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Inconel 600/625

October 3, 2022
Home Etchants

Inconel 600 and 625 are both solid-solution strengthened nickel chromium alloys. They are used for their corrosion resistance more than their high temperature counterparts. They are commonly used in applications where corrosion and strength are of concern such as in the oil and gas industry.

Inconel 600 forms a stable nickel-chromium-iron solid solution with finely dispersed carbides. Likewise, Inconel 625 is a nickel-chromium-iron-molybdenum alloy that forms a solid solution with finely dispersed carbides. However, Inconel 625 has greater strength and slightly better corrosion resistance due to its greater amount of alloying and higher chromium content.

The below photomicrographs are of a sample of first Inconel 600 and second Inconel 625 at 500X magnification. The samples were taken from bar stock, hot mounted, ground, and polished to a sub-micron final polish. The samples were then etched using either Waterless Kalling’s or a mixture of Hydrochloric Acid and Hydrogen Peroxide. The microstructure of both samples consists of fine twin grains (solid solution matrix) with finely dispersed carbides.

Waterless Kalling’s:

12 grams Cupric Chloride, 20 mL Hydrochloric Acid, 225
mL Ethanol

 Hydrochloric Acid/Hydrogen Peroxide:

6 mL Hydrochloric Acid to 4 drops Hydrogen Peroxide
(30% concentration)

(MUST BE USED QUICKLY ONCE MIXED)

 

View of Inconel 600 at 200X Etchant Waterless Kalling’s
View of Inconel 600 at 500X Etchant Waterless Kalling’s
View of Inconel 625 at 200X Etchant HCL/H2O2
View of Inconel 625 at 500X Etchant HCL/H2O2
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Neel Nadpara

Neel Nadpara

I am a materials engineer who loves to learn new things and explore different ways to solve problems. I have experience working in mechanical design, manufacturing/materials processing, materials testing/metallurgical analysis, and quality. If you look at human evolution and where we are as a species and how we got there, the story could not be told without the advent and improvement of metallurgy over time. Point to anything in a room and almost everything has something metallic within it. As a result, I find metallurgy fascinating and metallography allows us to understand metallurgy. Metallography, while a science, has a unique abstract and artistic component to it while also serving to help us understand metals. I wanted to create this blog to share metallography, discuss tips/tricks, and hopefully start some interesting discussions.

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About Me

Neel Nadpara

Materials Engineer

Hello & welcome to my blog! My name is Neel Nadpara and I love learning about, reading, discussing metallography.

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