Nickel alloys are weldable but require fundamentally different procedures from stainless steel: use ERNiCrMo-3 for Inconel 625, ERNiFeCr-2 for Inconel 718 (with post-weld age heat treatment), ERNiCrMo-4 for Hastelloy C-276, and NEVER use 308L or 316L filler wire on any nickel alloy. Nickel weld pools are less fluid, wet differently, and are far more sensitive to contamination than stainless steel — the most common fabrication failures I see are not base metal failures but weld joint failures caused by applying carbon steel or stainless steel logic to nickel alloy work.
Nickel alloys are generally considered weldable — but they behave very differently from carbon steel and even from austenitic stainless steel. The most common fabrication failures I see in the field are not about the base metal failing; they're about the weld joint failing because the welder applied carbon steel or even stainless steel logic to a nickel alloy job.
This guide covers what you actually need to know to weld nickel alloys successfully in a fabrication shop: filler metal selection, gas shielding, heat input control, and the specific pitfalls for each major alloy family.
The single most important rule: Never use 308L, 316L, or any standard stainless steel filler wire for nickel alloys. The chemistry is wrong and the result is cracked, porous, or corrosion-prone weld metal. If your shop has been welding 316L all day and you pick up an Inconel weld without changing wire, you will have a problem.
1. Why Nickel Alloys Are Different from Carbon Steel and Stainless
Before getting into specific procedures, it helps to understand why nickel alloys demand different handling:
- High thermal expansion: Nickel alloys expand about 30% more than carbon steel during heating. This creates higher residual stresses in welds and makes distortion control harder. You need more robust fixturing and often slower cooling.
- Low thermal conductivity: Heat flows more slowly in nickel alloys than in carbon steel. This means the area around the weld stays hot longer, widening the heat-affected zone (HAZ) and increasing the risk of sensitization or cracking.
- Susceptibility to hot cracking: Many nickel alloys (especially those with high Nb and Mo) are susceptible to solidification cracking and ductility dip cracking in the weld metal if heat input is too high or composition drifts.
- Oxidation sensitivity: Nickel alloys are more reactive to oxygen at high temperatures than carbon steel. Even brief exposure to air at welding temperatures can cause surface oxidation that prevents proper fusion. This is why gas shielding is mandatory.
- Viscosity: Nickel alloy weld pools are more "sluggish" than steel — the molten metal flows less freely. This makes it harder to achieve good wetting and penetration with the same torch angle you'd use for carbon steel.
2. Filler Metal Selection: The Right Wire for Every Alloy
Filler metal selection is the most consequential decision in nickel alloy welding. Using the wrong wire — or even the right wire from the wrong manufacturer — can mean the difference between a sound joint and one that cracks in service.
| Base Metal | Recommended Filler | Alternate Filler | Process |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inconel 625 | ERNiCrMo-3 | ERNiCrMo-4 | GTAW, GMAW, SMAW |
| Inconel 718 | ERNiFeCr-2 | ERNiCrCoFe-1 (for higher temp) | GTAW, GMAW |
| Hastelloy C-276 | ERNiCrMo-4 | ERNiCrMo-3 | GTAW, GMAW |
| Hastelloy C-22 | ERNiCrMo-4 or ERNiCrMo-10 | ERNiCrMo-3 | GTAW, GMAW |
| Hastelloy B-3 | ERNiMo-2 | ERNiMo-7 | GTAW (preferred) |
| Monel 400 | ERNiCu-7 | ENiCu-7 (stick) | GTAW, GMAW, SMAW |
| 800H/800HT | ERNiCrCo-1 | ERNiCr-3 | GTAW, GMAW |
| Duplex 2205 | ER2594 | ERNiCrMo-4 (for high Cr matching) | GTAW, GMAW, FCAW |
| Super Duplex 2507 | ER2594 | ERNiCrMo-4 | GTAW, GMAW, FCAW |
Over-alloying principle: For most nickel alloy welds, it's acceptable — and often preferred — to use a filler with slightly higher Cr and/or Mo content than the base metal. This provides a margin of safety against composition loss during welding (volatilization of Mn, Cr) and gives better corrosion resistance in the weld deposit. Don't use a "matching" filler when a slightly over-alloyed option is available.
3. Gas Shielding: This Is Not Optional
Gas shielding is the most commonly neglected aspect of nickel alloy welding. In carbon steel welding, a small amount of porosity or oxide inclusion might be acceptable in non-critical service. With nickel alloys, contamination causes real problems:
- Porosity: Nickel weld metal dissolves very little hydrogen, so any hydrogen present during solidification forms pores. Even minor porosity can be a corrosion initiation site in service.
- Oxide inclusions: If the shielding gas does not fully exclude oxygen and nitrogen, the weld pool forms refractory oxides (NiO, Cr₂O₃) that become inclusions in the solidifying weld metal. These are often invisible to visual inspection but create stress concentrators and corrosion sites.
- Temper color: If you see gold, blue, or purple temper colors on the weld bead surface, your shielding is insufficient. The discoloration is oxide, and it means the underlying metal has been contaminated. A properly shielded nickel weld is silver-grey and bright.
Shielding Gas Recommendations
Primary Shielding (Backpurge)
Argon with ≤10 ppm oxygen. For root passes and backpurge, this is the minimum standard. Use argon for root passes on all GTAW (TIG) welding of nickel alloys.
Hot Pass / Fill Passes
Adding helium improves heat input and penetration. Good for thick sections. 25% He is a common compromise for most shop applications.
MIG/GMAW (Semi-Auto)
The CO₂ adds a small amount of oxidizing potential that stabilizes the arc for spray transfer. Too much CO₂ increases spatter and porosity.
Root Pass (TIG)
Flow rate depends on nozzle size and joint configuration. Use a trailing shield if possible to protect the bead from oxidation during cooling.
Backpurge mandatory for root passes: When welding pipe or tube with the GTAW process, always use backpurge argon. The oxygen inside the pipe, if not displaced, will oxidize the root bead on the inside. For pressure piping or any service where internal corrosion is a concern, a cracked or oxidized root pass is a leak waiting to happen.
4. Heat Input Control: The Key Variable
Heat input in nickel alloy welding is a balancing act. Too little heat and the weld doesn't fuse properly; too much and you risk hot cracking, HAZ sensitization, and distortion. Here's what to aim for:
Heat Input Range
Lower end for thin sections and high-Mo grades (C-276, C-22); upper end for heavier sections. Below 0.5 kJ/mm risks lack of fusion; above 1.5 kJ/mm risks cracking in high-Nb grades.
Interpass Temperature
This is the most frequently violated rule in nickel alloy welding. Many shops are used to preheating stainless steel and then applying the same preheat to nickel alloys — a mistake. For C-276, C-22, and other high-Mo grades, keep interpass below 120°C if possible.
Preheat
Preheating nickel alloys is generally not required and can be harmful for high-Mo grades. If the ambient temperature is below 10°C, a light preheat of 50°C can help with surface moisture — but don't exceed 100°C.
Travel Speed
Variations in travel speed cause variations in heat input, which causes inconsistent bead shape and potential undercut. Use a welding timer or consistent reference point to maintain steady speed.
5. Common Defects and How to Avoid Them
A. Solidification Cracking (Hot Cracking)
Occurs in the weld metal during solidification. Caused by high heat input, high sulfur or phosphorus in base/filler metal, or restraint. Prevention: reduce heat input, use low-sulfur filler, ensure proper fit-up with minimal gap, use a backing strip for restrained joints.
B. Ductility Dip Cracking (HACC)
Heat-Affected Zone Cracking (HACC) occurs in the HAZ at temperatures between solidus and ~600°C. Common in Inconel 625 and 718 welds with high Nb content. Prevention: control heat input strictly to ≤1.5 kJ/mm, maintain interpass ≤150°C, use a travel speed that avoids dwelling in the critical temperature range.
C. Porosity
Caused by inadequate gas shielding, moisture in the filler metal, or contaminated base metal. Prevention: check gas flow rate and purity, store filler wire in sealed containers with desiccant, clean base metal thoroughly (remove any hydrocarbon residues, drawing compounds, or paint), use a trailing shield for GTAW.
D. Lack of Fusion / Lack of Penetration
Common when the operator applies stainless or carbon steel torch angles and travel speeds to nickel alloys. Nickel weld pools are less fluid — they don't "wet" as easily. Prevention: use a slightly more aggressive torch angle (5–10° drag), reduce travel speed slightly, increase amperage if the bead looks "cold." For root passes, verify fit-up with a root gauge before welding.
E. Undercut
Nickel alloys are prone to undercut because the sluggish weld pool doesn't fill the track edges properly. Prevention: reduce arc length, lower amperage slightly, use the correct electrode angle (leaning slightly back into the weld pool), and adjust weave technique — for nickels, stringer beads are usually better than wide weaves.
6. Specific Alloys: What You Need to Know
Inconel 625
- ERNiCrMo-3 filler; ERNiCrMo-4 as alternate
- Weld overlay for corrosion resistance is common
- Can be GTAW (TIG), GMAW (MIG), or SMAW (stick)
- Post-weld solution anneal not required unless spec'd
- Watch for ductility dip cracking in thick sections
Inconel 718
- ERNiFeCr-2 filler — different from 625 filler
- Age-hardening alloy: post-weld heat treatment required for max strength (solution + precipitation treatment)
- If you don't post-weld heat treat, the joint will be weaker than the base metal
- Weld in the annealed condition; post-weld age after welding
- Keep interpass below 120°C for critical welds
Hastelloy C-276
- ERNiCrMo-4 is the standard filler
- Extremely sensitive to precipitation of secondary phases (mu phase, sigma) if cooled slowly or held in the 540–870°C range
- Keep interpass below 120°C; avoid prolonged PWHT
- GTAW is the preferred process for critical service
- Do not use 316L or 308L filler — will crack
Monel 400
- ERNiCu-7 filler (TIG/MIG) or ENiCu-7 (stick)
- Copper-nickel alloy — very different from Inconel
- Lower melting point than Inconel; easier to burn through if not careful
- Use lower amperage and slower travel than you'd expect
- Excellent resistance to HF acid; widely used in oil and gas wellhead piping
- Post-weld heat treatment not required
7. Post-Weld Heat Treatment: When and What
For most nickel alloys in non-critical service, a post-weld heat treatment is not mandatory. But in certain cases, it is required — and in those cases, skipping it can mean failure in service.
- Inconel 718: Post-weld solution anneal (980°C, water quench) + precipitation age (720°C/8h + 620°C/8h) is required to achieve design strength. A weld in 718 that is not post-weld heat treated has ~40–50% lower yield strength than the base metal in the aged condition.
- Hastelloy C-276 and C-22: Generally no PWHT. If PWHT is required by code (e.g., ASME for pressure vessels), keep the time at temperature as short as possible — extended PWHT causes secondary phase precipitation. Rapid cooling from PWHT is preferred.
- Inconel 625: Stress relief annealing (870–980°C) can be used if required by the design code. However, for corrosion service, avoid post-weld heat treatment — it can reduce the corrosion resistance of the weld HAZ by promoting carbide precipitation.
- Monel 400: No PWHT required. Stress corrosion cracking is not a concern for Monel 400 in most environments.
Check your design code before specifying PWHT: If your project uses ASME BPVC, PD 5500, EN 13445, or similar codes, the code will specify whether PWHT is required for the alloy and thickness. Some codes have different PWHT requirements for different nickel alloys — don't assume the rule for carbon steel applies to nickel alloys.
8. Equipment and Consumable Storage
Even if your welding procedure is perfect, poor consumable storage can destroy the weld quality. Nickel alloy filler metals are particularly sensitive to moisture and surface contamination:
- Store filler wire in sealed containers with desiccant. Once opened, keep in a warming cabinet at 50–80°C to prevent moisture absorption.
- Remove any packaging within 4–8 hours of use for TIG rods — moisture from ambient air can condense on the rod surface even at room temperature in humid conditions.
- Clean the welding machine's wire feed system before switching from stainless or carbon steel wire to nickel wire. Cross-contamination from previous wire spools is a real issue in production shops.
- Use dedicated liners and cups for nickel alloy MIG welding. Don't use the same liner that fed carbon steel — even a small amount of carbon steel dust in the liner can cause arc instability and inclusion.
- Grind with dedicated wheels — if you've been grinding carbon steel, use a fresh wheel for nickel alloys to avoid iron contamination in the weld preparation.
What Findsteel Can Do for You
We supply nickel alloy filler metals (ERNiCrMo-3, ERNiCrMo-4, ERNiCu-7, ERNiFeCr-2, ER2594) from verified manufacturers, with full batch traceability and certificate of conformance. We can also advise on welding procedure specifications (WPS) and qualify procedure qualification records (PQR) for your specific joint configuration and design code.
- Filler metals in stock for Inconel 625/718, Hastelloy C-276, Monel 400, and duplex grades
- Base metal procurement with mill certificates verifying chemistry and mechanical properties
- Welding consultation for procedure development and defect troubleshooting
- Third-party inspection (SGS, DNV, BV) for critical welds on request
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