316L vs Duplex Stainless Steel Pipes: Why 2205 Is Replacing 316L in High-Chloride Environments
If you’ve ever specified stainless steel pipes for marine, chemical, or desalination projects, you’ve likely faced this dilemma: 316L has been the workhorse for decades, but in high-chloride conditions, it keeps failing – often too soon.
Enter 2205 duplex stainless steel. Engineers and procurement teams are increasingly switching to 2205 for chloride-rich environments. But is it just a trend, or is there real engineering behind it?
Let’s break down the facts – no fluff, just performance data and field experience.
1. The Chloride Problem: Why 316L Struggles
316L stainless steel contains 16–18% chromium, 10–14% nickel, and 2–3% molybdenum. That moly helps resist pitting – but only up to a point.
In environments with >1000 ppm chlorides (seawater, brackish water, chemical processing, or road salt spray), 316L becomes vulnerable to:
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Pitting corrosion – microscopic holes that grow into leaks.
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Crevice corrosion – under gaskets, flanges, or deposits.
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Chloride stress corrosion cracking (CSCC) – the silent killer. At temperatures above 50–60°C (120–140°F) with chlorides present, 316L can crack without warning.
Real-world example: Many seawater cooling lines made of 316L start pitting within 6–12 months. Some fail completely in under two years.
2. What Makes 2205 Different?
2205 duplex stainless steel has a balanced austenitic-ferritic microstructure – roughly 50% each. Its key alloying elements:
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22–23% chromium
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4.5–6.5% nickel
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3–3.5% molybdenum
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0.14–0.20% nitrogen
That higher chromium and nitrogen content dramatically improves localized corrosion resistance.
Key performance differences (tested per ASTM G48):
| Property | 316L | 2205 |
|---|---|---|
| PREN (Pitting Resistance Equivalent Number) | ~24–26 | ~35–38 |
| Critical pitting temperature in 1M NaCl | ~10–15°C | ~50–60°C |
| Stress corrosion cracking limit | ~60°C | >150°C (no failure in typical service) |
| Yield strength (MPa) | ~170–220 | ~450–550 |
PREN = %Cr + 3.3×%Mo + 16×%N. Higher is better for chloride resistance.
In plain English: 2205 resists pitting at temperatures where 316L would already be leaking, and it virtually eliminates SCC risk in normal industrial ranges.
3. Mechanical Strength: Do More with Less
2205’s yield strength is roughly 2.5x higher than 316L. What does that mean for you?
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You can use thinner walls for the same pressure rating.
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Result: Lighter pipe, lower material cost per meter, and reduced support structure needs.
Example: A 6-inch Sch 40S pipe in 316L weighs ~18.7 kg/m. A 2205 pipe for the same service class can often drop to Sch 10S – weighing ~9.5 kg/m. That’s nearly 50% less weight, which directly cuts shipping and installation costs.
4. Cost Reality: Higher Upfront, Lower Lifetime Cost
Let’s be honest – 2205 costs more per kg. Typical raw material premium: 1.5x to 2x over 316L. But that’s only part of the equation.
Total cost of ownership (TCO) comparison over 10 years in a high-chloride environment:
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316L: Lower initial buy → but expect 1–2 full replacements due to corrosion, plus downtime, plus leak repair labor, plus lost production.
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2205: Higher upfront → zero corrosion failures, zero replacements, minimal maintenance.
Many chemical plants and offshore platforms have calculated that 2205 pays for itself within 2–3 years simply by avoiding unplanned shutdowns.
5. Where 2205 Is Now the Default Choice
Industry after industry is updating specs. Common applications where 2205 has largely replaced 316L:
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Desalination plants (brine handling, high-pressure piping)
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Offshore oil & gas (topside and subsea lines)
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Marine exhaust & scrubber systems
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Chemical tankers (cargo piping for chlorides, acids)
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Pulp & paper (bleach plants – chlorinated environments)
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Geothermal power (high-chloride, high-temperature brines)
Even the water treatment industry – historically slow to change – now recommends 2205 for reverse osmosis (RO) feed lines and brine recirculation loops.
6. One Caveat: Fabrication and Welding
2205 is not a drop-in replacement if your workshop only knows 316L. A few practical notes:
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Welding requires lower heat input and often a nitrogen-backed shielding gas to maintain duplex structure.
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Preheating is usually not required, but interpass temperature must be kept below 150°C (300°F).
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Post-weld heat treatment is generally not needed – unlike some superaustenitics.
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Pickling and passivation must be done carefully to avoid preferential attack on the ferrite phase.
If your fabricator follows ASME Section IX or similar duplex welding procedures, it’s perfectly doable. Just don’t hand it to an inexperienced welder.
Conclusion: Switch or Stick?
| Your environment | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Clean water, low chlorides (<200 ppm), room temp | 316L – cheaper, well understood |
| Seawater, brackish, brine, >1000 ppm chlorides, or temps >50°C | 2205 – it will save you money and downtime |
316L still has a place in general industrial service. But if your project involves chlorides – especially warm chlorides – 2205 isn’t a luxury. It’s the minimum requirement for reliability.
Need a quick rule of thumb?
If you’ve ever seen “brown staining” or pinhole leaks on your 316L pipes, you’ve already paid for 2205. You just didn’t get it.
Need help selecting the right grade for your specific media, temperature, and chloride level? Contact our engineering support – we’ll help you compare PREN values and lifecycle costs before you buy.
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