Alloy B2

Titanium

Nickel

Overview

Grades & Materials

Pure Nickel

Nickel–Chromium Alloys

Nickel–Molybdenum Alloys

Alloy B2

Nickel–Chromium–Molybdenum Alloys

Nickel–Iron Alloys

Applications

Products

Standards & Quality

Technical Knowledge

Selection Guide

Stainless

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Copper, Brass and Bronze

Alloy B2

Alloy B2 is a nickel–molybdenum (Ni–Mo) alloy specifically engineered for exceptional resistance to strong reducing acids, particularly hydrochloric acid (HCl).
It is one of the most corrosion-resistant materials available for severe chemical processing environments where stainless steels, Ni–Cr alloys, and even many Ni–Cr–Mo alloys fail rapidly.

Within the Nickel–Molybdenum alloy family, Alloy B2 represents a pure acid-resistance solution, optimized for chemical survivability rather than oxidation or high-temperature service.

Chemical & Metallurgical Characteristics

Alloy B2 is characterized by a high molybdenum content in a nickel matrix, with extremely low levels of chromium and iron.

Key Metallurgical Features

  • High Mo content for superior reducing-acid resistance

  • Very low Cr and Fe to avoid instability in reducing media

  • Stable face-centered cubic (FCC) structure

  • Excellent resistance to embrittlement in corrosive environments

This chemistry makes Alloy B2 exceptionally effective in non-oxidizing and low-oxygen acidic systems.

Corrosion Resistance Performance

Alloy B2 is specifically designed for extreme chemical corrosion resistance, not for oxidation protection.

Excellent Resistance In:

  • Hydrochloric acid (HCl) at all concentrations

  • Sulfuric acid under reducing conditions

  • Acetic, formic, and phosphoric acids

  • Acidic process streams with low oxidizing potential

Limitations:

  • Poor resistance to oxidizing environments

  • Not suitable for nitric acid or oxidizing chlorides

  • Susceptible to rapid attack in the presence of oxidizing contaminants

Process control is critical — even small amounts of oxidizing species can significantly reduce Alloy B2 performance.

Mechanical Properties (Typical)

Alloy B2 offers:

  • Moderate tensile and yield strength

  • Excellent ductility and toughness

  • Stable mechanical behavior in corrosive environments

Although not a high-strength alloy, Alloy B2 is selected primarily for chemical resistance and service life, not load-bearing capacity.

Typical Applications

Alloy B2 is widely used in chemical plants handling strong reducing acids, where material failure would be rapid and costly.

Common Applications Include:

  • Hydrochloric acid reactors and vessels

  • Acid regeneration and pickling systems

  • Chemical processing heat exchangers

  • Acid transfer piping and tubing

  • Corrosion-critical process equipment

In these applications, Alloy B2 often represents the only technically viable material option.

Product Forms Available

Alloy B2 is commonly supplied in the following forms:

  • Seamless tubes

  • Pipes

  • Plates and sheets

  • Bars and rods

  • Forgings and fittings

For chemical processing and heat exchanger applications, seamless Alloy B2 tubes are preferred due to:

  • Uniform wall thickness

  • Reliable pressure performance

  • Consistent corrosion resistance

Manufacturing & Fabrication

Alloy B2 can be fabricated using conventional methods, but strict controls are required.

Processing Notes

  • Hot and cold working are feasible

  • Solution annealing is typically required

  • Welding must avoid contamination and oxidizing conditions

Proper fabrication procedures are essential to maintain corrosion resistance and microstructural stability.

Standards & Specifications

Alloy B2 products are typically supplied in accordance with:

  • ASTM material specifications

  • ASME pressure equipment standards

  • Project-specific chemical service requirements

Typical Inspection & Testing:

  • Chemical composition analysis

  • Mechanical testing

  • Dimensional inspection

  • Eddy current or ultrasonic testing (for tubes)

  • PMI verification

Complete Mill Test Certificates (MTC) and full traceability are generally provided.

Alloy B2 vs Ni–Cr–Mo Alloys (Concept)

  • Alloy B2

    • Optimized for reducing acids

    • Exceptional HCl resistance

    • Very limited oxidation resistance

  • Ni–Cr–Mo alloys (e.g. Alloy C276)

    • Broader corrosion resistance range

    • Better tolerance to oxidizing contaminants

    • Slightly reduced performance in pure reducing acids

Material selection depends on whether the process environment is strictly reducing or mixed.

When to Choose Alloy B2

Alloy B2 is recommended when:

  • The service medium is strongly reducing

  • Hydrochloric acid is present at high concentration

  • Uniform corrosion is the primary failure risk

  • Maximum chemical resistance is required

It is not recommended when:

  • Oxidizing conditions may occur

  • Nitric acid or oxidizing chlorides are present

  • High-temperature oxidation resistance is required