Heat Exchanger Material Selection: Chemical Compatibility by Industrial Application
Technical reference guide to support material selection for heat exchangers based on process fluid, industrial sector and operating conditions. From AISI 304/316 stainless steel to Hastelloy, titanium and cupronickel.
Material selection is the engineering decision with the greatest impact on a heat exchanger's lifecycle cost and reliability. An inappropriate material leads to accelerated corrosion, process contamination or premature failure; an over-specified material drives unnecessary cost. This guide provides a structured starting point for engineering, procurement and technical management teams.
1. Standard materials: application range and key characteristics
Industrial heat exchangers are typically manufactured in a spectrum of materials covering the majority of process applications. Each presents a distinct profile of chemical, mechanical and thermal resistance.
Excellent thermal conductivity. Suitable for non-oxidising fluids, oils and gases. Sensitive to ammonia and oxidising acids.
Lightweight, good conductor. Used in HVAC, automotive and food. Limited in strong alkaline and chloride environments.
Robust and cost-effective for general steam, hot gas and non-aggressive oil applications.
Versatile in food, beverage and light chemical duties. Lower chloride resistance than 316.
Benchmark for chemical and marine environments. Mo addition improves crevice corrosion and chloride resistance.
Maximum resistance in highly corrosive environments: oxidising and reducing acids, mixed media.
Outstanding in seawater, nitric acid, chlorides and oxidising media. Low density.
Reference material for marine and desalination applications. Notable biofouling resistance.
For the most demanding environments — concentrated chlorides, strongly oxidising media, extreme temperatures or pharmaceutical hygiene requirements — BOIXAC manufactures heat exchangers in Hastelloy C-276 and B-3, titanium Gr. 2, cupronickel 90/10, AISI 309 and AISI 310. These materials deliver solutions where standard stainless steels cannot meet the required performance.
2. Key factors determining compatibility
A material's chemical resistance is not a fixed value: it is a function of several variables interacting simultaneously in the real process. Any extrapolation beyond the documented conditions range requires specific validation.
- Temperature: Corrosion accelerates exponentially with temperature. A material compatible at 20 °C may be unsuitable at 80 °C for the same fluid.
- Fluid concentration: Acids and bases exhibit non-linear behaviour. Stainless steel, for instance, resists high concentrations of nitric acid but not intermediate ones.
- Chloride content: Pitting and crevice corrosion in stainless steels is particularly sensitive to Cl⁻ concentration and temperature.
- Fluid velocity: Erosion-corrosion and cavitation are velocity-dependent. Copper, for example, has velocity limitations in seawater service.
- pH and redox potential: These determine the passivation or active attack zone on the material's Pourbaix diagram.
- Contaminants and trace impurities: Unexpected compounds (sulphides, oxidants, metal ions) can drastically alter material behaviour even at trace concentrations.
3. Compatibility table by fluid and sector
The table covers the most common process fluids and compounds across the main industries using industrial heat exchangers, indicating materials for which documented compatibility exists under representative conditions. Empty cells indicate absence of standard-condition compatibility data, not necessarily incompatibility.
Compatibility marks (✓) indicate general suitability documented in technical literature under moderate temperature, pressure and concentration conditions. They do not guarantee compatibility under all process conditions. Definitive validation requires reference to ASTM G31, specialist corrosion databases, and where applications are critical, laboratory or pilot testing. Always consult our technical team before finalising a specification.
| Sector | Typical application | Fluid / Compound | Copper | Aluminium | CS | AISI 304 | AISI 316 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Food | Baking, margarine, hospitality | Wheat oil | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Energy | Machinery, engines | Lubricating oil | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Beverages | Soft drinks, perfumery | Amyl acetate | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Textile | Dyeing, perfumery | Ethyl acetate | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Plastics / Pharma | Plastic, fibre, pharmaceuticals | Acetone | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Plastics / Textile | Pharma, dyes, additives | Acetic acid | ✓ | Conc. <20%. Validate temp. | ||||
| Chemical | Pharma, chemical | Hydrobromic acid | ✓ | ✓ | Consider Hastelloy | |||
| Food / Beverage | Carbonated drinks, confectionery | Citric acid | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Food | Palm oil substitute | Stearic acid | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Textile / Paper | Dyeing, paper, leather | Formic acid | ✓ | ✓ | Avoid Cu and Al | |||
| Chemical | Water treatment | Phosphoric acid | ✓ | ✓ | Concentration & temp. dependent | |||
| Agriculture | Fertilisers, metals | Nitric acid | ✓ | ✓ | Titanium for high conc. | |||
| Food / Beverage | Olive oil, cocoa | Oleic acid | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Chemical / Petrochem. | Fertilisers, refined petroleum | Sulphuric acid | ✓ | High conc. only. Hastelloy recommended | ||||
| Beverages | Wine & viticulture | Tannic acid | ✓ | |||||
| Food / Beverage | Baking, gelatine, desserts | Tartaric acid | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Marine | Vessels, offshore plants | Seawater | Cupronickel: reference material | |||||
| Textile | Fertiliser, dyeing, cleaning | Ammonia | ✓ | ✓ | Avoid copper and Cu alloys | |||
| Plastics / Textile | Plastic, pharma, dye, perfume | Acetic anhydride | ✓ | Validate with stabilisers | ||||
| Chemical | Resin, herbicide, varnish | Aniline | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Chemical | Rubber, lubricant, detergent | Benzene | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Beverages | Brewing industry | Beer | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Beverages | Butter, yoghurt, dairy | Milk | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Food | Butter, yoghurt, dairy | Lactic acid | ✓ | ✓ | 316 preferred >5% | |||
| Oil & Gas | Petrochemical by-products | Crude oil | ✓ | ✓ | Titanium: premium option | |||
| Energy | Heating and power | Natural gas | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Agriculture | Fertiliser, hydroponics | Potassium sulphate | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Chemical | Ink, dye, varnish | Resin | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Food | Dietary supplements | Cereals | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Food | Dietary supplements | Pickling brine / Vinegar | ✓ | ✓ | 316 for more acidic environments | |||
| Food | Dietary supplements | Yeast | ✓ | |||||
| Food | Dietary supplements | Dairy cream | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Food | Dietary supplements | Fatty acids | ✓ | Chain-length dependent | ||||
| HVAC | Pools, water treatment | Chlorinated water | Titanium: reference material | |||||
| Water treatment | Wastewater treatment | Urine | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
| Chemical / Pharma | Hygiene, healthcare | Physiological saline | ✓ | ✓ | 316L for pharmaceutical |
4. Special cases: where standard materials are insufficient
Certain applications involve combinations of corrosivity, temperature and regulatory requirements that exceed the performance of standard materials. BOIXAC has established experience in the following:
- Seawater and chlorinated media: Grade 2 titanium and 90/10 cupronickel provide crevice corrosion and biofouling resistance that AISI 316 cannot reliably guarantee under prolonged high-salinity exposure.
- Concentrated oxidising acids: Hastelloy C-276 is the reference material for hydrochloric acid, mixed acid environments and reducing conditions. Hastelloy B-3 for purely reducing media without oxidants.
- High-specification pharmaceutical and food processing: AISI 316L (low carbon) with electropolished or machined finish Ra < 0.8 µm meets FDA/EHEDG requirements. AISI 310 is used in special cases at temperatures above 650 °C.
- Petroleum and hydrocarbons with H₂S: Titanium and select Hastelloy grades resist sulphide stress cracking (SSC) under NACE MR0175 conditions.
BOIXAC is one of the few Iberian manufacturers with in-house production capability for heat exchangers in Hastelloy, titanium, cupronickel, AISI 309 and AISI 310. Every special-material project starts with a detailed technical analysis of the process fluid, operating conditions and applicable regulatory requirements. Contact our engineering team for a no-commitment assessment.
5. Recommended material selection methodology
Material selection for an industrial heat exchanger follows a structured process combining compatibility table reference with detailed analysis of the specific case.
- Characterise the process fluid: full composition, pH, maximum and minimum operating temperature, pressure, presence of solids or impurities.
- Consult corrosion literature (ASTM G31, Corrosion Engineers databases, alloy manufacturer data sheets).
- Consider applicable standards: FDA 21 CFR, EHEDG, ATEX, NACE MR0175, PED 2014/68/EU, AD-2000.
- Evaluate lifecycle cost: material cost versus maintenance cost, expected service life, cost of unplanned shutdown due to failure.
- Engage the heat exchanger manufacturer with the above data for final validation.
Our technical team analyses your application and recommends the optimal material solution. In-house manufacturing in Hastelloy, titanium, cupronickel and special alloy steels.