Titanium Plates & Sheets
Titanium Plates & Sheets
Engineering Product Reference for Fabrication, Tube Sheets, and Pressure Components
Titanium plates and sheets are fundamental materials used in fabricated equipment, pressure components, and structural parts where corrosion resistance and long-term reliability are required.
Unlike tubes and pipes, plates and sheets serve as the starting material for forming, welding, and machining, enabling complex component geometry and system integration.
This page explains the engineering role, selection logic, and application scope of titanium plates and sheets.
1. Role of Titanium Plates & Sheets in Engineering Systems
Titanium plates and sheets are typically used where:
Flat or formed components are required
Structural rigidity and dimensional stability are important
Corrosion-resistant pressure parts are needed
Fabrication flexibility is critical
Common components include tube sheets, pressure vessel shells, cladding, baffles, covers, and structural panels.
2. Plates vs Sheets – Engineering Distinction
From an engineering perspective, plates and sheets differ mainly in thickness and fabrication role.
| Aspect | Sheets | Plates |
|---|---|---|
| Typical thickness | Thin to moderate | Moderate to thick |
| Primary use | Forming, cladding, panels | Pressure parts, tube sheets |
| Fabrication method | Bending, forming, welding | Machining, drilling, welding |
| Structural role | Secondary | Primary |
Engineering rule
Select plates when pressure or rigidity governs design; select sheets when forming and flexibility dominate.
3. Why Titanium Plates & Sheets Are Selected
Titanium plates and sheets are chosen because they offer:
Excellent corrosion resistance in seawater and chemical media
High strength-to-weight ratio compared with corrosion-resistant steels
No need for corrosion allowance
Stable mechanical properties over long service life
These characteristics make titanium ideal for fabricated equipment operating in aggressive environments.
4. Titanium Grade Selection for Plates & Sheets
Grade selection depends on corrosion severity and fabrication requirements.
Commonly Used Grades
Grade 2 – Baseline choice for most fabricated components
Grade 1 – Selected when extensive forming or deep drawing is required
Grade 16 – Used where moderate corrosion uncertainty exists
Grade 7 – Selected for severe corrosion or crevice-prone components
Grade 5 – Used for structural components where strength dominates
Engineering rule
Fabrication requirements should be evaluated together with corrosion risk—not separately.
5. Typical Applications of Titanium Plates & Sheets
Titanium plates and sheets are widely used in:
Heat exchangers – tube sheets, baffles, channel covers
Pressure vessels – shells, heads, internal components
Marine & Offshore – structural and corrosion-resistant panels
Petrochemical plants – corrosion-resistant linings and equipment
Industrial equipment – fabricated housings and supports
These applications prioritize fabrication feasibility and corrosion reliability.
6. Fabrication and Forming Considerations
When working with titanium plates and sheets, engineers should consider:
Cold forming limits and springback
Bending radius requirements
Heat input control during welding
Cleanliness to prevent contamination
Tooling material compatibility
Titanium’s fabrication behavior differs from steel and requires process awareness.
7. Welding and Machining Notes
Titanium plate and sheet welding requires:
Inert gas shielding on weld and heat-affected zones
Controlled atmosphere until cooling
Qualified welding procedures
Machining considerations include:
Lower cutting speed
Sharp tooling
Heat control to prevent surface damage
Correct procedures preserve corrosion resistance and mechanical integrity.
8. Inspection, Testing, and Certification
Titanium plates and sheets are commonly supplied with:
Chemical composition verification
Mechanical testing
Ultrasonic testing (for thicker plates)
Visual and dimensional inspection
Typical standards include:
ASTM B265 – Titanium and titanium alloy plates and sheets
ASME SB equivalents for pressure equipment
Certification is typically provided per EN 10204 3.1 or 3.2.
9. Lifecycle Value of Titanium Plates & Sheets
In fabricated equipment, titanium plates and sheets provide:
Long service life without corrosion allowance
Reduced inspection and maintenance frequency
Stable mechanical and corrosion performance
Lower total lifecycle cost
They are often selected to eliminate corrosion-related design compromises.
10. How This Page Connects to the Titanium System
This product page integrates with:
Titanium Tubes – heat transfer components
Titanium Pipes – pressure and transport systems
Grades & Materials – grade behavior and selection
Applications – environment-specific requirements
Standards & Quality – compliance and inspection
Titanium plates and sheets form the fabrication foundation of corrosion-resistant systems.