Titanium Grade 1
Titanium Grade 1
Engineering Reference for Maximum Ductility and Formability Titanium
Titanium Grade 1 is the softest and most ductile grade within the commercially pure (CP) titanium family.
It is primarily selected for applications where formability, deep drawing, and corrosion resistance are more critical than mechanical strength.
From an engineering perspective, Grade 1 represents the formability extreme of CP titanium.
1. Material Classification
Titanium Grade 1 belongs to the category of Commercially Pure (CP) Titanium.
Lowest oxygen content among CP grades
No intentional alloying elements
Mechanical properties controlled mainly by impurity limits
Grade 1 is designed for maximum ductility and cold workability.
2. Chemical Composition (Engineering Perspective)
Titanium Grade 1 consists almost entirely of titanium with very tight impurity limits.
Titanium (Ti): Balance
Oxygen (O): Lowest level among CP grades
Iron (Fe), Carbon (C), Nitrogen (N), Hydrogen (H): Strictly limited
The low oxygen content directly results in high ductility and excellent formability.
3. Mechanical Properties – What Makes Grade 1 Unique
From an engineering standpoint, Grade 1 offers:
Lowest tensile and yield strength among CP titanium grades
Highest elongation and ductility
Excellent cold forming and deep drawing capability
Engineering implication
Grade 1 is not selected for load-bearing strength, but for shaping capability.
4. Corrosion Resistance Behavior
Despite its lower strength, Grade 1 provides excellent corrosion resistance, comparable to other CP titanium grades.
Key corrosion characteristics
Near-zero general corrosion in seawater
Excellent resistance in oxidizing environments
Stable passive titanium dioxide film
Grade 1 maintains corrosion performance as long as mechanical demands are modest.
5. Fabrication and Forming Advantages
Titanium Grade 1 is the most fabrication-friendly titanium grade.
Key advantages
Excellent cold forming and bending
Suitable for deep drawing and complex shapes
Low forming force compared with other titanium grades
Excellent weldability when proper procedures are followed
Grade 1 is often selected when complex geometry or thin-wall construction is required.
6. Typical Applications of Titanium Grade 1
Grade 1 is commonly used in applications such as:
Chemical processing equipment linings
Heat exchanger components requiring extensive forming
Thin plates and sheets for corrosion-resistant structures
Architectural panels
Applications where corrosion resistance is required but loads are low
Grade 1 is frequently chosen where manufacturing feasibility governs material selection.
7. Product Forms Commonly Supplied in Grade 1
Titanium Grade 1 is available in standard CP titanium product forms:
Sheets and plates
Tubes and thin-wall tubing
Pipes
Bars (limited structural use)
Its superior formability makes Grade 1 particularly suitable for sheet-based fabrication.
8. Grade 1 vs Grade 2 – Engineering Comparison
| Engineering Aspect | Grade 1 | Grade 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanical strength | Lower | Higher |
| Ductility / elongation | Highest | High |
| Formability | Excellent | Very good |
| Corrosion resistance | Excellent | Excellent |
| Typical role | Forming-driven | Baseline industrial |
Engineering rule
Select Grade 1 when formability is the dominant requirement; select Grade 2 when strength and general service dominate.
9. Engineering Limits and Proper Use
Grade 1 should not be selected when:
Structural load or pressure governs design
Fatigue resistance is required
Dimensional rigidity is critical
In such cases, Grade 2 provides a more balanced solution.
10. Applicable Standards and Specifications
Titanium Grade 1 is commonly supplied according to:
ASTM B265 – Sheets and plates
ASTM B338 – Tubes for heat exchangers and condensers
ASTM B861 / B862 – Pipes
ASTM B348 – Bars and billets
ASME SB equivalents
Material certification is typically provided per EN 10204 3.1 / 3.2.
11. Role of Grade 1 in the Titanium Grade System
From an engineering system perspective:
Titanium Grade 1 defines the lower-strength, maximum-formability boundary of CP titanium.
It complements:
Grade 2 – baseline industrial service
Grade 16 – cost-optimized corrosion upgrade
Grade 7 – severe corrosion environments
Grade 1 completes the CP titanium spectrum, ensuring correct material choice based on manufacturing and design needs, not just corrosion resistance.