Choosing Alloys for Food Processing Equipment

Food processing equipment must resist organic acids, chloride sanitizers, and cleaning chemicals while meeting strict hygienic design requirements. Surface finish, cleanability, and regulatory compliance drive selection beyond simple corrosion resistance.

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## Regulatory Framework Food-contact materials must comply with FDA 21 CFR 174-186, EC 1935/2004, 3-A Sanitary Standards, and EHEDG Guidelines. 300-series stainless steel with Ra less than or equal to 0.8 micrometers is the baseline. ## The Standard: 316L Stainless Steel 316L is the default food processing alloy worldwide. It resists organic acids (citric, acetic, lactic), withstands chloride-based sanitizers at typical use concentrations, achieves the required surface finish by electropolishing, and produces smooth weldable joints. ### When 316L Falls Short 316L can pit in high-chloride brines (>5% NaCl), warm acidified chloride solutions, and aggressive CIP cycles. ## Upgraded Alloys **904L (UNS N08904)**: PREN 36. For warm chloride solutions. Used in mustard production and vinegar processing. **Duplex 2205**: Double yield strength of 316L allows thinner vessels. Resists chloride SCC in warm CIP cycles. **254 SMO (UNS S31254)**: PREN 43. For the most aggressive food processing environments. ## Surface Finish Requirements | Application | Minimum Ra (micrometers) | |-------------|-------------------------| | General food contact | 0.5-0.8 | | Dairy, beverage | 0.4-0.6 | | Pharmaceutical crossover | <0.4 | ## Hygienic Design Principles No crevices or dead legs, self-draining surfaces (minimum 3-degree slope), smooth welds ground flush, sanitary clamp connections instead of threaded fittings, and minimum 6 mm internal radius at corners.