Pub 139 Copper Nickel Welding and Fabrication PDF
Pub 139 Copper Nickel Welding and Fabrication PDF
Pub 139 Copper Nickel Welding and Fabrication PDF
Contents
6.0 Brazing
14
1.0 Introduction
15
17
4
4
4
9.0 Linings
19
10.0
20
21
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
6
7
7
7
7
21
21
21
22
23
4.0
Welding
24
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.5
4.6
4.7
4.8
4.9
4.10
13.0 Checklist
25
14.0 Bibliography
26
14.1
14.2
14.3
14.4
14.5
14.6
26
26
2.1 Standards
2.2 Composition
2.3 Mechanical and Physical Properties
8
8
9
9
10
10
11
12
12
12
13
13
13
5.1 Cutting
5.2 Welding
Desalination Plants
11.1
11.2
11.3
11.4
11.5
Flow Rates
Sand Abrasion
Localised Abrasion
Galvanic Behaviour
Handling Sulphides
General
Fabrication
Piping Systems, Heat Exchangers
and Condensers
Offshore Sheathing
Boat Hulls
Biofouling
26
26
27
27
28
Disclaimer:
Whilst this document has been prepared with care, Copper Development Association, Copper Development Association Inc and Nickel Institute
can give no warranty regarding the contents and shall not be liable for any direct, incidental or consequential damage arising out of its use. For
complete information on any material, the appropriate standard should be consulted.
Tables
Figures
1.0 Introduction
2.1 Standards
Table 1 gives some of the more common
international designations for both alloys.
2.2 Composition
The chemical composition ranges for the
two alloys vary between the different
standards. When materials are intended for
welding applications, the maximum limits
for some specific impurities need to be
restricted because of their effects on hot
ductility, and thus on weldability. Examples
of preferred limits for Zn, C, Pb, S and P are
shown in Table 2.
ASTM/UNS
ISO
CEN
90-10
C70600
C70620*
CuNi10Fe1Mn
CW352H
70-30
C71500
C71520*
CuNi30Fe1Mn
CW354H
*C70620 and C71520 are intended for products that will be subsequently welded
Table 2 UNS Chemical Composition (%) of 90-10 and 70-30 Alloys for Welding Applications
Alloy
UNS No
Cu
Min.
Ni
Fe
Mn
Max.
Zn
Max.
C
Max.
Pb
Max.
S
Max.
P
Max.
Other
Max.
90-10
C70620
>86.5
9-11
11.8
1.0
0.5
0.05
0.02
0.02
0.02
0.5
70-30
C71520
>65.0
29-33
0.4-1
1.0
0.5
0.05
0.02
0.02
0.02
0.5
Table 3 Typical Mechanical Properties of Annealed Copper-nickel Sheet and Plate (taken from EN1652:1997)
Alloy
Elongation Min.
%
Hardness
HV
90-10
100
300
30
90
120
350
35
100
70-30
90-10
70-30
kg/dm
8.90
8.95
7.85
Melting range
1100-1145
1170-1240
1460-1490
Specific heat
J/kgK
377
377
485
Thermal conductivity
W/mK
40
29
50
10-6/K
17
16
12
microhm/cm
19
34
30
Modulus of elasticity
GPa
135
152
210
Modulus of rigidity
GPa
50
56
81
Density
Electrical resistivity at 20 C
o
3.2 Forming
Copper-nickels can be hot or cold formed,
although cold working is preferred; a
maximum of 50% reduction is achievable
before a full inter-stage anneal becomes
necessary. A 20% cold reduction
approximately halves the as-annealed
elongation and doubles the proof strength.
Hot working is carried out at 850-950C
(90-10) or 925-1025C (70-30) but can lead
to hot cracking in inexperienced hands.
Tubes can be bent by a range of methods,
including rotary draw bending, 3-roll
bending, compression bending and ram
bending (press bending). When bending
copper-nickel, a mandrel and wiper die
are also applied for support (mandrel
bending). Care must be taken to get
smooth bends and avoid wrinkling, because
liquid turbulence in service can lead to
impingement attack. Bends with a tube
bend radius of twice the tube diameter
can be produced. Smaller radii require
prefabricated bends.
3.3 Heat Treatment
The work piece should be clean and free
from any contamination before and during
heating. Copper-nickels can embrittle if
heated in the presence of contaminants
such as sulphur, phosphorus, lead and
other low melting point metals, sources
of which include paints, marking crayons,
lubricating grease and fluids. Fuels used
must be low in sulphur; normally, fuel oils
containing less than 0.5% by weight of
sulphur are satisfactory.
Oxidising atmospheres cause surface
scaling and therefore furnace atmospheres
should be between neutral and slightly
reducing and must not fluctuate between
oxidising and reducing conditions. Flame
impingement must be avoided.
For a full anneal, soaking times of 3-5
minutes per mm thickness are appropriate.
90-10 250-500C
70-30 300-400C.
3.4 Descaling
Surface oxide films on both alloys can be
very tenacious. Oxides and discolouration
adjacent to welds can be removed with
very fine abrasive belts or discs. If pickling
is required, a hot 5-10% sulphuric acid
solution containing 0.35g/l potassium
dichromate is satisfactory. Before pickling,
oxides can be broken up by a grit blast.
The pickled components should be rinsed
thoroughly in hot, fresh water and finally
dried in hot air.
3.5 Painting
Painting copper-nickel is strictly
unnecessary as the alloys inherently resist
corrosion and biofouling. However, it is
sometimes desirable, perhaps for aesthetic
reasons, or to reduce the exposed metal
area in a bimetallic couple, and so reduce
the risk of galvanic corrosion.
A thorough roughening by grit or sand
blasting is crucial before paint is applied.
Compared with treating steel, a finer
particle size and less pressure should be
used. Above the water line on boat hulls,
epoxy followed by polyurethane coatings
can be applied. Leading paint suppliers
will normally prefer to recommend
appropriate paint specifications based
on their proprietary products for specific
applications.
4.0 Welding
A
t: up to 3mm, A: 0-1.5mm
C
t
B
A
t: 3-15mm, A: 1-3mm, B: 1.5-2.5mm, C: 70-80
Figure 1 Examples of weld preparations for joining copper-nickel plate
4.3 Weld Preparations
It is possible to weld copper-nickel up to
3mm thick with a square butt preparation.
However, autogenous welding should
not be attempted, since this will result
in porous welds due to the absence of
effective deoxidisers in the alloys. Above
this thickness, a bevelled preparation must
be used; the included angle of the V should
be larger than for carbon steel - typically,
70 or more - because the molten weld
metal is not as fluid as with carbon steels,
and manipulation of the electrode or
torch is necessary to ensure fusion with
the side walls. Figure 1 shows some weld
preparations.
MMA
(SMAW)
TIG (GTAW)
MIG (GMAW)
Form
Type
AWS Spec
BS Spec
Flux-coated
electrode
Cu-30% Ni
A5.6 ECuNi
In draft
65% Ni-Cu
A5.11 ENiCu-7
BS EN ISO 14172
E Ni 4060
Cu-30% Ni
A5.7 ERCuNi
BS EN ISO 24373
S Cu 7158
65% Ni-Cu
A5.14 ERNiCu-7
BS EN ISO 18274
S Ni 4060
Wire in
straight
lengths or
spools
10
TIG (GTAW) welding 90-10 copper-nickel assembly. Note baffle for backing gas supply at root
run stage (Courtesy Eucaro Buntmetall GmbH)
11
Tensile
Strength
N/mm2
Elongation
5d*
%
Hardness
HV
TIG (GTAW)
200
385
40
105
MMA (SMAW)
270
420
34
120
Welding process
Butt weld showing area which had been cleaned after welding
(Courtesy Eucaro Buntmetall GmbH)
Pipe assembly showing both cold pulled T pieces and welded saddle connections
(Courtesy Eucaro Buntmetall GmbH)
12
5.1 Cutting
Unlike solid copper-nickel plate, it is
possible to use oxyacetylene equipment
for cutting clad plate if the ratio of steel to
clad thickness is 4:1 or greater (20% clad
or less). The clad side of the plate is placed
face down so that cutting starts from the
steel side and the slag stream from the
backing steel is a cutting agent for the
cladding. This is not necessary for plasmaarc cutting, but trials may be needed to
find the most suitable settings for either
cutting procedure. The cut face must be
ground or machined to clean metal before
welding.
5.2 Welding
0 - 1.5mm
CuNi clad
bevel optional
Runs 1, 2, 3 (or as
needed to fill) - steel
filler
1
2
CuNi clad
carbon steel
carbon steel
CuNi clad
30 to 450
CuNi clad
2A
carbon steel
1
2
1.55mm min
carbon steel
1A
13
6.0 Brazing
14
Tube to tubesheet welding of a large heat exchanger using automatic TIG (GTAW) welding heads
(Courtesy Arc Machines Inc)
15
Cladding
Fillet weld
A1 A2
Tube wall
Tubesheet
ligament
Tube wall
Cladding
D1 D2
Tubesheet
ligament
E1 E2
B1 B2
Added-ring weld
F1 F2
Figure 3 Typical tube weld joint preparations showing finished weld on the right side. 1st and 3rd columns are solid copper-nickel tubesheet; the
2nd and 4th columns are clad plate (ex Reynolds et al - see Bibligraphy)
16
90-10 copper-nickel splash zone protection on a platform in the Morecambe Field, UK.
The sheathing has been in service over 25 years
(Courtesy Centrica Energy Upstream, East Irish Sea)
17
Copper-nickel
Copper-nickel
50mm
1 run 70Cu-30Ni
Structural steel
Root and
cap runs
65% Ni-Cu
Structural Steel
Typical circumferential
butt joint
Typical longitudinal
lap joint
Typical circumferential
fillet joint
18
9.0 Linings
Large diameter steel pipe manufactured with 90-10 copper-nickel inner liner
(Courtesy of KME Germany GmbH & Co. KG/Bergrohr GmbH)
19
20
21
- 0.2
- 1.0
- 1.2
- 1.4
- 1.6
Magnesium
Zinc
Beryllium
Aluminium alloys
Cadmium
Mild steel, cast iron
Low alloy steel
Austenitic nickel cast iron
Aluminium bronze
Naval brass, yellow brass, red brass
Tin
Copper
Pb-Sn solder (50/50)
Admiralty brass, aluminium brass
Manganese bronze
Silicon bronze
Tin bronze
Stainless steel types 410, 416
Nickel-silver
90-10 Copper-nickel
80-20 Copper-nickel
Stainless steel type 430
Lead
70-30 Copper-nickel
Nickel-aluminium-bronze
Nickel-chromium alloy 800
Silver braze alloys
Nickel 200
Silver
Stainless steel types 302, 304, 321, 343
Nickel-copper alloys 400, K500
Stainless steel types 316, 317
Alloy 20 stainless steels cast and wrought
Nickel-iron-chromium alloy 825
Nickel-molybdenum alloy B
Titanium
Nickel-chromium-molybdenum alloy C
Platinum
Graphite
Alloys are listed in the order of the corrosion potential they exhibit in flowing sea water
(2.5-4m/sec, 10-27oC)
Alloys indicated by
in the chart may become active and exhibit a potential near
-0.5 volts in low-velocity or poorly aerated water, and in shielded areas
22
23
Exposure panels (left to right in above picture): steel, 90-10 copper-nickel sheathed steel,
copper-nickel - all three protected with aluminium anodes - and freely exposed copper-nickel.
After 12 months exposure at Langstone Harbour, UK, there was no macrofouling on the freely
exposed panel.
Table 7 Biofouling Mass on Copper-nickel Sheathed Test Pilings After 5 and 10 Years Exposure
Piling
Biofouling Mass
kg/m2
Percentage of
Area Covered
5 year removal
18
100
10 year removal
12
100
5 year removal
0.36
1.9
10 year removal
0.14
1.2
5 year removal
7.95
44.3
10 year removal
4.43
36.8
Concrete insulated
Directly welded
Rubber insulated
24
5 year removal
0.26
1.4
10 year removal
0.62
5.3
13.0 Checklist
Use 70-30 copper nickel consumables for similar welds in 90-10 and 70-30 copper nickel
Ensure maximum velocity limits for the alloys are not exceeded
Add ferrous sulphate to enhance the protective film formation if extra safeguard
required
Electrically insulate copper-nickels from less noble alloys when highest resistance to
biofouling is required.
25
14.0 Bibliography
14.1 General
Heat Exchanger and Piping Systems from Copper Alloys Commissioning, Operating and Shutdown. M Jasner et al. KME
publication. 1998
14.2 Fabrication
Joining Copper-nickel Alloys. R E Avery. CDA Inc Seminar Technical
Report 7044-1919. The Application of Copper-nickel Alloys in Marine
Systems. 1992
26
14.6 Biofouling
Long Term Exposure Trials Evaluating the Biofouling and Corrosion
Resistance of Copper-nickel Alloy Sheathing Materials. S Campbell
and C Powell. 12th International Congress on Marine Corrosion and
Fouling. July 2004. University of Southampton
Biofouling Resistance of Cupronickel - Basics and Experience.
W Schleich and K Steinkamp. Stainless Steel World 2003 Conference.
Maastricht. November 2003
Preventing Biofouling with Copper Alloys. CDA Publication 157. 2002
Seawater Corrosion Resistance of 90-10 and 70-30 Copper-nickel
- 14 year Exposures. K Efird and Anderson. Material Performance.
November 1975
The Interrelation of Corrosion and Fouling of Materials in Seawater.
K Efird. NACE Corrosion-75. Toronto. 1975
Controlling Biofouling on Ferry Hulls with Copper-nickel. L Boulton,
C Powell. 10th International Congress on Marine Corrosion and
Fouling. Melbourne 1999
27
28
Notes
|
75
29