## What Makes Duplex Different
Duplex stainless steels have a mixed microstructure of approximately 50% austenite and 50% ferrite, achieved through balanced Cr, Ni, Mo, and N content.
## Representative Grades
| Grade | UNS | Cr | Mo | PREN |
|-------|-----|----|----|------|
| 316L | S31603 | 17 | 2.1 | 25 |
| 2205 (Duplex) | S32205 | 22 | 3.2 | 35 |
| 2507 (Super Duplex) | S32750 | 25 | 4 | 43 |
## Mechanical Properties
| Property | 316L | 2205 Duplex |
|----------|------|-------------|
| Tensile Strength (min) | 485 MPa | 620 MPa |
| Yield Strength (min) | 170 MPa | 450 MPa |
| Elongation (min) | 40% | 25% |
The yield strength of 2205 is 2.6 times that of 316L, enabling thinner walls that often offset the higher alloy price per kilogram.
## Corrosion Advantage
2205 duplex resists chloride pitting far better than 316L (CPT approximately 35 degrees C vs less than 15 degrees C). Critically, duplex resists chloride stress corrosion cracking much better than austenitic grades, as the ferrite phase acts as a barrier to crack propagation.
## Temperature Limitations
- **Upper limit (~300 degrees C)**: Above approximately 300 degrees C, sigma phase precipitates and causes severe embrittlement. 316L can operate to 800 degrees C.
- **Lower limit (~-50 degrees C)**: The ferrite phase has a ductile-to-brittle transition. Austenitic grades retain toughness to -196 degrees C.
## Welding Considerations
Duplex steels require controlled heat input (0.5-2.5 kJ/mm), interpass temperature limited to 150 degrees C, and over-alloyed filler metal with 2-4% more nickel than the base metal. Austenitic steels are more forgiving.
## When to Choose Each
**Choose austenitic (316L) when**: Service temperature exceeds 300 degrees C or is below -50 degrees C, maximum formability is needed, or welding must be simple.
**Choose duplex (2205) when**: Chloride pitting or SCC is a risk, weight savings from thinner walls are valuable, and service temperature stays between -50 degrees C and 300 degrees C. Key applications include chemical tankers, desalination equipment, and offshore platforms.
Duplex vs Austenitic Stainless Steel: Strength Meets Corrosion Resistance
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Duplex stainless steels combine corrosion resistance of austenitic grades with roughly double the yield strength, enabling thinner wall sections. The tradeoff is a lower maximum service temperature and more demanding fabrication.
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