Pure Nickel

Pure Nickel

Pure Nickel refers to commercially pure nickel materials with a nickel content typically ≥ 99%.
Within the nickel material system, pure nickel represents the baseline corrosion-resistant material, valued for its excellent chemical stability, ductility, and resistance to alkaline and reducing environments.

This category plays a role similar to Titanium Grade 2 in the titanium system — not the strongest alloy, but often the most chemically reliable and predictable in the right environment.

Material Characteristics

Pure nickel exhibits a stable face-centered cubic (FCC) crystal structure, which provides consistent mechanical behavior across a wide temperature range.

Key Properties

  • Excellent resistance to alkaline and caustic solutions

  • Good resistance in reducing environments

  • High ductility and formability

  • Good thermal and electrical conductivity

  • Stable performance at low and moderate temperatures

Pure nickel is not designed for extreme strength or high-temperature oxidation resistance, but rather for chemical compatibility and long-term stability.

Corrosion Resistance Behavior

Pure nickel performs best in environments where corrosion mechanisms are dominated by alkaline attack or reducing chemistry.

Suitable Media

  • Sodium hydroxide (NaOH)

  • Potassium hydroxide (KOH)

  • Neutral salts

  • Dry gases at moderate temperatures

Limitations

  • Limited resistance to strong oxidizing acids

  • Not recommended for high-chloride, oxidizing environments

  • Not suitable for very high-temperature oxidation service

Material selection should always consider actual process chemistry, not just nominal corrosion resistance.

Typical Applications

Pure nickel is commonly selected for applications where chemical purity, cleanliness, and corrosion stability are more important than high mechanical strength.

Common Uses

  • Caustic soda production and handling systems

  • Chemical processing equipment

  • Food and pharmaceutical processing equipment

  • Heat exchanger components in alkaline service

  • Low-temperature and cryogenic equipment

In many chemical plants, pure nickel remains a cost-effective and reliable solution when stainless steels suffer rapid alkaline corrosion.

Common Pure Nickel Grades

Pure nickel is primarily supplied under two internationally recognized grades:

Nickel 200

  • Commercially pure nickel

  • Excellent resistance to alkaline environments

  • Suitable for a wide range of industrial applications

Nickel 201

  • Low-carbon version of Nickel 200

  • Improved resistance to graphitization at elevated temperatures

  • Preferred for applications above approximately 315 °C

Both grades share similar corrosion resistance, with Nickel 201 favored for higher-temperature service.

Product Forms

Pure nickel materials are commonly supplied in the following forms:

For heat exchanger and process equipment, seamless pure nickel tubes are widely used due to:

  • Uniform wall thickness

  • Reliable pressure performance

  • Consistent corrosion behavior

Standards & Specifications

Pure nickel products are typically manufactured and tested in accordance with:

  • ASTM standards

  • ASME material specifications

  • EN standards (where applicable)

Common inspections include:

  • Chemical composition analysis

  • Mechanical property testing

  • Dimensional inspection

  • Eddy current or ultrasonic testing (for tubes)

  • PMI verification

When to Choose Pure Nickel

Pure nickel is the right choice when:

  • The environment is alkaline or reducing

  • Chemical stability is more critical than strength

  • Long-term corrosion resistance is required

  • Stainless steels show rapid degradation

It is not recommended when:

  • High-temperature oxidation resistance is required

  • Strong oxidizing acids are present

  • Severe chloride-induced corrosion is expected

Position Within the Nickel Material System

Within the Nickel → Grades & Materials structure, Pure Nickel serves as:

  • The foundation material category

  • A reference point for alloy performance comparison

  • The entry level for nickel-based corrosion-resistant solutions

From here, engineers typically move to: