Hoʻoponopono i ka unuhiʻana
Ma Transposh - translation plugin for wordpress
CN7M Hoʻolei ʻia i ka ʻili kinipōpō pōpopo

ASTM A744 CN7M kila kila | Alloy 20 KAHOu

Papa o nāʻikepili Hōʻike

ʻO ASTM A744 CN7M kahi hoʻolei, kiʻekiʻe-nickel, Mybridelu- and copper-bearing austenitic stainless alloy engineered for aggressive chemical service—notably sulfuric and other reducing acids, chloride-bearing process streams and mixed acid duties.

Its combination of high Ni, Cr, Mo and Cu yields superior resistance to localized corrosion, good ductility and reliable castability for complex geometries (Nā kino kino, Nā Vilves, KahawaiOli).

This expanded guide provides in-depth metallurgy, design and fabrication guidance, inspection and procurement checklists, failure-mode analysis, and selection decision rules so engineers and procurement professionals can specify, buy and deploy CN7M castings with confidence.

1. He aha la ASTM A744 CN7M kila kila

Cn7m is a high-nickel, chromium–molybdenum, copper-bearing austenitic cast kila kohu ʻole belonging to the Alloy-20 family.

It is specifically engineered for severe chemical environments, particularly those involving sulfuric acid, mixed acids, and other reducing media where conventional 300-series stainless steels show rapid corrosion.

As a cast alloy specified under ASTM A744, CN7M is widely used for pressure-containing and corrosion-critical components such as pump casings, nā kino valve, hanakai, KahawaiOli, and reactor hardware.

ASTM A744 CN7M Stainless Steel Gate Valve
ASTM A744 CN7M Stainless Steel Gate Valve

Its high nickel content ensures a fully austenitic, non-magnetic structure with excellent toughness, while chromium promotes passive film stability.

Molybdenum improves resistance to pitting and crevice corrosion in chloride-containing environments, and copper significantly enhances performance in sulfuric acid and other reducing acids.

CN7M effectively bridges the performance gap between standard austenitic stainless steels (E.g., Cf8m / 316 KAHOu) and more expensive nickel-base alloys.

This balance of corrosion resistance, whola, mechanical ingority, and cost efficiency makes it a preferred material in chemical processing, petrochemimical, fertilizer, Ka Makani, and pulp-and-paper industries.

Standard designations & global equivalents

Standard system / Kahuna Kiola / Wrought form Keiawai
Hosm / Meme (USA) Kiola ASTM A744 Grade CN7M (also referenced in ASTM A743 / A351 for cast corrosion-resistant steels)
Kā mākou Kiola UNS N08007
Hosm / Meme (USA) Wrought equivalent Alloy 20 / ASTM A182 F20
Kā mākou Huhū UNS N08020
I / Mai (Europa) Approximate equivalent I 1.4536 (Alloy-20 class reference)
ʻo ia (Iapana) Cast alloy reference Often cross-referenced as SCS-23 Oole GX5NiCrCuMo 29-21 (application-dependent)

2. Typical chemical composition and metallurgical role

Values below are representative engineering ranges for CN7M castings supplied in the solution-annealed condition.

Mua Representative wt.% Primary metallurgical / corrosion role
C (KālekaʻAʻI) ≤ 0.07 Strength contribution; controlled to limit carbide precipitation and preserve corrosion resistance.
Cr (Chromium) 19.0 - 22.0 Promotes durable passive Cr₂O₃ film; base of corrosion resistance.
I (Nickel) 27.5 - 30.5 Austente Stabilizer; improves ductility and general corrosion performance.
Mo (Mybrideum) 2.0 - 3.0 Raises pitting and crevice corrosion resistance; important with chlorides.
Cu (keleawe)
3.0 - 4.0 Enhances resistance to sulfuric and other reducing acids; important design feature.
A (Silikino) ≤ 1.5 Deoxidation and oxidation resistance.
Mn (Mang kāne) ≤ 1.5 Processing aid and minor austenite stabilizer.
P (Phoshorus) ≤ 0.04 Impurity control for toughness.
S (Sulfur) ≤ 0.04 Kept low to avoid casting defects and reduce embrittlement risk.
Lia ('Eron) Kaulike Mantal element; remaining content after alloying additions.

3. Microstructure and metallurgical behaviour — in depth

  • Austenitic matrix: High Ni content ensures a fully austenitic γ-matrix at room temperature with excellent toughness and ductility. That microstructure is the base for CN7M’s mechanical and corrosion properties.
  • Carbides and precipitation: Carbon is deliberately limited; Akā naʻe,, improper casting, slow cooling or post-casting thermal exposures can precipitate chromium carbides at grain boundaries, locally depleting chromium and reducing corrosion resistance.
    A solution anneal dissolves such carbides.
  • Nā'mala waena (sigma, Chi): Long dwell times in the 600–900 °C range can precipitate sigma (a) and associated phases in high-alloy austenitics.
    These phases embrittle and lower corrosion resistance. Avoid prolonged service in that temperature band or perform qualification testing if exposure is inevitable.
  • Role of copper and molybdenum: Cu enhances resistance to sulfuric and other reducing acids by stabilizing surface chemistry under reducing conditions; Mo boosts local-attack resistance in chloride-bearing media.
    The synergistic effect produces an alloy that resists a broader set of chemistries than plain 316L.
  • Cast microstructural heterogeneity: Cast components may show dendritic segregation and microsegregation at the microscopic scale.
    Good foundry practice—adequate melt treatment, Kapalakula, homogenization and proper heat treatment—is required to minimize heterogeneities that compromise corrosion or mechanical integrity.

4. Mechanical properties — ASTM A744 CN7M (kiola, hopena-ʻaeʻia)

The values below are representative engineering ranges for CN7M castings supplied solution-annealed and quenched.

Cast mechanical properties vary with section thickness, hana hanana, heat treatment and post-cast processing.

Waiwai Representative value (typ./range)
0.2% Hono (Koho Koho. hua) ≈ 170 - 300 Mpa (≈ 25 - 44 ksi) — use the heat-specific value from the MTR for design
Ikaika ikaika (Rm, Us) ≈ 425 - 650 Mpa (≈ 62 - 94 ksi) — depend on section and casting quality
Elongation at fracture (A, %) ≈ 20 - 40% (typical castings ~30–40% for well-made, solution-annealed parts; lower for thick/segregated sections)
Paʻakikī paʻakikī (HB)
≈ 150 - 260 HB (varies with section, heat treatment and degree of cold work)
Rockwell hardness (Hrb) ≈ 70 - 100 Hrb (corresponding to HB range above)
Modulus olasticity (E) ≈ 190 - 200 GPA (≈ 28,000 - 29,000 ksi) — use ≈193 GPa if a single value is needed
Modulus shear (G) ≈ 75 - 80 GPA
Lakiō o Poisson (n) ≈ 0.27 - 0.30
Huakai ≈ 7.95 - 8.05 g · cad (≈ 7950–8050 kg·m⁻³)

5. Corrosion Performance of CN7M Stainless Steel

CN7M Stainless Steel Check Valve
CN7M Stainless Steel Check Valve

Nā ikaika

  • Sulfuric and reducing acids: Superior performance relative to 300-series stainless due to Cu and Ni—CN7M is commonly selected where sulfuric acid contact is routine.
  • Mixed acid and process chemistries: Good overall resistance to nitric, phosphoric and various organics with appropriate concentration/temperature limits.
  • Hoʻomaikaʻiʻia i ke kū'ē: Mo provides raised pitting resistance compared with low-Mo austenitics; useful where chlorides are present at moderate levels.

PAHUI & application boundaries

  • Severe chloride immersion / Nā Pūnaewele Glash: CN7M is better than 304 but in aggressive seawater immersion or splash zones duplex stainless steels or copper-nickel alloys may outperform CN7M in long-term service.
  • Scan scress: In high tensile stress + kohuala + elevated temperature combinations, stress-corrosion cracking remains a possibility; duplex or super-austenitics may be preferred for SCC-critical duties.
  • High-temperature embrittlement: Avoid continuous service in the 600–900 °C band due to risk of sigma phase formation.

6. Casting Characteristics of CN7M Stainless Steel

ʻO nā kaʻina hana

CN7M is primarily produced via sand casting and investment casting, with process parameters tailored to avoid segregation and defects:

  • Sand cread: Used for large components (nā kino valve, Nā Hale Hōʻikeʻike) with wall thickness ≥5 mm.
    Resin-coated sand (pahū poluli) is preferred for dimensional accuracy (tolerance ±0.2–0.5 mm) a hoʻopauʻia (RA 3.2-6.3 μM).
  • Kāhaka kūʻai kūʻai: For precision components (small valves, KahawaiOli) with thin walls (≥2 mm), achieving surface finish Ra 1.6–3.2 μm and tolerance ±0.1–0.3 mm.
CN7M Stainless Steel Investment Casting Gate Valve
CN7M Stainless Steel Investment Casting Gate Valve

Foundry Controls

  • Hoʻomālamalama & charge control: Use vacuum induction melting or controlled air/argon practice where possible to minimize dissolved gases and inclusion content. Strict control of alloy additions and deoxidation is essential.
  • Filtration and gating: Ceramic filtration and well-designed gating minimize inclusions and porosity; small entrapped gases in pump impellers or valve seats are a common root cause of failure.
  • Pouring temperature and solidification: Control pouring temperature to minimize shrinkage cavities and to promote directional solidification toward risers. Provide adequate risering for heavy sections.
  • ʻO ka hana wela: Specify a solution anneal at the foundry-recommended temperature (typical cast austenitics heat to ≈1100–1120 °C, hold and quench) to dissolve segregated carbides and reset microstructure.
    Provide quench method (water/air/oil) per foundry recommendations to control distortion.

ʻO ke kaomiʻana o ka wela wela (Hip) and other densification options

  • Hip hoʻohana: for the most critical pressure parts susceptible to shrinkage porosity or sub-surface inclusions, HIP can close internal porosity and improve fatigue life and corrosion integrity.
    HIP adds cost but is a valuable option for highly stressed or safety-critical components.
  • PAHUI: HIP requires that the part geometry and tolerances accommodate the process; subsequent heat treatment and machining may be necessary.

Machining allowance and dimensional control

  • Machimen allowance: specify realistic machining stock depending on casting finish and critical features: typical roughing allowance = 2–6 mm (0.08–0.25 in) for general surfaces;
    critical sealing faces / machined flanges = 0.5–2 mm after finish grinding as negotiated with the foundry. Thinner allowances may be specified for precision investment castings.
  • Nā mea hana dimensional: castings have larger tolerances than forged/wrought parts; specify critical dimensions to be machined and provide true-position controls for features that must align. Use first-piece inspection and establish FAI criteria.

Ke hoʻopauʻana, cleaning and passivation

  • ʻO ka hoʻomaʻemaʻe papa: remove sand, Slag, scale and contaminants by shot-blast, pickling or mechanical cleaning before inspection and machining.
  • Descale & pickling: for corrosion-sensitive applications, pickling removes discoloration and heat tint; follow with neutralization and passivation.
  • Hoʻolauna: apply citric or nitric passivation processes per specification to restore the chromium-oxide passive film, especially on welded or pickled surfaces.
    Electropolishing can be used for sanitary applications to improve surface finish and reduce crevice sites.

7. Welding, joining and repair guidance

  • Wawahua: CN7M is weldable using matching or recommended filler metals engineered for high-Ni, Cu and Mo alloys. Follow qualified WPS/WPQ for each joint geometry and base-metal thickness.
  • Koho metala piha: Use filler alloys with comparable corrosion performance—match Ni/Cr/Mo/Cu balance to avoid galvanic or metallurgical mismatch.
    Do not use generic 316 filler if process chemistry demands alloy-20-class corrosion resistance.
  • Heat input control: Minimize excessive interpass temperatures and heat input to reduce grain growth and avoid local precipitation of deleterious phases in heat-affected zones (HAZ).
  • ʻO ka hana wela wela (Pwht): If the weld is in a critical pressure-containing area or in severe corrosive service, consider solution anneal of the welded assembly if feasible—coordinate with design for distortion management.
    HE MAU NUI, use CN7M/Alloy-20 compatible filler metal and limit heat so the HAZ retains acceptable corrosion resistance without PWHT.
  • Weld inspection: Use dye-penetrant, MT/PT for surface defects and radiography/UT for volumetric assurance where required.

8. Industrial Applications of ASTM A744 CN7M Stainless Steel

CN7M’s unique combination of corrosion resistance, whola, and cost-effectiveness makes it indispensable in industries requiring reliable performance in harsh corrosive environments:

CN7M Stainless Steel  Water Pump
CN7M Stainless Steel Water Pump

Kekau & Petrochemical Industry

Core applications: Sulfuric acid storage tanks, nā mea hana loiloi, nā mea hana wela, and piping for handling acids (Holak₄, H₃PO₄), organic solvents, and sour gas (H₂S).

Ke kī nui: Complies with NACE MR0175 for sour service, with a service life 3–5 times longer than 316L in acid environments.

Pump & Valve Manufacturing

Core applications: Nā kino valve, Trim, nā mea hana pump, and casings for chemical process pumps and control valves.

Ke kī nui: Castability enables complex flow geometries; corrosion resistance minimizes wear and leakage in aggressive media.

Meaʻai & Pharmaceutical Industry

Core applications: Processing equipment for acidic foods (Cittri, Manuela), pharmaceutical reactors, and cleanroom components.

Ke kī nui: Non-toxic, maʻalahi e hoʻomaʻemaʻe, and resistant to food acids and sanitizing agents—complies with FDA 21 CFR'āpana 177 a me iso 10993.

Ke hana kino wai & Hoʻohanaʻoihana

Core applications: Reverse osmosis membranes, brine handling equipment, and wastewater treatment tanks.

Ke kī nui: Resistance to chloride-induced pitting and crevice corrosion in high-salinity environments.

Other Applications

  • Mana pā'āʻu: Flulue gaslfuization (Fgd) Pūnaehana, where resistance to sulfur dioxide and acidic condensates is critical.
  • ʻOihana Moana: ʻO nā wahi o nā kahua'āina (Nā Vilves, KahawaiOli) exposed to seawater and sour crude.
  • Pākīpika & Rubber Manufacturing: Reactors for polymer synthesis, resistant to monomers and catalysts.

9. Loaʻa & PAHUI

Core Advantages of ASTM A744 CN7M Stainless Steel

  • Superior sulfuric acid resistance: Outperforms conventional stainless steels, reducing maintenance and replacement costs in acid service.
  • Balanced corrosion protection: Resists oxidizing/reducing acids, chrlodes, and SCC—versatile for mixed-corrosive environments.
  • ʻO ka Castability maikaʻi loa: Suitable for complex-shaped components (Nā Vilves, Pumps) that are difficult to fabricate via wrought processes.
  • Kumukūʻai-kūpono: 30–40% cheaper than nickel-based alloys (E.g., HadELy C276) while offering comparable corrosion resistance in moderate environments.
  • Nb stabilization: Eliminates IGC risk during welding/heat treatment, reducing post-processing costs.

Key Limitations of ASTM A744 CN7M Stainless Steel

  • Higher cost than 316L: 2–3 times more expensive due to high Ni/Mo/Cu content, limiting use in non-critical applications.
  • Ikaika: Ikaika ikaika (425–480 MPa) is lower than duplex stainless steels (E.g., 2205: 600-800 mPA), requiring thicker sections for structural loads.
  • Hana paʻakikī: Prone to work hardening during machining, requiring specialized tools and slower cutting speeds.
  • Limited high-temperature resistance: Not suitable for continuous service above 800°C (oxidation and NbC coarsening); use Hastelloy C276 for ultra-high temperatures.
  • Residual element sensitivity: Trace Sn, Pb, or As can cause cracking, requiring strict raw material control.

10. Hoʻohālikelike hoʻohālikelike: CN7M vs. Similar Alloys

Aspect / Alloy Cn7m (Astm A744, cast Alloy-20 family) 316L (Una s3103) Duplex 2205 (S32205) Nickel-base alloys (E.g., C-276 class)
Metallurgical type Fully austenitic cast stainless steel ʻO kahi kila kila Austetetitic Ferritic–austenitic duplex stainless steel Fully austenitic nickel-base alloys
Key alloying features High Ni, Cr, Mo (~ 2-3%), Cu (~3–4%) Cr ~17%, I ~ 10-14%, Mo ~2–3% Cr ~22%, Ni ~4–6%, Mo ~3%, N added Very high Ni, Cr, Mo; tailored chemistry
Primary corrosion strengths Ke kū'ē nei i ke kū'ē sulfuric and reducing acids; ʻO ke kū'ēʻana o ka'ōpū Good general corrosion; ʻO ke kū'ēʻana i ke kū'ēʻana Kūʻē maikaʻi i ka lua, Kāleʻa Crenice Corrosioni, and chloride SCC Outstanding resistance to mixed, Oxidizezing, and reducing media
Sulfuric acid resistance Very strong (core design objective) Paʻa; not recommended for concentrated sulfuric acid Loli; not optimized for sulfuric acid service Kūpono, including hot and concentrated acids
Pitting / Kāleʻa Crenice Corrosioni
Maikaʻi loa, improved by Mo Loli; lower than CN7M in aggressive acids Kiʻekiʻe loa, nui loa i nā kaiāulu chrlode Kūpono, superior in severe conditions
Chloride SCC resistance Better than standard austenitics but not immune Susceptible at elevated temperature and stress Very high resistance Kūpono
Ka ikaika ikaika (MAKAINA WAU) Ikaika; good ductility for a cast alloy Ikaika; maikaʻi no ka formability Ikaika ikaika (yield roughly 2× austenitic steels) ʻAnoʻano; strength depends on alloy design
Fabrication form Cast only (nā geomet paʻakikī) Huhū (papaʻi, pi pou, Bar, Ua kalaʻia) Huhū (papaʻi, pi pou, Ua kalaʻia) Wrought or cast, Ke hilinaʻi nei i ka alloy
Wawahua
Good with matching filler; solution anneal recommended for severe corrosion service Maikaʻi loa (low carbon grade) Good but requires strict heat input and phase balance control Good with qualified procedures; fillers critical
Dimensional complexity Kūpono – ideal for intricate pump/valve shapes Loli Loli Loli
Nā noi maʻamau Nā kāpili pump, nā kino valve, hanakai, acid-handling castings General process piping, Nā'Ka, food/pharma equipment Of 3Ikeha, Hoʻohanaʻoihana, chloride-rich systems Extreme chemical reactors, high-severity process equipment
Best use case I ka wa hoʻolei i nā māhele must withstand sulfuric or reducing acids Cost-effective solution for general corrosion service Ikaika-ikaika, chloride-dominated environments When corrosion severity exceeds stainless steel limits

11. Hopena

ASTM A744 CN7M stainless steel stands as a premier super austenitic cast alloy, uniquely optimized for harsh corrosive environments—particularly sulfuric acid service.

Its balanced composition of high nickel, Chromium, Mybridelu, a me ke keleawe, combined with niobium stabilization, delivers exceptional corrosion resistance, whola, a me ka hui pūʻana, filling the performance-cost gap between conventional stainless steels and high-cost nickel-based alloys.

While CN7M faces limitations in strength, Kālā, and high-temperature service, ongoing innovations in microalloying, mea hoʻohuiʻaha, and green casting are expanding its application boundaries.

For engineers and material selectors, CN7M remains the optimal choice for cast components in chemical processing, pump/valve manufacturing, and acid-centric industries, where reliability and corrosion resistance are non-negotiable.

FaqS

Can CN7M stainless steel be welded without post-heat treatment?

Welding is possible, aka, solution annealing is recommended for critical corrosion service to restore the passive layer.

Is CN7M stainless steel suitable for chloride-rich environments?

Moderate performance; for high chloride SCC resistance, Duplex 2205 or nickel-base alloys makemakeʻia paha.

Can CN7M replace 316L stainless steel in sulfuric acid service?

ʻAe, CN7M outperforms 316L in sulfuric and reducing acid conditions, especially in cast components.

What are typical casting sizes and shapes for CN7M stainless steel?

Pumps, Nā Vilves, hanakai, and fittings with nā geomet paʻakikī, nā pāʻili, and internal passages are common.

Waiho i kahi manaʻo

ʻAʻole e paʻiʻia kāu leka uila. Ua hōʻailonaʻia nā mahina i koiʻia *

E nānā i luna

E kiʻi i ka manaʻo ʻōlelo koke

Eʻoluʻolu e hoʻopiha i kāuʻike a e hoʻokaʻaʻike mākou iāʻoe koke.