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Heat treatment of welded joints

Heat treatment is an operation that is both time consuming and costly. It can affect the strength and toughness of a
welded joint, its corrosion resistance and the level of residual stress but is also a mandatory operation specified in
many application codes and standards. In addition it is an essential variable in welding procedure qualification
specifications.
Before discussing the range of heat treatments that a metal may be subjected to, there is a need to clearly define
what is meant by the various terms used to describe the range of heat treatments that may be applied to a welded
joint. Such terms are often used incorrectly, particularly by non-specialists; for a metallurgist they have very precise
meanings.

Fig. 1 Heat treatment of welded joints


Solution treatment
Carried out at a high temperature and designed to take into a solution elements and compounds which are then
retained in solution by cooling rapidly from the solution treatment temperature. This may be done to reduce the
strength of the joint or to improve its corrosion resistance. With certain alloys it may be followed by a lower
temperature heat treatment to reform the precipitates in a controlled manner (age or precipitation hardening).
Annealing
This consists of heating a metal to a high temperature, where recrystallisation and/or a phase transformation take
place, and then cooling slowly, often in the heat treatment furnace. This is often carried out to soften the metal after
it has been hardened, for example by cold working; a full anneal giving the very softest of microstructures. It also
results in a reduction in both the yield and the tensile strength and, in the case of ferritic steels, usually a reduction in
toughness.
Normalising
This is a heat treatment that is carried out only on ferritic steels. It comprises heating the steel to some 30-50C
above the upper transformation temperature (for a 0.20% carbon steel this would be around 910C) and cooling in
still air. This results in a reduction in grain size and improvements in both strength and toughness.
Quenching
This comprises a rapid cool from a high temperature. A ferritic steel would be heated to above the upper
transformation temperature and quenched in water, oil or air blast to produce a very high strength, fine grained
martensite. Steels are never used in the quenched condition, they are always tempered following the quenching
operation.
Tempering

A heat treatment carried out on ferritic steels at a relatively low temperature, below the lower transformation
temperature; in a conventional structural carbon steel this would be in the region of 600-650C. It reduces hardness,
lowers the tensile strength and improves ductility and toughness. Most normalised steels are tempered before
welding, all quenched steels are used in the quenched and tempered condition.
Ageing or Precipitation hardening
A low temperature heat treatment designed to produce the correct size and distribution of precipitates, thereby
increasing the yield and tensile strength. It is generally preceded by a solution heat treatment. For steel, the
temperature may be somewhere between 450-740 degree C, an aluminium alloy would be aged at between 100200C. Longer times and/or higher temperatures result in an increase in size of the precipitate and a reduction in
both hardness and strength.
Stress relief
As the name suggests, this is a heat treatment designed to reduce the residual stresses produced by weld shrinkage. It
relies upon the fact that, as the temperature of the metal is raised, the yield strength decreases, allowing the residual
stresses to be redistributed by creep of the weld and parent metal. Cooling from the stress relief temperature is
controlled in order that no harmful thermal gradients can occur.
Post heat
A low temperature heat treatment carried out immediately on completion of welding by increasing the preheat by
some 100C and maintaining this temperature for 3 or 4 hours. This assists the diffusion of any hydrogen in the weld
or heat affected zones out of the joint and reduces the risk of hydrogen induced cold cracking. It is used only on
ferritic steels, where hydrogen cold cracking is a major concern i.e. very crack sensitive steels, very thick joints etc.
Post Weld Heat Treatment (PWHT)
So what does the term 'post weld heat treatment' mean? To some engineers it is a rather vague term that is used to
describe any heat treatment that is carried out when welding is complete. To others however, particularly those
working in accordance with the pressure vessel codes such as BS PD 5500, EN 13445 or ASME VIII, it has a very
precise meaning. When an engineer talks of post weld heat treatment, annealing, tempering or stress relief it is
therefore advisable.
Heat treatment following welding may be carried out for one or more of three fundamental reasons:

to achieve dimensional stability in order to maintain tolerances during machining operations or during
shake-down in service

to produce specific metallurgical structures in order to achieve the required mechanical properties

to reduce the risk of in-service problems such as stress corrosion or brittle fracture by reducing the residual
stress in the welded component
The range of heat treatments to achieve one or more of these three objectives in the range of ferrous and non-ferrous
metals and alloys that may be welded is obviously far too extensive to cover in great detail within these brief Job
Knowledge articles. The emphasis in the following section will be on the PWHT of carbon and low alloy steels as
required by the application standards although brief mention will be made of other forms of heat treatment that the
welding engineer may encounter in the ferrous alloys. There are two basic mechanisms that are involved, firstly
stress relief and secondly microstructural modifications or tempering.
Stress Relief
Why is it necessary to perform stress relief? It is an expensive operation requiring part or all of the welded item to
be heated to a high temperature and it may cause undesirable metallurgical changes in some alloys. As mentioned
above there may be one or more reasons. The high residual stresses locked into a welded joint may cause
deformation outside acceptable dimensions to occur when the item is machined or when it enters service. High
residual stresses in carbon and low alloy steels can increase the risk of brittle fracture by providing a driving force

for crack propagation. Residual stresses will cause stress corrosion cracking to occur in the correct environment eg
carbon and low alloy steels in caustic service or stainless steel exposed to chlorides.
What causes these high residual stresses? Welding involves the deposition of molten metal between two essentially
cold parent metal faces. As the joint cools the weld metal contracts but is restrained by the cold metal on either side;
the residual stress in the joint therefore increases as the temperature falls. When the stress has reached a sufficiently
high value (the yield point or proof strength at that temperature) the metal plastically deforms by means of a creep
mechanism so that the stress in the joint matches the yield strength. As the temperature continues to fall the yield
strength increases, impeding deformation, so that at ambient temperature the residual stress is often equal to the
proof strength (Fig 1).
To reduce this high level of residual stress, the component is reheated to a sufficiently high temperature. As the
temperature is increased the proof strength falls, allowing deformation to occur and residual stress to decrease until
an acceptable level is reached. The component would be held at this temperature (soaked) for a period of time until a
stable condition is reached and then cooled back to room temperature. The residual stress remaining in the joint is
equal to the proof strength at the soak temperature.
Figure 1 shows that residual stress in a carbon manganese steel falls reasonably steadily from ambient to around 600
degree C but that the high strength creep resistant steels need to be above 400 degree C before the residual stress
begins to fall. Stainless steel is hardly affected until the temperature exceeds 500 degree C. There is therefore a
range of soak temperatures for the various alloys to achieve an acceptable reduction in residual stress without
adversely affecting the mechanical properties of the joint. In carbon manganese steels this temperature will be
between 550-620 degree C, in creep resistant steels somewhere between 650-750 degree C and for stainless steels
between 800-850 degree C.
The next article will cover tempering of ferritic steels and will be followed by further information on other alloys
and methods of applying and controlling heat treatment activities.
Heat treatment of welded joints - Part 2
Part 1 of this series of articles gave definitions of some of the heat treatments that may be applied to a welded joint
and dealt with the operation of stress relieving a ferritic steel assembly. The temperature range within which stress
relief takes place will also cause tempering of those regions in the HAZs where hard structures may have formed.
Tempering
Tempering is a heat treatment that is only relevant to steels and is carried out to soften any hard micro-structures that
may have formed during previous heat treatments, improving ductility and toughness. Tempering also enables
precipitates to form and for the size of these to be controlled to provide the required mechanical properties. This is
particularly important for the creep resistant chromium-molybdenum steels. Tempering comprises heating the steel
to a temperature below the lower critical temperature; this temperature being affected by any alloying elements that
have been added to the steel so that for a carbon-manganese steel, the temperature is around 650C, for a 2CrMo
steel, 760C . Quenched steels are always tempered. Normalised steels are also usually supplied in the tempered
condition although occasionally low carbon carbon-manganese steel may be welded in the normalised condition
only, the tempering being achieved during PWHT. Annealed steels are not supplied in the tempered condition.
Tempering of tool steels may be performed at temperatures as low as 150 degrees C, but with the constructional
steels that are the concern of the welding engineer the tempering temperature is generally somewhere between 550760C, depending on the composition of the steel.
Post Weld Heat Treatment (PWHT)
As mentioned in Part 1, PWHT is a specific term that encompasses both stress relief and tempering and is not to be
confused with heat treatments after welding. Such treatments may comprise ageing of aluminium alloys, solution
treatment of austenitic stainless steel, hydrogen release etc. PWHT is a mandatory requirement in many codes and
specifications when certain criteria are met. It reduces the risk of brittle fracture by reducing the residual stress and
improving toughness and reduces the risk of stress corrosion cracking. It has, however, little beneficial effect on
fatigue performance unless the stresses are mostly compressive.

It is an essential variable in all of the welding procedure qualification specifications such as ISO 15614 Part 1 and
ASME IX. Addition or deletion of PWHT or heat treatment outside the qualified time and/or temperature ranges
require a requalification of the welding procedures. PWHT temperatures for welds made in accordance with the
requirements of EN 13445, ASME VIII and BS PD 5500 are given below in Table 1.
Table 1: PWHT Temperatures from Pressure Vessel Specifications
Steel Grade

BS EN 13445
Temp range
C

ASME VIII
Normal holding temp

BS PD 5500
Temp range
C

C Steel
550-600
593
580-620
C 1/2 Mo
550-620
593
630-670
1Cr 1/2 Mo
630-680
593
630-700
2 1/4 Cr/Mo
670-720
677
630-750
5CrMo
700-750
677
710-750
3 1/2 Ni
530-580
593
580-620
Note from Table 1 that ASME VIII specifies a minimum holding temperature and not a temperature range as in the
BS and EN specifications.
As mentioned above, PWHT is a mandatory requirement when certain criteria are met, the main one being the
thickness. BS EN 13445 and BSPD 5500 require that joints over 35mm thick are PWHTd, ASME VII above 19mm.
If, however, the vessel is to enter service where stress corrosion is a possibility, PWHT is mandatory, irrespective of
thickness. The soak time is also dependant on thickness. As a very general rule this is one hour per 25mm of
thickness; for accuracy, reference must be made to the relevant specification.
These different requirements within the specifications mean that great care needs to be taken if a procedure
qualification test is to be carried out that is intended to comply with more than one specification. A further important
point is that the PWHT temperature should not be above that of the original tempering temperature as there is a risk
of reducing the strength below the specified minimum for the steel. It is possible to PWHT above the tempering
temperature only if mechanical testing is carried out to show that the steel has adequate mechanical properties. The
testing should, obviously, be on the actual material in the new heat treatment condition.
Maximum and minimum heating and cooling rates above 350-400C are also specified in the application codes. Too
fast a heating or cooling rate can result in unacceptable distortion due to unequal heating or cooling and, in very
highly restrained components, may cause stress cracks to form during heating.
Application of PWHT
The method of PWHT depends on a number of factors; what equipment is available, what is the size and
configuration of the component, what soaking temperature needs to be achieved, can the equipment provide uniform
heating at the required heating rate? The best method is by using a furnace. This could be a permanent fixed furnace
or a temporary furnace erected around the component, this latter being particularly useful for large unwieldy
structures or to PWHT a large component on site. Permanent furnaces may be bogie loaded with a wheeled furnace
bed on to which the component is placed or a top hat furnace that uses a fixed hearth and a removable cover.
Typically, a furnace capable of heat treating a 150tonne pressure vessel would have dimensions of around 20m long,
a door 5x5m and would consume around 900cu/metres of gas per hour.
Furnaces can be heated using electricity, either resistance or induction heating, natural gas or oil. If using fossil fuels
care should be taken to ensure that the fuel does not contain elements such as sulphur that may cause cracking
problems with some alloys, particularly if these are austenitic steels or are nickel based corrosion resistant
cladding for example. Whichever fuel is used the furnace atmosphere should be closely controlled such that there is
not excessive oxidation and scaling or carburisation due to unburnt carbon in the furnace atmosphere. If the furnace
is gas or oil fired the flame must not be allowed to touch the component or the temperature monitoring
thermocouples; this will result in either local overheating or a failure to reach PWHT temperature.

Monitoring the temperature of the component during PWHT is essential. Most modern furnaces use zone control
with thermocouples measuring and controlling the temperature of regions within the furnace, control being exercised
automatically via computer software. Zone control is particularly useful to control the heating rates when PWHTing
a component with different thicknesses of steel. It is not, however, recommended to use monitoring of the furnace
temperature as proving the correct temperatures have been achieved in the component. Thermocouples are therefore
generally attached to the surface of the component at specified intervals and it is these that are used to control the
heating and cooling rates and the soak temperature automatically so that a uniform temperature is reached. There are
no hard and fast rules concerning the number and disposition of thermocouples, each item needs to be separately
assessed.
As mentioned earlier, the yield strength reduces as the temperature rises and the component may be unable to
support its own weight at the PWHT temperature. Excessive distortion is therefore a real possibility. It is essential
that the component is adequately supported during heat treatment and trestles shaped to fit the component should be
placed at regular intervals. The spacing of these will depend on the shape, diameter and thickness of the item.
Internal supports may be required inside a cylinder such as a pressure vessel; if so, the supports should be of a
similar material so that the coefficients of thermal expansion are matched.
Whilst heat treating a pressure vessel in one operation in a furnace large enough to accommodate the entire vessel is
the preferred method this is not always possible. In this case the pressure vessel application codes permit a
completed vessel to be heat treated in sections in the furnace. It is necessary to overlap the heated regions the
width of the overlap is generally related to the vessel thickness. BS EN 13445 for instance specifies an overlap of
5Re where R = inside diameter and e = thickness; ASME VIII specifies an overlap of 1.5 metres. It should be
remembered that if this is done there will be a region in the vessel (which may contain welds) that will have
experienced two cycles of PWHT and this needs to be taken into account in welding procedure qualification testing.
There is also an area of concern, this being the region between the heated area within the furnace and the cold
section outside the furnace. The temperature gradient must be controlled by adequately lagging the vessel with
thermally insulating blankets and the requirements are given in the application codes.
It is, of course, possible to assemble and PWHT a vessel in sections and then to carry out a local PWHT on the final
closure seam. Local PWHT will be discussed in the next part of this series on heat treatment.
The next article will cover further information on other alloys and methods of applying and controlling heat
treatment activities.
Heat Treatment Part 3
Job Knowledge
When it is not possible to place the entire component in a furnace for heat treatment (because of the size of the
fabrication, circumferential welds in a pipework system or when installing equipment on site, for example), then a
local PWHT may be the only option. Local PWHT needs careful planning to ensure that heating and cooling rates
are controlled and that an even and correct temperature is achieved. Uneven and/or rapid heating can give rise to
harmful temperature gradients producing thermally induced stresses that exceed the yield stress. This may result in
the development of new residual stresses when the component is cooled.
Local PWHT may be carried out using high velocity gas burners, infra red burners, induction heating and high or
low resistance heating elements. Electrical equipment is more easily installed and controlled than heating using
natural gas or propane, particularly on site. High voltage resistance heating is rarely used on site due to the need for
the radiant heaters to be positioned a set distance from the surface and, more significantly perhaps, the health and
safety risks involved with the use of high voltage current. Low voltage electrical resistance heating and induction
heating are the two most commonly used methods.
High velocity gas burners are more advantageous when large areas need to be heat treated, particularly if, for
example, firing can take place within a pressure vessel which then becomes its own furnace. For local PWHT of
vessel circumferential seams internal insulating barriers can be used to localise the heat source. Motorised valves
and micro-processor control of the combustion conditions enabled precise management of the heating cycle to be
achieved.

Low voltage electrical resistance heating uses flexible ceramic heating elements, colloquially known as corsets, an
appropriate number being assembled to cover the area to be heat treated. Induction heating uses insulated cables that
can be wrapped around the joint or shaped to fit the area to be heated or specially designed fitting for repetitive
PWHT operations as illustrated in Fig 1. To perform the PWHT, temperature control thermocouples are firstly
attached, often by capacitor discharge welding, the elements placed in position and the area then lagged with thermal
insulating blankets to reduce heat loss and to maintain an acceptable temperature gradient.
There are no standard terms used to describe the various regions within the locally PWHT'd area. In this article the
terms 'soak band', 'heated band', 'gradient control band', 'temperature gradient', which may be axial and through
thickness, and 'control zone' as suggested by the ASME will be used (see Fig 2).
The soak band is the area that is heated to, within the specified PWHT temperature and time range. It comprises the
weld, the two HAZs and part of the surrounding parent metal. The heated band is the area covered by the heating
elements, the temperature at the edge of the heated band generally being required to be at least half that of the soak
temperature. The temperature gradient control band is the region where thermal insulation, perhaps supplemented by
additional heating elements, is applied to ensure that an acceptable axial temperature gradient is achieved from
PWHT temperature to ambient. A control zone is the region where a number of heating elements are grouped
together and controlled by a single thermocouple, enabling different regions to be heated independently; particularly
useful with large diameter items or where there are variations in thickness.
Temperature gradients may be axial (along the length of a pipe or vessel) and through thickness. The through
thickness temperature gradient is caused by heat losses from the internal surface and is a function of both thickness
and internal diameter, the larger the diameter, the greater the effect of radiation and convection losses. Both the
width of the soak band and the temperature achieved can be substantially less than that on the outside of the pipe or
tube. Insulation on the inner surface will reduce the temperature/width differential but may not be possible on small
diameter tubes or pipework systems. This through thickness gradient is one of the reasons that specifications and
codes require the soak or heated band to be a minimum width, generally related in some way to the thickness of the
component.
As mentioned above, there are rules in the application codes concerning the size of the heated area, normally related
to the thickness. In a circular component such as a pipe butt weld or a pressure vessel circumferential seam the width
of the band is easy to calculate. ASME VIII for instance requires the soak band width to be twice the thickness of the
weld or 50.8mm either side of the weld, whichever is the lesser.
ASME B31.3 requires the soak band width to be the weld width plus 25.4mm either side of the weld. BS EN 13445
does not specify a soak band width but instead specifies a heated band width of 5Rt centred on the weld and where
R = component inside radius and t = component thickness. There are no requirements in the ASME codes regarding
heated band width. A very approximate rule of thumb for flat plate is that the heated band should be a minimum of
twice the length of the weld although practical considerations may prevent achieving this ideal.
There are no requirements, in any code or specification, on the width of the thermally insulated band although BS
EN 13445 recommends 10Re. It is essential that the relevant specification is referred to for specific guidance on
what is required and it is worth remembering that the specification requirements on soak or heated band widths are
minima and very little is lost by ensuring the specified dimensions are comfortably exceeded.
What is an acceptable axial temperature gradient? Again, there is little advice in the codes and specifications. It is
generally assumed that if the temperature at the edge of the heated band is above half that of the soak temperature
then the temperature gradient will not be harmful. During heating and cooling BS EN 13445 specifies a maximum
temperature difference of 150C in 4500mm below 450C (1C in 3mm) and 1000C in 4500mm above 4500C (1C
in 4.5mm).
To ensure that gradients and temperatures are controlled within acceptable limits sufficient thermocouples need to be
attached to provide both temperature control and recording. For small diameter tubes, eg less than 100mm diameter,
one control zone and one recording thermocouple are regarded as sufficient; between 100-200mm one control zone
and one recording thermocouple at each of the 12 oclock and 6 oclock positions; above 250mm diameter one
control zone and one recording thermocouple at each 900 quadrant, 12, 3, 6 and 9 oclock, are suggested.

These thermocouples should be placed on the centre line of the weld. Thermocouples will also be needed at the edge
of the soak band and the edge of the heated band. Ideally, thermocouples should also be placed on the opposite
surface to the heating elements to ensure that the correct through thickness temperature has been achieved although
this is rarely possible on pipe systems. It is advisable to double up on the thermocouples to cope with the possibility
of a thermocouple failure.
Thermocouples use a hot and a cold junction to measure the temperature, the hot junction being attached to the
component, the cold junction within the temperature recorder. For accurate temperature measurement the hot
junction must obviously be at the temperature of the component. Errors can be introduced if the junction is not
firmly attached, either by capacitor discharge (CD) welding, by mechanically fixing the wires to the component or
by overheating of the thermocouple junction.
CD welding of the thermocouple wires gives the most accurate results, particularly if the two wires are separated by
3-4mm. Mechanically attached wires will probably need to be insulated by covering the junction with heat resistant
putty to prevent overheating of the thermocouple by the overlying heater. If the wire covering is stripped back then
the bare wires also need to be insulated. It is advisable to specify the positions of the thermocouples on a drawing
and to include these within a formal written heat treatment procedure document that covers both the specification
and best practice requirements.
For more information, please contact us.

Fig 1. Induction PWHT of Pipework

Fig 2 Schematic of Temperature bands within a local PWHT (Reproduced with permission of the American Welding
Society (AWS), Miami, Florida, USA)
Heat Treatment of welded joints Part 4 - Precipitation or age hardening
Job Knowledge
There are several methods that may be used to increase the strength of a metal; alloying, quenching of steel, work
hardening, and one very specific form of heat treatment, that of precipitation or age hardening (the two terms are
synonymous). Many ferrous and non-ferrous alloys are capable of being age hardened and, as the name suggests,
this method of increasing the strength relies upon the formation of precipitates. To achieve the optimum combination
of mechanical properties the heat treatment cycles must be very closely controlled.
Unfortunately, to understand how the precipitates affect the mechanical properties it is necessary to introduce some
fundamental metallurgy.
The precipitation hardening mechanism requires the solubility of the alloying element, the solute, in the metal, the
solvent, to increase as the temperature increases as shown in the phase diagram in Figure 1 where the solvus line
shows decreasing solubility of alloying element B in the solvent A as the temperature falls.
An analogy is that of salt in water; as the temperature increases more salt can be dissolved but the converse happens
as the solution is allowed to cool when salt crystals begin to form or precipitate.
The same process occurs in suitably alloyed metals except that the processes of dissolving and precipitating take
place in the solid and are hence much slower as atoms find it more difficult to move in a solid than a liquid solution.

A consequence of this is that once the precipitates have been dissolved by taking the metal alloy to a sufficiently
high temperature, ie above the solvus line, they can be prevented from re-forming by rapid cooling or quenching.
This heat treatment is known as solution heat treatment and is carried out to form an unstable super-cooled solid
solution which, if reheated to a lower ageing or precipitation hardening temperature, will begin to re-form the
precipitates, these growing in size as the heat treatment proceeds. A schematic of such a heat treatment cycle is also
given in Figure 1 for alloy N.

Figure 1: Phase diagram showing decreasing solubility of B in A and heat treatment cycle
In the solution heat treated metal the atoms of the alloying element, the solute, are randomly distributed throughout
the matrix but once the temperature is raised the precipitates begin to form by a nucleation and growth process. At
relatively low temperatures and in a short timescale the solute atoms begin to cluster together to form extremely
small and very finely dispersed precipitates known as Guinier-Preston (GP) zones, named after the two metallurgists
who first identified them. The GP zones are so small that they are not visible using normal optical microscopes but
can be seen using electron microscopy at magnifications of around x100,000.
The GP zones are described as coherent, in other words they have the same crystal structure as the solvent metal.
However, they distort the crystal lattice, the framework on which the atoms are positioned. This makes it more
difficult for dislocations to move through the lattice and it is dislocation movement that enables metal to deform;
tensile strength and hardness therefore increase but ductility and toughness decrease. As the ageing treatment
continues or the temperature is raised the tensile strength also continues to increase as the precipitates grow and
coarsen whilst still remaining coherent. At some point, however, the precipitates begin to lose their coherency; they
become incoherent, forming separate particles within the metal with a different crystal structure from the solvent and
at this stage they become visible using an optical microscope.
Just before this point is reached is when the alloy has the very highest tensile strength. As these incoherent particles
form and grow in size the tensile strength progressively decreases. The alloy then is said to be overaged although the
precipitates still contribute towards the tensile strength of the alloy. The high strength low alloy (HSLA) steels are a
good example of this where incoherent, overaged precipitates are used to give a substantial increase in the tensile
strength.
In order to achieve the best combination of properties the precipitates need to be evenly distributed throughout the
grains of the alloy and of an optimum size. The ageing temperature and/or time can obviously be changed to tailor
the distribution and size of the precipitates; longer times and/or higher temperatures generally result in a reduction in
strength but an increase in ductility, an overaged structure giving the lowest tensile strength but the highest ductility.

Typical heat treatment times and temperatures of a range of different alloys are given in Table 1. The ferritic and
nickel based alloys are generally used in the overaged condition in order to ensure a reasonable degree of ductility. It
can be seen that with some alloys, eg 17/4PH stainless steel, the precipitation mechanism is sufficiently sluggish that
the component can be cooled in still air or, as with the A286 stainless steel, long ageing times are required.
On the other hand the aluminium-copper alloy 2219 is capable of ageing at room temperature if left for a couple of
days. Some of the 6000(Al-Si-Mg) and series 7000 (Al-Zn-Mg) alloys will similarly age at ambient temperature.
This is known as natural ageing; aging at an elevated temperature is known as artificial ageing.

Table 1: Typical ageing heat treatments and properties of a range of age hardening alloys
The close control of heat treatment times, temperatures and cooling rates is therefore essential if the required
properties are to be obtained. For the solution treatment of aluminium alloys a salt bath is frequently used, artificial
ageing taking place in a forced air circulation furnace. Illustrated in Figure 2 is the effect of varying the time and
temperature on the ultimate tensile strength of an Al-4%Cu alloy such as alloy 2025 where it can be seen that a
difference as small as 40OC in the ageing temperature can have a major effect on the strength. The higher
temperature needed by the nickel and ferrous alloys generally requires the use of gas fired or electrical furnaces with
sufficient thermocouples to ensure the correct temperatures are consistently achieved throughout the component.

Figure 2: Effect of varying ageing times and temperatures on tensile strength

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