Quick Answer: High-temperature valve materials fall into three main categories based on operating temperature. Chrome-moly steel (15CrMoG up to 550°C, WC9 to 593°C) is the standard for medium-high temperature service. Stainless steel (304 up to 550°C, 310S up to 700°C) offers corrosion resistance plus heat tolerance. Nickel-based alloys (Inconel 625/718 up to 700°C, Haynes 282 up to 950°C) handle extreme ultra-high temperature applications. Selection must also account for sealing materials and seating surface hardfacing.
1. Chrome-Moly Steel — Standard Choice for Medium-to-High Temperatures
Chrome-moly steel adds chromium and molybdenum to carbon steel, significantly improving creep resistance and oxidation resistance. It solves the graphitization and strength degradation problems of ordinary carbon steel at elevated temperatures.
| Grade | ASTM Equivalent | Max Temperature | Common Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15CrMoG | A217 WC5 | 540–550°C | Power plant auxiliary steam |
| WC9 | — | 593°C | Subcritical unit main steam piping |
| 2.25Cr-1Mo | — | 565–590°C (up to 650°C with stress relief) | Hydroprocessing units |
Chrome-moly steel grades are the most cost-effective solution for medium-to-high temperature valve applications. WC9 is a common choice for power generation valves. Browse our gate valve product range for chrome-moly options.
2. Stainless Steel — Corrosion Resistance Plus High-Temperature Stability
Austenitic stainless steels combine corrosion resistance with excellent high-temperature stability, making them the most widely applied valve material category across industries.
| Grade | Temp Limit | Key Advantage | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 304 / 304H | 550°C (higher for 304H) | Standard, widely available | Non-corrosive high-temp fluid control |
| 316L | 550–560°C | Mo addition for corrosion resistance | Sulfur-containing media, corrosive fluids |
| 321 | 650°C | Ti-stabilized, prevents intergranular corrosion | High-temp steam with moisture |
| 310S | 700°C (oxidizing atm.) | High Cr-Ni, superior oxidation resistance | Furnaces, incinerator exhaust |
For applications above 700°C in oxidizing environments, nickel-based alloys become necessary. For corrosive high-temperature applications, 316L or 310S are preferred. See our globe valve and check valve ranges for stainless steel options.
3. Nickel-Based Alloys — Extreme Temperature Performance
Nickel-based superalloys are the primary choice for ultra-high-temperature applications. The high-temperature stability of nickel, combined with strengthening elements like chromium, molybdenum, and niobium, delivers temperature limits far beyond chrome-moly steel and stainless steel.
| Alloy | Continuous Limit | Peak Limit | Primary Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inconel 625 | 650–700°C | 815°C | Cracking furnace outlets, gas systems |
| Inconel 718 | 650–700°C | 980°C (≤1 hr) | High-strength + corrosion resistance |
| Haynes 282 | 650–950°C | — | Nuclear, concentrated solar power |
| Hastelloy C-276 | 540–590°C | — | Strong acid, medium-high temp |
Nickel-based alloys are significantly more expensive than stainless steel and are specified only when operating conditions demand it. Inconel 718 is particularly valued for its combination of high-temperature strength and corrosion resistance.
4. Sealing Materials and Seat Hardfacing
The body material temperature limit is not the only selection criterion. Sealing materials and seating surfaces must also be rated for the operating temperature:
- Flexible graphite packing: 450–500°C in air, up to 1600°C in inert environments. The preferred high-temperature sealing material for valve stems and gaskets.
- Stellite 6 hardfacing: Withstands temperatures above 850°C. Provides excellent wear and erosion resistance for valve seating surfaces in high-temperature service.
Material Selection Summary
When selecting materials for high-temperature valves, apply this systematic three-layer approach:
- Body material — Match to maximum operating temperature (chrome-moly for medium, stainless for high, nickel-based for extreme)
- Sealing material — Flexible graphite for most high-temp services
- Seat hardfacing — Stellite 6 for erosion and wear resistance at temperature
This three-layer system — body alloy + sealing material + seating surface — must form a complete temperature-resistant solution for reliable long-term operation. Contact our engineering team for material selection assistance for your specific application.
FAQ: High-Temperature Valve Materials
Q: What temperature can standard carbon steel valves handle?
A: Carbon steel should not be used above 425°C due to graphitization. Chrome-moly steel is required above this temperature.
Q: Can 316L be used above 560°C?
A: Prolonged use above 560°C may cause carbide precipitation. For higher temperatures, use 321 or 310S stainless steel.
Q: What valve material is best for incinerator exhaust?
A: 310S stainless steel (up to 700°C) or nickel-based alloys for temperatures exceeding 700°C.
Q: Which material is used for supercritical power plant valves?
A: WC9 for subcritical units, advanced nickel-based alloys for supercritical/ultra-supercritical applications exceeding 600°C.
Need expert help selecting the right high-temperature valve material? Contact Vornet Valve for a free consultation.