Stainless Steel Powder

Overview

Stainless steel powder refers to fine stainless steel particles used as feedstock for manufacturing techniques like metal injection molding (MIM), additive manufacturing (AM), and conventional press and sinter powder metallurgy. Controlling stainless steel powder characteristics like composition, particle size distribution, morphology, and microstructure is critical to properties of finished components.

Common stainless steel grades available in powder form include:

  • Austenitic grades – 304L, 316L, 303L, 17-4PH
  • Martensitic grades – 420, 440C
  • Duplex/ferritic – Custom alloys

atomization and the Hoganas process of reducing stainless steel oxides are the predominant production routes.

Stainless Steel Powder Production Methods

MethodKey CharacteristicsMain Applications
Gas AtomizationSpherical powders for AMAerospace components
Water AtomizationIrregular shapes, lower costAutomotive parts
Hoganas ProcessReduces oxides into alloy powdersHigh purity requirements
Carbonyl ProcessUltra-fine spherical powdersMIM components
Stainless Steel Powder

Alloy Grades and Compositions

Stainless steel powders contain iron alloyed with chromium, nickel, molybdenum, manganese in varying compositions:

Austenitic Stainless Steel Powder

Austenitic stainless steel powder like 316L and 304L are non-magnetic with an austenitic FCC crystal structure. Common compositions are:

Alloying ElementRoleWeight % Range
ChromiumCorrosion resistance16-18%
NickelAustenite stabilizer10-14%
MolybdenumResists pitting and crevice corrosion2-3%
ManganeseSubstitute for nickelUp to 2%
NitrogenIncreases strength0.1-0.25%

Benefits: Excellent corrosion resistance, good weldability and formability. Most widely used grade.

Martensitic Stainless Steel Powder

Martensitic stainless steel powder like 420, 440C achieve high strength and moderate corrosion resistance with compositions like:

Alloying ElementRoleWeight % Range
ChromiumCorrosion resistance12-18%
CarbonHardenability0.2-1.0%
MolybdenumIncreases corrosion resistance0.2-1%
VanadiumCarbide formerUp to 1%

Benefits: Very high hardness capability up to 60 HRC after heat treatment.

Duplex Stainless Steel Powder

Duplex stainless steel powder combines both ferritic and austenitic structures to provide a balance of high strength and good ductility and toughness.

Alloying ElementRoleWeight % Range
ChromiumCorrosion resistance21-26%
NickelAustenite stabilizer5-8%
MolybdenumPitting/crevice resistance2-4%
NitrogenStrengthens ferrite0.2-0.3%

Benefits: Twice the strength of austenitic grades. Good resistance to stress corrosion cracking.

Production Methods

Various techniques are utilized to produce stainless steel powders:

Gas Atomization

In gas atomization process, molten stainless steel stream breaks into fine droplets by an inert gas blast which rapidly solidify into spherical powders ideal for metal AM and MIM.

ParameterDescription
Particle shapeHighly spherical
Particle size15–45 μm typical
Oxygen content<0.5%
Production scaleMedium–high

Water Atomization

In water atomization, compressed air or water breaks up a stainless steel melt into fine irregular powders containing higher oxygen suitable for press and sinter process.

ParameterDescription
Particle shapeIrregular
Particle size20-150 μm
Oxygen content0.8-1.5%
Production scaleVery high

Carbonyl Iron Process

Metal carbonyls are decomposed to produce very fine stainless steel particles containing chromium alloying additions suitable for micro powder injection molding.

ParameterDescription
Particle shapeSpherical
Particle size2-5 μm
Oxygen content<0.2%
Production scaleLower

Oxide Reduction (Hoganas) Process

Stainless steel scrap oxides are reduced at high temperature producing irregular shaped powders with optimized oxygen/nitrogen levels.

ParameterDescription
Particle shapeIrregular
Particle size45-150 μm
Oxygen content<0.6%
Production scaleHigh

Powder Characteristics

Critical stainless steel powder characteristics include:

Particle Size Distribution

Laser diffraction analyzers determine full range size distribution from nanometers to millimeters. Matching particle sizes to production method capabilities allows maximizing density.

Key parametersDescription
D10, D50, D90Size below which 10%, 50%, 90% particles by volume exist
Mean sizeMeasure of central tendency
Span = (D90-D10)/D50Width of distribution

Particle Morphology

Scanning electron microscopy reveals fine particle shape details influencing powder behavior. Smooth, spherical particles improve flow and packing density.

Apparent and Tap Density

Flowmeter funnels determine how easily powders consolidate indicating ease of handling and compression into fine mold sections or intricate 3D geometries.

ParameterTypical range
Apparent density2 – 3 g/cc
Tap density3 – 4 g/cc

Flow Characteristics

Hall flowmeter rates correlate well with layer filling performance in binder jet AM methods through optimized stainless steel powder flowability matching equipment needs.

Applications of Stainless Steel Powder

Unique properties of stainless steel powders make them critical for:

Metal Additive Manufacturing

Powder bed fusion techniques like selective laser melting and electron beam melting use fine stainless steel powders to directly fabricate complex three-dimensional components like impellers and reactive vessels.

Metal Injection Molding (MIM)

Mixing fine stainless steel powders with binders, then injection molding and sintering produces high volume small precision parts like gears, valves and nozzles.

Press and Sinter Powder Metallurgy

Compacting and sintering stainless steel powders produce porous structures like filters or self-lubricated bearings.

Surface Coatings

Atmospheric plasma spraying stainless steel powders creates durable protective coatings resisting wear, abrasion and corrosion.

Standards and Specifications

Stringent chemistry limits and powder characteristics are mandated to satisfy critical application needs:

Chemistry Control

Standards like ASTM A743, AMS 5604, 5743 regulate:

  • Alloy ratios of Fe, Cr, Ni, Mn to provide specific microstructures and corrosion resistance
  • Impurity limits on S, P, Si, N, O defining contamination thresholds
  • Minor trace elements like Mo, Cu, Co enhancing performance

Powder Properties

Key quality metrics include:

ParameterTypical SpecificationTest Method
Mean particle size15-45 μm for AMLaser diffraction
Apparent density> 2.5 g/ccHall flowmetry
Tap density> 3 g/ccScott volumeter
Flow rate>23 sec/50gHall flowmetry
Loss on ignition<1%Thermogravimetric analysis

Standards evolve continuously, mandating stricter chemistry and powder attribute controls to satisfy expanding application needs and safety in high performance sectors.

Suppliers and Pricing

Leading stainless steel powder producers globally include:

SupplierHeadquartersProduction Capabilities
Sandvik OspreyUKGas atomization
HoganasSwedenWater atomization, oxide reduction
CNPC PowderChinaGas, water atomization
CarpenterUSAGas, water atomization

Cost varies based on:

  • Base composition – higher alloy grades are pricier
  • Production method purity
  • Processing to tailor particle characteristics
  • Purchase volumes – contracts enable lower pricing
GradePrice Estimate
304L$15 – $30 per kg
17-4PH$30 – $60 per kg
Custom duplex/maraging$60 – $150 per kg

Pros and Cons

Benefits

  • Corrosion resistance
  • Thermal/electrical properties
  • Fabrication flexibility – weldable

Tradeoffs

  • More expensive than carbon steels
  • Lower ductility than austenitic alloys
  • Difficult machining driving costs

Comparing stainless steel powders to alternatives:

ParameterStainless SteelTool SteelMaraging Steel
Corrosion ResistanceExcellentLowerMedium
Thermal ConductivityLowerHigherHighest
StrengthMediumHigherHighest
CostMediumLowHighest
Stainless Steel Powder

FAQs

Q: What is the most common stainless steel powder used in metal AM?

A: Gas-atomized 316L stainless steel powder is widely used in powder bed fusion AM techniques like SLM and EBM thanks to its excellent corrosion resistance combined with availability and reasonable pricing.

Q: How does stainless steel powder cost compare to tool steels or nickel alloys?

A: Stainless generally costs more than tool steels but less than precious metal alloys like nickel superalloys widely used in aerospace applications. Unique compositions can vary prices drastically.

Q: What affects stainless steel powder reuse rates in binder jet printing?

A: Maintaining strict layer thickness uniformity and accountability for ratio of fresh to recycled powder per build helps limit effects of work hardening and contamination enabling reuse up to 20 times before full replenishment.

Q: Why is high apparent density preferred for stainless steel powders in MIM feedstock?

A: Higher apparent density improves powder-binder mixing homogeneity allowing easier mold filling without binder richness issues that generate internal voids and sinks degrading mechanical performance.

Q: Which grades offer the best combination of corrosion resistance and high strength?

A: Duplex stainless steel powders like 2304 provide double the strength of 304 and 316 while still maintaining pitting and crevice resistance equivalent to 316 through high chromium and molybdenum contents.

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