mhiggins
Mechanical
- Oct 16, 2001
- 2
After reviewing a Material Certification from our 316L investment casting supplier, I'm concerned with what appears to be additional elements that are not listed in ASTM-A240 for 316L. The added non-standard elements and their respective concentrations are: Vanadium - .066%, Copper - .258%, Tungsten - .012%, Titanium - .005%, Cobalt - .136%, Aluminum - .006%, and Niobium - .003%.
At a minimum, these added elements are displacing the required elements for 316L. The question is, is there enough of the non-standard elements to affect the properties of 316L, and if so, what properties could one expect to change, i.e., corrosion resistance and strength? As an FYI, per the material certification, the other standard elements are within ASTM-A240 specs, but on the low end of the range. These are investment castings in the annealed state to be electropolished after machining.
At a minimum, these added elements are displacing the required elements for 316L. The question is, is there enough of the non-standard elements to affect the properties of 316L, and if so, what properties could one expect to change, i.e., corrosion resistance and strength? As an FYI, per the material certification, the other standard elements are within ASTM-A240 specs, but on the low end of the range. These are investment castings in the annealed state to be electropolished after machining.