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Welding Nickel Alloys: Inconel, Monel, and Hastelloy Guide

By The Welder's Guide Editorial Team
Welding Nickel Alloys: Inconel, Monel, and Hastelloy Guide

Welding Nickel Alloys: Inconel, Monel, and Hastelloy Guide

Nickel alloys represent some of the most demanding materials in any welding shop. Used in chemical processing, power generation, marine environments, and aerospace applications, alloys like Inconel, Monel, and Hastelloy are specified because they retain strength and corrosion resistance at temperatures and in environments that destroy ordinary steel and stainless.

Welding them requires understanding their metallurgical quirks, choosing the right filler metals, and controlling heat input with precision.

Understanding Nickel Alloys

Nickel alloys share a common characteristic: they are engineered for extreme service. Their welding challenges stem from the same properties that make them valuable.

Key Welding Characteristics of Nickel Alloys

  • Low thermal conductivity — Heat builds up rapidly and locally. The weld pool stays hot longer than steel.
  • High coefficient of thermal expansion — Nickel alloys expand and contract significantly. Distortion control is critical.
  • Sluggish weld pool — The molten puddle is stiffer and less fluid than steel or stainless. It does not wet out as readily.
  • Hot cracking susceptibility — Sulfur, phosphorus, lead, and other low-melting-point impurities cause hot cracking in the HAZ and weld metal.
  • Work hardening — Cutting and grinding heat the surface rapidly.

Inconel (Nickel-Chromium Alloys)

Inconel is a family of austenitic nickel-chromium superalloys produced by Special Metals (now part of Precision Castparts). The most commonly welded grades are:

GradeCompositionService TemperatureCommon Use
Inconel 600Ni-Cr-FeUp to 2100°FFurnace components, chemical processing
Inconel 625Ni-Cr-Mo-NbUp to 1800°FMarine, aerospace, chemical
Inconel 718Ni-Cr-Fe-Mo-NbUp to 1300°FAerospace, turbines
Inconel X-750Ni-Cr-Fe-Ti-AlUp to 1500°FSprings, fasteners, turbine blades

Welding Inconel

Process: TIG (GTAW) is preferred for precision work and thin sections. MIG (GMAW) with short circuit or pulsed transfer is used for production. Stick (SMAW) with appropriate electrodes works for field repairs.

Filler metals:

  • Inconel 600 → ERNiCrFe-7 (Filler Metal 82) or ENiCrFe-3 (Inconel 182)
  • Inconel 625 → ERNiCrMo-3 (Filler Metal 625)
  • Inconel 718 → ERNiFeCr-2 (Filler Metal 718)

Heat input: Keep heat input low. Use stringer beads, not wide weaves. Multiple smaller passes are preferable to fewer large passes.

Interpass temperature: Maximum 300°F (149°C) for most Inconel grades. Use an infrared thermometer between passes.

Shielding gas: 100% argon for TIG. 100% argon or Ar/He blends for MIG.

Cleanliness: Inconel is sensitive to sulfur contamination. Clean all surfaces with acetone. Never allow lubricants, cutting fluids, or marking materials to contact the weld zone. Remove all grease, oil, and paint.

Monel (Nickel-Copper Alloys)

Monel alloys contain 60–70% nickel and 25–30% copper. They have excellent corrosion resistance in seawater, hydrofluoric acid, and alkaline environments.

GradeCompositionCommon Use
Monel 400Ni-CuMarine hardware, heat exchangers, valve stems
Monel K-500Ni-Cu-Al-TiPropeller shafts, pump impellers (age-hardenable)

Welding Monel

Process: TIG and MIG are both suitable. Stick welding works for repairs.

Filler metals:

  • Monel 400 → ERNiCu-7 (Filler Metal 60)
  • Monel K-500 → ERNiCu-7 (do not use K-500 filler — weld in annealed condition, then age harden the part)

Sulfur sensitivity: Monel is extremely sensitive to sulfur cracking. Even trace amounts of sulfur (from cutting fluids, grease, or contaminated base metal) cause hot cracking at grain boundaries. This is the most common failure mode when welding Monel.

Prevention:

  1. Degrease with acetone
  2. Do not use sulfur-containing cutting fluids when machining Monel
  3. Remove all scale and oxides mechanically
  4. Use only clean, stainless steel wire brushes (never carbon steel)

Joint design: Keep joint gaps tight. Monel’s sluggish puddle makes bridging gaps difficult.

Heat input: Low. Move steadily. Avoid excessive weaving.

Distortion: Monel has high thermal expansion (similar to austenitic stainless). Tack weld frequently, use fixtures, and allow cooling between tacks.

Hastelloy (Nickel-Molybdenum and Nickel-Chromium-Molybdenum Alloys)

Hastelloy alloys (produced by Haynes International) are engineered specifically for corrosion resistance in highly aggressive chemical environments including oxidizing acids, reducing acids, and mixed acid conditions.

GradeKey AlloyingBest AgainstCommon Use
Hastelloy C-276Ni-Cr-Mo-WOxidizing + reducing acidsChemical reactors, flue gas scrubbers
Hastelloy C-22Ni-Cr-Mo-WOxidizing acids, wet chlorineProcess piping, valves
Hastelloy B-3Ni-MoHydrochloric acidHCl handling equipment
Hastelloy XNi-Cr-Fe-MoHigh temperatureGas turbine components

Welding Hastelloy

Process: TIG is preferred for critical applications. GMAW with pulsed transfer for production.

Filler metals:

  • Hastelloy C-276 → ERNiCrMo-4
  • Hastelloy C-22 → ERNiCrMo-10
  • Hastelloy B-3 → ERNiMo-10
  • Hastelloy X → ERNiCrMo-2

Heat input control: This is the most critical parameter when welding Hastelloy. Excessive heat causes:

  • Precipitation of grain boundary carbides and intermetallic phases
  • Sensitization that destroys corrosion resistance
  • Hot cracking

Use the lowest amperage that gives complete fusion. Keep interpass temperature below 200°F (93°C).

Welding speed: Faster is better. Move deliberately and quickly to limit time at temperature.

Solution annealing: For the most demanding corrosion service, post-weld solution annealing (heating to 2100–2150°F followed by rapid water quench) dissolves precipitates and restores full corrosion resistance. This is often specified for Hastelloy C-276 process piping.

General Nickel Alloy Welding Best Practices

These rules apply to all nickel alloy welding:

1. Cleanliness is Non-Negotiable

Contamination from sulfur, lead, phosphorus, and low-melting-point metals causes hot cracking. This includes:

  • Cutting fluids and lubricants
  • Paint and coatings
  • Zinc (from galvanized clamps, tools, or surfaces)
  • Lead-containing markers or compounds

Always clean with acetone and use dedicated stainless steel tools for nickel alloys.

2. Control Heat Input Relentlessly

Use the heat input formula if needed: Heat Input (kJ/in) = (Amps × Volts × 60) ÷ (Travel Speed in/min × 1000)

Most nickel alloys require heat input below 50 kJ/in. Many specifications require below 35 kJ/in.

3. Keep Interpass Temperature Low

  • Inconel grades: 300°F maximum
  • Monel: 200°F maximum
  • Hastelloy: 200°F maximum

Use an infrared thermometer. Allow weld to cool between passes. Do not rush.

4. Use Stringer Beads

Wide weave beads increase heat input and time at temperature. Run narrow stringer beads. Multiple passes are better than single wide passes.

5. Back Purge When Required

For pipe and tubing welds where the back side is accessible, use argon back purging. The back side of nickel alloy welds that oxidize in air can develop sensitization and corrosion attack from the inside out.

6. Weld Preparation

  • Machine or grind joint faces to bright metal
  • Bevel properly — 37.5° included angle (75° total) is standard
  • Keep root gaps tight (0–1/16 inch)
  • Clamp rigidly to control distortion

Specialty Filler Metals for Nickel Alloys

The Lincoln Electric NI-ROD FC 55 flux-cored electrode works for field stick welding of nickel alloys when TIG is not available. For TIG filler metals, Weldtool ERNiCrMo-3 (Alloy 625) filler wire is a versatile choice that works as a matching filler for Inconel 625 and as an overalloyed filler for many other nickel alloy combinations.

Dissimilar Metal Welding with Nickel Alloys

Nickel alloy filler metals are frequently used for dissimilar metal joints — particularly joining carbon steel or stainless steel to higher-alloy materials, or bridging thermal expansion mismatches. Common applications:

  • Stainless steel to carbon steel transitions (using ENiCrFe-3)
  • Carbon steel to Inconel transitions
  • Austenitic to ferritic stainless interfaces

The nickel filler’s austenitic structure accommodates the different coefficients of expansion and resists brittle martensite formation at the fusion line.

Final Thoughts

Nickel alloys demand respect and precision, but they are weldable by any skilled TIG welder who follows the metallurgical rules. The keys are cleanliness, low heat input, low interpass temperatures, and matching filler metal selection. The reward is welds that perform in environments that would destroy ordinary materials.

For shops that regularly weld nickel alloys, a dedicated set of stainless tools, a good infrared thermometer, and a supply of Alloy 625 filler wire handle the majority of nickel alloy work.

Frank Ciervo

The Welder's Guide Editorial Team

Independent trade-focused editorial team

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