ASME & Pressure Equipment Standards
ASME & Pressure Equipment Standards
Engineering Interpretation for Titanium Use in Pressure Equipment
In pressure equipment applications, material compliance alone is not sufficient.
While ASTM standards define material properties, ASME codes govern how materials are permitted to be used in pressure-retaining equipment.
This page explains how titanium materials are treated under ASME pressure equipment codes, and how engineers should correctly interpret the relationship between ASTM, ASME, and project specifications.
1. ASTM vs ASME – Understanding the Difference
A common source of confusion in titanium projects is the assumption that ASTM compliance automatically satisfies pressure equipment requirements.
Fundamental distinction
ASTM
Material specifications
Defines chemistry, mechanical properties, and test methods
ASME
Construction codes for pressure equipment
Defines allowable stress, design rules, fabrication, inspection, and certification
ASTM qualifies the material. ASME qualifies its use in pressure equipment.
2. ASME SB Standards for Titanium Materials
For pressure equipment built to ASME code, titanium materials are typically specified using ASME SB (Specification Boiler) standards, which are largely derived from ASTM but formally adopted into the ASME code system.
Common ASME SB Titanium Standards
| Product Form | ASME Standard | ASTM Origin |
|---|---|---|
| Plates & Sheets | ASME SB-265 | ASTM B265 |
| Heat Exchanger Tubes | ASME SB-338 | ASTM B338 |
| Seamless Pipes | ASME SB-861 | ASTM B861 |
| Welded Pipes | ASME SB-862 | ASTM B862 |
| Bars & Billets | ASME SB-348 | ASTM B348 |
| Forgings | ASME SB-381 | ASTM B381 |
Engineering note
ASME SB standards ensure material traceability within the ASME code framework.
3. ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code (BPVC)
Titanium pressure equipment is most commonly designed and fabricated under:
ASME BPVC Section VIII, Division 1 – General pressure vessels
ASME BPVC Section VIII, Division 2 – Higher design stress, more detailed analysis
These sections govern:
Allowable stress values
Design formulas and safety factors
Fabrication requirements
Inspection and testing obligations
4. Allowable Stress and Design Implications
In ASME design, allowable stress values, not tensile strength, govern wall thickness and component sizing.
Engineering implications
High-strength titanium alloys do not automatically permit thinner walls
CP titanium grades often have conservative allowable stresses
Corrosion resistance and design life must be balanced with thickness and cost
ASME design is stress-controlled, not strength-driven.
5. Titanium in Heat Exchangers Under ASME
For heat exchangers:
Tubes are typically specified to ASME SB-338
Tube sheets and pressure parts to ASME SB-265 / SB-381
Design and fabrication follow ASME Section VIII and often TEMA recommendations
Engineering coordination between:
Tube material
Tube sheet material
Joint design
is essential to ensure code compliance.
6. Fabrication and Welding Requirements Under ASME
ASME requires:
Qualified welding procedures (WPS / PQR)
Qualified welders
Controlled welding environment
Post-fabrication inspection
Titanium welding must satisfy both material requirements and code rules.
A compliant material with non-compliant welding is still a non-compliant pressure part.
7. Inspection, Testing, and Code Compliance
Typical ASME pressure equipment requirements include:
Material traceability and certification
Non-destructive examination (UT / RT / PT as applicable)
Pressure testing (hydrostatic or pneumatic)
Documentation and data reporting
ASME compliance is demonstrated through process control, not only final inspection.
8. ASME Code Stamp and Manufacturer Responsibility
For stamped pressure equipment:
The manufacturer bears responsibility for code compliance
Authorized inspection agencies may be involved
Documentation must support full traceability
ASME code compliance is a system of responsibility, not a certificate.
9. Common Misunderstandings in Titanium Pressure Equipment Projects
Assuming ASTM material certificates are sufficient
Mixing ASTM and ASME specifications incorrectly
Selecting titanium grade based on strength rather than allowable stress
Ignoring fabrication and inspection code requirements
Understanding these pitfalls prevents late-stage project delays and rework.
10. How to Use ASME Standards Correctly in Titanium Projects
Best practice approach:
Define whether the equipment is code-stamped
Select titanium grade based on service environment
Specify ASME SB material standards where required
Apply appropriate ASME BPVC design and fabrication rules
Integrate inspection and documentation requirements early
ASME compliance must be designed in—not added later.
11. How This Page Fits the Standards & Quality System
This page integrates with:
ASTM Standards for Titanium – material definition
Inspection, Testing & Certification – QA execution
Products → Tubes / Pipes / Tube Sheets – component application
Design Rules – engineering best practice
It represents the regulatory and compliance layer of the titanium knowledge base.