What is Pickling and Passivation? Surface Treatment for Stainless Steel Tubes Explained

DLSS - Tubes For Heat Exchanger - What is Pickling and Passivation? Surface Treatment for Stainless Steel Tubes Explained

Meta Description:
Learn the difference between pickling and passivation for stainless steel tubes. Understand how these surface treatments improve corrosion resistance and comply with industry standards like ASTM A380 and A967.


Introduction

Stainless steel may be known for its corrosion resistance, but improper surface conditions can compromise performance. To ensure maximum durability, two essential surface treatments are often used: pickling and passivation.

These processes are vital for removing contamination, enhancing corrosion resistance, and meeting industry specifications—especially in applications like food processing, pharmaceuticals, marine, and chemical industries.


1. What is Pickling?

Pickling is a chemical treatment that removes oxides, heat tint, weld scale, and impurities from the surface of stainless steel after manufacturing processes like welding or annealing.

How It Works:

  • Involves nitric acid + hydrofluoric acid or commercial pickling pastes
  • Removes surface impurities and exposes clean, active stainless surface

When It’s Used:

  • After welding or heat treatment
  • For removing black scale or discoloration
  • Before passivation or electropolishing

Learn more: ASTM A380 – Cleaning & Descaling of Stainless Steel Parts


2. What is Passivation?

Passivation is the process of forming a thin, uniform oxide layer (chromium oxide) on stainless steel to restore or enhance corrosion resistance.

How It Works:

  • Involves immersion in nitric acid or citric acid solutions
  • Removes free iron and contaminants that can cause rust
  • Allows chromium-rich passive layer to regenerate

When It’s Used:

  • After pickling or mechanical cleaning
  • On machined or handled stainless parts
  • For critical hygiene or medical applications

Related standard: ASTM A967 – Chemical Passivation Treatments for Stainless Steel


3. Pickling vs. Passivation – Key Differences

FeaturePicklingPassivation
FunctionRemoves scale and oxidesRestores protective oxide layer
Chemicals UsedHNO₃ + HFHNO₃ or citric acid
Surface AppearanceMatte / etchedSmooth, original finish
Surface RoughnessSlightly increases RaNo impact on Ra
Use Before/After WeldingRequired after heat-tint or weldsOptional final step

4. DLSS Pickling & Passivation Capabilities

At DLSS, all stainless steel seamless tubes undergo controlled pickling and optional passivation, ensuring:

  • Removal of oxides, scaling, and contaminants
  • Full compliance with ASTM A380 / A967
  • Surface finish suited for high-purity and industrial applications
  • Custom treatments upon customer specification

Available Services:

ProcessAvailability
Internal PicklingYes (for tubes ≥10mm ID)
External PicklingYes
Full ImmersionOn request
Passivation OnlyYes (for polished/EP tubes)
CertificationYes, with MTC and photos

5. Applications That Require Pickling/Passivation

IndustryRequirement
Food & BeverageClean, oxide-free interior surfaces
PharmaceuticalsBiofilm-resistant tube interiors
Oil & GasCorrosion resistance for sour service lines
Water TreatmentPrevent contamination or iron leaching
Power PlantsScale-free boiler tubes

For guidance, refer to Outokumpu Surface Finishes Handbook


FAQs

Q1: Is passivation mandatory after pickling?
Not always. If a strong passive layer reforms naturally, additional passivation may not be needed. However, in critical applications (e.g., WFI, semiconductors), both are recommended.

Q2: Will pickling change the tube dimensions?
No significant change occurs unless pickling is overly aggressive or prolonged. DLSS controls time and acid concentration precisely.

Q3: Are there environmental concerns?
Yes. Pickling involves hazardous acids. DLSS treats all waste according to national environmental standards and safety protocols.

Q4: Can DLSS supply pickled and passivated tubes with export documentation?
Yes. All surface treatments are documented with photos, batch records, and noted in the EN 10204 3.1/3.2 MTC.


Conclusion

Proper surface treatment is a cornerstone of stainless steel tube performance. At DLSS, we ensure every tube undergoes reliable pickling and passivation processes to deliver clean, corrosion-resistant, and standard-compliant products to clients worldwide.


Contact DLSS
Email: info@dlsspipe.com
Website: www.dlsspipeline.com

Need pickled and passivated stainless steel tubes for a critical project? DLSS can help with expert advice, inspection-ready documents, and precision-finished products.

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