, N, C) raise Tβ and expand the HCP alpha phase field. Aluminium is the primary structural alpha stabiliser, limited to ≤7 wt% to avoid brittle Ti3Al ordering. Beta stabilisers lower Tβ and expand the BCC beta field: beta isomorphous elements (Mo, V, Nb, Ta) are miscible in beta without forming intermetallics; beta eutectoid elements (Fe, Cr, Mn, Ni) are stronger stabilisers per wt% but form brittle intermetallics if present in excess or on prolonged ageing. The Mo equivalent (Moeq) quantifies the combined beta-stabilising effect and classifies alloys from near-alpha to stable beta.
What is STA heat treatment for Ti-6Al-4V?
STA (solution treat and age) is the standard strengthening heat treatment for alpha-beta titanium alloys. For Ti-6Al-4V: (1) Solution treatment at 900–955°C (Tβ −95 to −40°C) for 30–60 min dissolves secondary alpha and maximises beta phase fraction; (2) Water quench to room temperature retains supersaturated beta; (3) Age at 500–560°C for 4–8 hr precipitates fine acicular alpha laths (αs) from beta, producing UTS 1,100–1,170 MPa, YS 1,000–1,100 MPa, and elongation 8–12%. Temperature must be controlled to ±10°C; over-ageing above 560°C coarsens αs and reduces strength.
Why is titanium highly corrosion-resistant and where does it fail?
Titanium forms a tenacious TiO2 passive film stable from pH 2–14 that re-passivates instantly when damaged. Unlike stainless steel, its passive film is not broken by chloride ions — titanium is immune to pitting in seawater. It excels in wet chlorine, oxidising acids, bleach plant environments, and body fluids. Failure environments: reducing acids (concentrated HCl, H2SO4, H3PO4) at elevated temperature; dry chlorine gas above 150°C; liquid metals (mercury, cadmium — causes LME); and high temperatures in air above ~600°C causing embrittlement from oxygen dissolution.
What is the Widmanstätten microstructure in titanium and when is it formed?
Widmanstätten (basketweave or colony) alpha forms when titanium beta phase is cooled from above Tβ. Alpha nucleates at prior beta grain boundaries and grows as parallel lath colonies following the Burgers orientation relationship. Slow cooling gives coarse colony alpha (poor fatigue crack initiation resistance); faster cooling gives fine basketweave interlocked alpha (much better fatigue crack propagation resistance). Beta forging produces Widmanstätten structures with the highest fracture toughness (KIc up to 100 MPa√m for Ti-6Al-4V) and is used for fracture-critical components such as fan discs and landing gear, where toughness and crack propagation rate are the design drivers.
Why is Ti-6Al-4V the most widely used titanium alloy?
Ti-6Al-4V (Grade 5, ~50% of all Ti alloy production) dominates because its Moeq of 2.67 places it in the alpha-beta field with the optimal combination of properties: UTS 900–1,170 MPa (annealed to STA), density 4.43 g/cm³, specific strength exceeding most structural alloys, excellent corrosion resistance, good weldability, and a vast established knowledge base and processing infrastructure. It is specified in AMS 4928, AMS 4911, ASTM B265, ASTM B348, and nearly all major aerospace material specifications. Ti-6Al-4V ELI (Grade 23) with reduced O, N, C, Fe provides higher toughness for biomedical implants.
What are the main beta titanium alloys and their applications?
Beta alloys (Moeq > 8) retain BCC beta on air cooling from solution treatment, allowing full hardening by ageing. Key alloys: Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al (Moeq ~9.5, Boeing 777 landing gear — highest toughness + strength combination); Beta-C (Ti-3Al-8V-6Cr-4Mo-4Zr, Moeq ~22, springs and coiled tubing — cold-workable); Ti-15V-3Cr-3Al-3Sn (cold-strip formable); Ti-17 (Ti-5Al-2Sn-2Zr-4Mo-4Cr, GE90 fan disc). Peak-aged beta alloys achieve UTS 1,200–1,450 MPa but at lower toughness than Widmanstätten alpha-beta. Their cold-formability advantage enables strip, thin-walled components, and springs not achievable with alpha-beta alloys.
How does hydrogen embrittlement affect titanium alloys?
Excess hydrogen above ~150 ppm forms brittle TiH2 hydride preferentially at alpha-beta interfaces and prior beta grain boundaries, drastically reducing ductility and fracture toughness and causing delayed cracking (hydride-induced fracture). Absorption occurs during acid pickling/etching, electrochemical processing, or exposure to hydrogen atmospheres. Prevention: vacuum anneal at 700–800°C after acidic processing to degas hydrogen; control pickling bath parameters; use oxidising rather than cathodic surface treatments for final components. Aerospace specifications limit hydrogen to <150 ppm; most AMS specifications require hydrogen testing on representative material lots.

Recommended Reference Books

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Titanium: A Technical Guide — M. J. Donachie (2nd ed.)

The definitive ASM reference for titanium and its alloys: phase diagrams, alloy families, processing, heat treatment, microstructure, properties, welding, and aerospace applications. Essential reading for any titanium engineer.

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Titanium Alloys: An Atlas of Structures and Fracture Features — Lutjering & Williams

Authoritative graduate-level text on titanium alloy microstructures, deformation, fatigue, fracture, and the processing-microstructure-property relationships governing alloy selection and heat treatment.

View on Amazon
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ASM Handbook Vol. 2: Properties and Selection of Nonferrous Alloys

Comprehensive ASM reference covering titanium alloy compositions, mechanical properties, corrosion data, processing parameters, and applications alongside all other non-ferrous engineering alloy families.

View on Amazon
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Engineering Alloys: Composition, Properties, Applications — N. Woldman

Comprehensive data handbook covering compositions and mechanical properties of titanium, aluminium, nickel, copper, and steel alloys with UNS and commercial designation cross-references. Practical engineering reference.

View on Amazon

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References

  1. Donachie, M.J., Titanium: A Technical Guide. 2nd ed. ASM International, 2000.
  2. Lutjering, G. and Williams, J.C., Titanium. 2nd ed. Springer, 2007.
  3. ASM Handbook Vol. 2: Properties and Selection of Nonferrous Alloys and Special-Purpose Materials. ASM International, 1990.
  4. ASTM B265: Standard Specification for Titanium and Titanium Alloy Strip, Sheet, and Plate. ASTM International.
  5. ASTM B348: Standard Specification for Titanium and Titanium Alloy Bars and Billets. ASTM International.
  6. AMS 4928: Titanium Alloy, Bars, Billets, and Rings, 6Al-4V. SAE Aerospace.
  7. AMS 2801: Heat Treatment of Titanium and Titanium Alloys. SAE Aerospace.
  8. AWS D1.9: Structural Welding Code — Titanium. American Welding Society.
  9. Boyer, R.R. et al. (eds.), Materials Properties Handbook: Titanium Alloys. ASM International, 1994.
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