Going back to a question earlier by zztop, about the ranking of materials.
There is one crevat on this list. Any material that is improperly heat treated, especialy senitized, will fail rapidly. This list assumes correct heat treatment and clean surfaces.
1. At the bottom of the list are the 7-10% Ni austenitics. Give me a few Cl ions and an atom or two of S and I can crack them.
The work by Copson is still valid for austenitic alloys. The CSCC is governed by the Ni content.
2. Alloys with 25%-35% Ni have some limited useful resistance to CSCC. Alloys like 6%Mo superaustenitics and 310 and 800 are in this group.
3. The duplex stainless grades also have some reasonable CSCC resistance. This is also a function of chemistry, but not Ni content. The higher Cr alloys (27%) have the highest resistance, the 25% Cr are in the middle and the lean alloys (19-22% Cr) are lower. Though the lean alloys are still much better than low Ni austenitics.
4. The ferritic stainless alloys fall into two groups. The alloys with no Ni (<0.5% such as 430) are totally resistant to CSCC. Ferritic alloys with some Ni (1-2%) are more resistant than even high alloy duplexes, but they can be cracked. All of the field failure data that I have see with these has been in sensitized material.
5. PH grades and Ni based alloys are tougher to catagorize. A lot depends on the specific strengthening mechanism. Alloys like 13-8, 15-5, 17-4 and Ni alloys like 718 and 188 are not very CSCC resistant. While alloys like 17-7 and A-286 are fairly resistant to CSCC (perhaps similar to 25% Cr duplex).
6. The top of the heap are Ni-Cr-Mo 'C' type alloys (276, 22, 686, 59). A couple of odd alloys also are in this class, alloy 33 and Allcorr. These alloys will not even crack when they are highly cold worked. For high strength the multi-phase alloys like MP-35N and Elgiloy are the answer. Some aero alloys are in this group also such as X-750. The other option would be Ti 3-8-5-4-4.
I need to reinterate, if any of these alloys are not properly heat treated, or are exposed to service temperatures that are too high (for microstructure stability) they will crack easily.
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Corrosion never sleeps, but it can be managed.