I loko o nā ʻōnaehana ʻoihana kiʻekiʻe-gas turbines, nā kapuahi hoʻomāhana hou, chemical reactors and aerospace hardware—materials are routinely expected to survive extreme thermal and chemical environments while retaining strength, dimensional stability and resistance to oxidation or corrosion.
Selecting the correct high-temperature alloy is therefore a critical engineering decision that balances maximum service temperature, hana kino (including at low temperature), oxidation and carburization resistance, mea hana, weldability and lifecycle cost.
1. Why are high-temperature alloys necessary
Standard steels and low-alloy materials rapidly lose yield strength, suffer excessive oxidation, carburization or sulfidation, and can undergo embrittlement when exposed to prolonged high temperature or aggressive chemical environments.
High-temperature alloys address these failure modes by controlled alloying (I, Cr, CO, Mo, Nb/Ta, W, A, AL) and tailored microstructures (solid-solution vs. precipitation strengthened).
Selection must balance: (a) thermal capability (continuous vs short-term peak), (na B) ke kū'ē kū'ē (oxiyan / Carburization Carburization / luhuahuaia / halogen attack), (c) mechanical demand (tersele, hoka, Kaluhi), and (D) manufacturing constraints (NoMame, Welding, Kālā).
Manufacturer rupture/creep data—not room-temperature tensile numbers—are the authoritative basis for life design at elevated temperature.
2. ʻEono mau mea wela wela kiʻekiʻe
Inconel® 600 (US N06600)
Ka Heluhelu & Hoʻokō maʻamau
Actoel 600 is a solid-solution strengthened nickel-chromium austenitic alloy commonly supplied as wrought plate, she wallpaper, bar and tubing.
It is manufactured to industry wrought-product specifications for high-temperature corrosion-resistant alloys and is widely used in forms suitable for welding and fabrication.

Key Chemical Composition (Wt.%)
Nickel (I) ~72.0–78.0; Chromium (Cr) ~14.0–17.0; 'Eron (Lia) ~6.0–10.0; KālekaʻAʻI (C) ≤0.15; Mang kāne (Mn) ≤_.0; Silikino (A) Ç0.5.
The chemistry emphasizes high nickel for thermal stability and chromium for oxidation protection.
Hoʻolālā Kūleʻa
Practical continuous service guidance to approximately 2000°F (≈1093°C) for un-stressed or moderately stressed components; short transient excursions modestly above this temperature are possible for non-structural parts.
The alloy retains good ductility down to cryogenic temperatures.
Pono Pono
Balanced corrosion resistance across oxidizing and many reducing environments; good general oxidation resistance;
excellent formability and weldability compared with many high-temperature alloys; broad availability in many product forms which simplifies procurement and fabrication.
Caveats
Not precipitation hardened—strength at elevated temperature is achieved by solid solution and cold work; long-term load-bearing applications require creep evaluation.
Susceptible to stress-corrosion cracking in aggressive chloride or caustic environments if residual or applied stresses are not controlled.
Design for SCC avoidance and apply appropriate stress relief after heavy fabrication where necessary.
Nā noi maʻamau
Furnace fixtures and heating elements, chemical process components and piping, certain aerospace exhaust and auxiliary components, and other applications where balanced oxidation/corrosion resistance with good manufacturability is required.
Inconel® 601 (UNS N06601)
Ka Heluhelu & Hoʻokō maʻamau
A nickel-chromium-iron alloy developed as an oxidation-resistant upgrade to general Ni-Cr alloys; commonly available in sheet, tube and bar and used where cyclic oxidation and scale adhesion under repeated thermal cycling are key concerns.
Key Chemical Composition (Wt.%)
Nickel (I) ~58.0–63.0; Chromium (Cr) ~21.0–25.0; 'Eron (Lia) ~10.0–15.0; Aluminum (AL) ~0.6–1.8 (small Al promotes alumina formation); KālekaʻAʻI (C) ≤0.15.
The combination of Cr and Al is the metallurgical basis for superior scale formation and adhesion.
Hoʻolālā Kūleʻa
Exceptional cyclic oxidation resistance and scale stability up to the mid-to-high 1100s °C (≈2100–2200°F) as an oxidation resistance characteristic; treat oxidation/scale limits and structural allowable temperatures separately when designing load-bearing parts.
Pono Pono
Excellent performance in cyclic oxidizing atmospheres and in situations where scale spallation would otherwise limit life; improved resistance to carburization and thermal cycling relative to many solid-solution Ni alloys; still reasonably formable and weldable.
Caveats
High oxidation limit reflects scale behavior rather than guaranteed long-term structural strength—creep and rupture properties at those temperatures must be checked for load-bearing items.
Standard welding practice is acceptable but attention to interpass temperatures and post-weld handling improves long-term performance.
Nā noi maʻamau
ʻO nā tubes, combustion liners, annealing and heat-treatment equipment, chemical plant components exposed to cyclic oxidizing atmospheres, and any application where scale adherence under repeated heating and cooling is paramount.
Inconel® 718 (US N07718)
Ka Heluhelu & Hoʻokō maʻamau
Actoel 718 is a precipitation-hardening nickel-base superalloy widely used for demanding structural applications; supplied as bar, Ua kalaʻia, papaʻi, sheet and castings where high strength, creep resistance and cryogenic toughness are required.
Key Chemical Composition (Wt.%)
Nickel (I) ~50.0–55.0; Chromium (Cr) ~17.0–21.0; Nihibium (Nb) + TANTALUM (Ke alo) ~4.75–5.50; Titanium (No) ~0.65–1.15; Aluminum (AL) ~0.20–0.80; Mybrideum (Mo) a hao hao (Lia) make up the balance.
Strength arises from controlled precipitation of γ′/γ″ phases during aging.

Hoʻolālā Kūleʻa
Structurally used up to roughly 1200–1300°F (≈650–704°C) for long-term loading; retains outstanding mechanical properties at cryogenic temperatures (down to −423°F / −253°C);
oxidation resistance is serviceable up to near 1800°F (for non-structural exposures), but creep considerations govern allowable design at elevated T.
Pono Pono
High yield and tensile strength in the aged condition, superior creep resistance for mid-temperature structural parts, and unusually good low-temperature toughness — making it appropriate where a single material must tolerate both cryogenic and elevated-temperature conditions.
Caveats
Performance is highly dependent on precise heat-treatment (Hoʻoholo i Airnaal + defined aging cycles).
Welding may require post-weld aging or other heat treatments to restore full properties; improper thermal cycles can degrade mechanical properties.
For sustained high-temperature loads use creep/rupture data rather than static tensile numbers.
Nā noi maʻamau
Aerospace rotating and static gas-turbine components, high-strength fasteners and fittings, cryogenic vessels and equipment, high-pressure valves, and other applications where a combination of cryogenic toughness and elevated-temperature strength is required.
Hastelloy® X (UNS N06002)
Ka Heluhelu & Hoʻokō maʻamau
A nickel-chromium-iron-molybdenum solid-solution alloy designed for outstanding structural strength and oxidation resistance at extreme temperatures;
typically produced in wrought forms for high-temperature structural and furnace applications.

Key Chemical Composition (Wt.%)
Nickel (I) ~47.0–50.0; Chromium (Cr) ~21.0–23.5; 'Eron (Lia) ~18.0–21.0; Mybrideum (Mo) ~8.0–10.0; minor cobalt (CO) a me ka wahine (W) Apana.
The alloy balances elements that provide both scale resistance and high-temperature solid-solution strengthening.
Hoʻolālā Kūleʻa
Engineered for continuous structural and oxidation service approaching ~2200°F (≈1204°C) under moderate stresses;
short-term excursions can be higher but long-term allowable stresses decline substantially as temperature and exposure hours increase.
Pono Pono
Superior high-temperature rupture and creep resistance compared with many Ni-Cr alloys, with robust oxidation/carburization resistance.
Good weldability and formability for a high-temperature alloy make it attractive for complex components that must carry load at extreme T.
Caveats
Long-term rupture strength falls with temperature and exposure time, so design must be anchored to creep-rupture data (hours to years) rather than room-temperature properties.
Welding, hot working and heat treatment must follow recommended procedures to avoid deleterious precipitates and localized weakening.
Nā noi maʻamau
High-temperature furnace components, combustor liners, turbine ducting and other gas-turbine hardware, petrochemical reactor components where both oxidation resistance and structural integrity at high temperature are required.
Alloy 330 (UNS N08330)
Ka Heluhelu & Hoʻokō maʻamau
An austenitic nickel-chromium-iron-silicon alloy optimized for oxidation and carburization resistance in industrial furnace and heat-treatment service; supplied in tubing, sheet and fabricated shapes for thermal-processing equipment.
Key Chemical Composition (Wt.%)
Nickel (I) ~34.0–37.0; Chromium (Cr) ~17.0–20.0; 'Eron (Lia) kaulike (Koho Koho. 38–46%); Silikino (A) ~1.0–2.5; KālekaʻAʻI (C) hoʻohaʻahaʻa (0.05-0.15).
Silicon and the Cr/Ni balance enhance scale formation and carburization resistance.
Hoʻolālā Kūleʻa
Recommended for oxidation and carburization service up to roughly 2100–2200°F (≈1150–1200°C), with good short-term behavior at higher excursions.
Stellar performance in carburizing atmospheres where internal carburization of components is a concern.
Pono Pono
Outstanding resistance to both oxidation and carburization in furnace environments; cost-effective relative to many higher-nickel superalloys; retains austenitic microstructure across service temperatures, avoiding phase-instability pitfalls.
Caveats
Not intended as a high-creep structural alloy at the absolute upper temperature extremes—use creep data for load-bearing parts; thermal-fatigue and cyclic sagging are failure modes for thin sections and belts, so mechanical design must account for these.
Check compatibility with any halogenated or strongly reducing chemistries in the process gas.
Nā noi maʻamau
ʻO nā tubes, furnace belts, heat-treatment baskets, boiler and flue parts, and other furnace internals exposed to alternating oxidizing and carburizing atmospheres.
Alloy 35-19Cb (mesh-belt family, UNS N06350)
Ka Heluhelu & Hoʻokō maʻamau
A family of niobium (columbium)-stabilized nickel-chromium austenitic alloys engineered for thin-section applications such as wire, mesh and conveyor belts in continuous furnaces.
Key Chemical Composition (Wt.%)
Nickel (I) ~34.0–37.0; Chromium (Cr) ~18.0–20.0; 'Eron (Lia) kaulike (≈35–40%); Nihibium (Nb) ~1.0–1.5; KālekaʻAʻI (C) Ç0.10.
Niobium stabilizes carbides and improves high-temperature tensile strength for wire and mesh geometries.
Hoʻolālā Kūleʻa
Designed for sustained furnace mesh operation up to about 1100°C (≈2012°F) with demonstrated service life advantages (reduced sagging and extended fatigue life) compared with non-stabilized alloys in the same environment.
Pono Pono
High tensile and creep resistance in thin section forms; niobium stabilization prevents intergranular carbide formation and improves resistance to grain-boundary depletion and embrittlement; optimized for cyclic belt loading and thermal fatigue.
Caveats
Use is specialized—primarily for mesh, wire and thin parts. Joining and repair procedures for mesh belts differ from bulk welding and require specialized techniques.
Mechanical design must account for belt sag, thermal expansion and support geometry to avoid premature mechanical failure.
Nā noi maʻamau
Continuous annealing furnace mesh belts, conveyor chains and thin-section conveying elements in heat-treatment and metal-processing lines.
Haynes® 25 / L-605 (UNS R30605)
Ka Heluhelu & Hoʻokō maʻamau
A cobalt-based high-performance alloy produced as wrought bar, sheet and precision components.
It is the principal cobalt option for environments demanding exceptional sulfidation, halogen and wear resistance at high temperature.
Key Chemical Composition (Wt.%)
'Lelo'Slelo (CO) ~50.0–55.0; Chromium (Cr) ~19.0–21.0; Tungsten (W) ~14.0–16.0; Nickel (I) ~9.0–11.0; 'Eron (Lia) ≤3.0.
The high tungsten and chromium content provides strength and oxidation resistance while cobalt forms the high-temperature matrix.
Hoʻolālā Kūleʻa
Commonly specified for continuous service to approximately 1800°F (≈980°C); retains useful strength at higher short-term exposures up to the low-2150°F range (≈1177°C) depending on load and time at temperature.
Exceptional resistance to aggressive chemical attack is a defining characteristic.
Pono Pono
Superior resistance to sulfidation, wet chlorination and many aggressive chemical environments where nickel alloys are insufficient; strong wear, galling and contact-fatigue resistance due to tungsten; some variants exhibit biocompatibility for medical applications.
Caveats
Higher cost and higher density relative to nickel-base alloys; procurement lead times and machining characteristics differ from Ni alloys; select only when the chemical or tribological advantages clearly justify the premium.
Welding and heat-treatment require attention to avoid property loss.
Nā noi maʻamau
High-temperature bearings, seals and shafts, combustion chamber components in highly corrosive atmospheres, certain petrochemical valves and pumps exposed to sulfidizing service, and specialized medical implant components in biocompatible grades.
3. Pā'ālua compastration
This table provides a concise, engineering-focused comparison of the six high-temperature resistant alloys discussed in this guide. Temperatures are shown in both °F and °C (converted accurately).
| Alloy (inoa maʻamau) | Kā mākou | Ke hoʻomau nei ka mahana o ka lawelaweʻana (i keʻano.) | Short-term peak temperature (i keʻano.) | Main strengths (hōʻaʻakeʻa) | Nā noi maʻamau |
| Actoel® 600 | N06600 | ≈2000°F / 1093° C | ≈2100°F / 1149° C | ʻO ke kū'ē kū'ē; ʻO ka paleʻana o ka oxidation maikaʻi; excellent fabricability and weldability; stable solid-solution microstructure | Furnace fixtures, nā mea kālepa kālepa, nā mea hoʻomehana, food-processing hardware, nā mea hoʻopiʻi |
| Actoel® 601 | N06601 | ≈2100–2200°F / 1149–1204°C (oxidation-driven) | ≈2200°F / 1204° C | Superior oxidation and scale adhesion due to Al–Cr synergy; strong resistance to thermal cycling and carburization | ʻO nā tubes, nā keʻena hui, annealing furnaces, rotary kilns, heat-treatment equipment |
Inconel® 718 |
N07718 | ≈1200–1300°F / 649–704°C (kūhae); down to −423°F / −253°C | Oxidation resistance to ≈1800°F / 982° C | Exceptional yield and tensile strength; outstanding creep and fatigue resistance; unmatched cryogenic-to-high-temperature versatility | Nā mea ʻenekini mokuahi, nā wahi hau, cryogenic tanks, high-pressure valves, aerospace and energy hardware |
| Hailani® X | N06002 | ≈2200°F / 1204° C | ≈2300°F / 1260° C | Very high strength retention at extreme temperatures; excellent oxidation, Carburization Carburization, a me nā pale scc; robust creep-rupture performance | Nā mea hoʻokūkū hoʻokūkū, furnace liners, Mahope, high-temperature petrochemical reactors |
Alloy 330 |
N08330 | ≈2100–2200°F / 1150–1204°C | ≈2300°F / 1260° C | Excellent oxidation and carburization resistance; stable austenitic structure; widely used furnace alloy | ʻO nā tubes, furnace belts and baskets, boiler components, flue gas ducting |
| Haynes® 25 (L-605) | R30605 | ≈1800°F / 982° C | ≈2150°F / 1178° C | Cobalt-based alloy with superior sulfidation, halogen, a kau pale; excellent thermal stability and biocompatibility | High-temperature bearings, combustion liners, aiepou aonespace, corrosive-service valves, NA KEKI ANA |
4. How to use this guide in engineering practice
Start with the thermal profile, not a single temperature.
Specify maximum steady temperature, short-term peaks, thermal cycle frequency, and expected total hours at temperature.
Use the longest exposure and highest stress to size components. (Use supplier creep-rupture tables for the intended hourly life.)
Specify atmosphere chemistry.
Carburizing → prefer high-Si/Ni alloys (Alloy 330, Actoel 601). Sulfidizing/halogenated → consider cobalt alloys (Haynes 25) or specialty Hastelloy grades.
Oxidizing cyclic service → Inconel 601 Oole 330 for scale adhesion; Hastelloy X when structural strength is primary.
Decide load case: tensile vs creep vs fatigue.
For short-term loaded parts use tensile properties; for long-term loaded parts use creep/rupture curves; for cyclic mechanical/thermal loads use fatigue/thermal-fatigue data (if available). Do not substitute RT tensile numbers for creep design.
Fabrication constraints:
confirm available product forms (wire for mesh belts, sheet for radiant tubes, bar/forging for structural parts), and welding/post-weld heat-treatment requirements.
718 needs controlled solution/age cycles to reach design strength; many Ni alloys need stress relief to avoid SCC in caustic exposures.
Life prediction & Manaʻo:
whenever life-limited components are designed, run coupons or component tests (oxiyan, Carburization Carburization, hoka, weld trials) in representative atmospheres. Vendor data are guidance — validate for your specific duty cycle.
5. Hopena
No single high-temperature alloy is universally optimal; each represents a trade-space among maximum operating temperature, oxidation/carburization behavior, mechanical strength across the service temperature range, corrosion resistance in specific chemistries, a me ka mea hana.
Use this guide to narrow candidates, then validate final selection with component-level tests (oxiyan, Carburization Carburization, hoka, weld trials) and vendor datasheets referenced here when designing for critical or life-limited applications.


