Materials·5 min read

Duplex 2205 (1.4462): Chemical Composition & Mechanical Properties

Quick Answer

Quick Answer

Duplex 2205 (EN 1.4462) has a mixed austenite-ferrite microstructure with approximately 22 % Cr, 5 % Ni, and 3 % Mo. It delivers roughly twice the yield strength of standard austenitic grades and a PREN of ~35, providing excellent resistance to pitting, crevice corrosion, and chloride stress corrosion cracking.

Overview

Duplex 2205 is the most widely used duplex stainless steel grade worldwide. Its dual-phase microstructure — approximately 50 % austenite and 50 % ferrite — provides a combination of properties unattainable with single-phase austenitic or ferritic grades:

  • High yield strength (~450 MPa minimum) enabling thinner wall sections and weight savings
  • Good toughness down to approximately −40 °C
  • Excellent chloride resistance — PREN ~35 significantly above the austenitic 316L (~24)
  • Resistance to chloride stress corrosion cracking (SCC) — a failure mode to which 304 and 316 are susceptible in hot chloride environments

The UNS number is S32205 (formerly S31803). The European designation is 1.4462. In ASME applications the grade appears as SA-790 S32205.


Chemical Composition — Duplex 2205 / 1.4462

ElementASTM A790 S32205EN 1.4462
Carbon (C)≤ 0.030≤ 0.030
Manganese (Mn)≤ 2.00≤ 2.00
Silicon (Si)≤ 1.00≤ 1.00
Phosphorus (P)≤ 0.030≤ 0.035
Sulfur (S)≤ 0.020≤ 0.015
Chromium (Cr)22.0 – 23.021.0 – 23.0
Molybdenum (Mo)3.0 – 3.52.50 – 3.50
Nickel (Ni)4.5 – 6.54.5 – 6.5
Nitrogen (N)0.14 – 0.200.10 – 0.22

Nitrogen is a critical alloying element in duplex grades — it is an austenite stabilizer, raises yield strength, and significantly improves pitting resistance (each 0.1 % N adds approximately 1.6 to PREN). The MTC must report nitrogen.


PREN Calculation

PREN = %Cr + 3.3×%Mo + 16×%N

For a typical 2205 at mid-composition: PREN ≈ 22.5 + 3.3×3.0 + 16×0.17 ≈ 22.5 + 9.9 + 2.7 ≈ 35.1

This positions 2205 well above austenitic 316L (PREN ~24) and below super duplex 2507 (PREN ~43).


Mechanical Properties — Duplex 2205

PropertyASTM A790 S32205EN 1.4462 (+AT)
Ultimate Tensile Strength (UTS)620 MPa (90 ksi) min620 – 880 MPa
0.2 % Proof Strength (YS)450 MPa (65 ksi) min450 MPa min
Elongation in 50 mm25 % min25 % min
Hardness (max)290 HBW / 31 HRC290 HBW
Charpy impact (−40 °C)100 J (transverse)

The YS of ~450 MPa minimum is approximately twice that of 316L (170 MPa), enabling significant wall thickness reductions in pressure-containing components.


Physical Properties

PropertyTypical Value
Density7.82 g/cm³
Thermal conductivity (20 °C)19 W/(m·K)
Thermal expansion (20–100 °C)13.0 × 10⁻⁶ /°C
Modulus of elasticity200 GPa
Magnetic permeabilityFerromagnetic (due to ferrite phase)

Unlike austenitic grades, duplex steels are ferromagnetic. This must be factored into applications involving magnetic fields or inspection methods relying on permeability.


Standards Coverage

StandardProduct FormDesignation
ASTM A790Seamless and welded pipeS32205 / S31803
ASTM A240Plate, sheet, stripS32205
ASTM A182ForgingsF51 (S31803) / F60 (S32205)
ASTM A276BarS32205
ASME SA-240Pressure vessel plateS32205
EN 10088-2Flat products1.4462
NORSOK M-650Qualifying materials for offshore22Cr duplex

Applications

Duplex 2205 is the preferred grade when both high strength and chloride resistance are required:

  • Oil and gas — subsea umbilicals, wellhead components, topside pipework
  • Desalination — brine piping, evaporators, multi-stage flash units
  • Chemical processing — vessels and heat exchangers handling chloride-containing process streams
  • Pulp and paper — digesters and bleaching equipment
  • Marine structures — propeller shafts, deck fittings, structural members in splash zone

Ready to automate your certificate workflow?

Try TestCert free

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the maximum service temperature for duplex 2205?

Duplex 2205 should generally be limited to a maximum continuous service temperature of 280–300 °C. Above this range, sigma phase and other intermetallic embrittlement phases can form in the ferrite, causing significant toughness loss. For elevated-temperature service above 300 °C, austenitic grades or nickel alloys are more appropriate.

Is duplex 2205 weldable?

Yes, but with more care than austenitic grades. Key requirements include: correct heat input (typically 0.5–2.5 kJ/mm), maximum interpass temperature of 150 °C, and use of over-alloyed filler (ER2209 for GTAW/GMAW) to restore the correct phase balance in the weld. Post-weld solution annealing is sometimes required for thick sections or highly corrosive service.

What is the difference between S31803 and S32205?

S31803 was the original UNS designation for 2205. S32205 is a refined version with a narrower composition range — particularly a tighter minimum nitrogen of 0.14 % (vs 0.08 % in S31803) and minimum Cr of 22.0 % (vs 21.0 %). S32205 is the preferred designation for new construction; many standards now list S32205 as the primary UNS number with S31803 retained for legacy material.

How does TestCert handle nitrogen reporting for duplex MTCs?

TestCert flags duplex 2205 MTCs where nitrogen is absent or not reported, since nitrogen is both a mandatory composition element and essential for PREN calculation. When all elements are present, the platform automatically calculates PREN and compares it against any customer-specified minimum (commonly 35 for 2205 in offshore specifications).

Related pages