Gas selection guide for plasma cutting aluminum, stainless steel, and mild steel

Do plasma cutters use gas? Yes. All plasma cutting systems—including air plasma cutters—use gas. In addition to using one type of gas, many fabricators choose plasma systems with “dual-gas” or “multi-gas” capability. This means that a variety of plasma and shield gases can be used for various applications. Multi-gas torches offer the most flexibility for shops that cut a variety of materials. Different gases are used, depending on material type and thickness, to achieve the best balance of cut quality, consumable life, productivity, and overall cost of operation. Most plasma system manuals tend to overwhelm the operator with a confusing array of cut charts and gas choices. The intent of this article is to provide a brief overview of the advantages and disadvantages of each gas and make "best case" recommendations for cutting the three most common materials: mild steel, stainless steel and aluminum.

Steel, stainless and aluminum cut sample examplesAir

Air is the most versatile plasma gas; it produces good cut quality and speed on mild steel, stainless, and aluminum. Air also lowers the cost of operation because it is not necessary to purchase gases. However air is not free. Shop air must be cleaned to remove contamination such as particulate, oil mist, and moisture. The best solution for air plasma systems like our Powermax® systems, is a good-sized, dedicated air compressor, a refrigerated dryer, and a bank of filters to take out particulate, oil mist, and any remaining moisture. Another concern with air plasma is weldability of the cut edge. Some nitriding and oxidation of the cut surface occurs with air plasma; this can cause porosity in welds. The problem is usually corrected by simply using good quality weld wire with denitriders and deoxidizers. For versatility, good speed, low dross levels, and parts life up to 600 starts, air is a good option for many shops. Air shield gas is the best choice when using air plasma.

Oxygen

When it comes to plasma gas, oxygen is the industry standard for cutting mild steel because it provides the best, clean cut quality and fastest cutting speed of any plasma gas. (Plasma cutting aluminum plate or stainless plate with oxygen plasma gas is not recommended). Oxygen plasma gas reacts with carbon steel to produce a finer spray of molten metal, each droplet having a lower surface tension. This molten spray is more easily ejected from the kerf. The disadvantage of oxygen is the cost of the gas and the consumable parts life. However state-of-the-art oxygen plasma systems use inert starting gases (such as nitrogen) with oxygen plasma to achieve similar parts life to nitrogen or air systems. These systems may have consumable life in the 800-1500-start range. Increased consumable and gas costs are usually offset by a decrease in expensive secondary operations to remove dross and straighten beveled parts. An air shield gas is typically used with oxygen plasma.

Nitrogen

Nitrogen was used in most early plasma torches. It is still the best choice if you cut a lot of aluminum and stainless. The cut quality and consumable life is excellent, with the electrode and nozzle lasting for more than 1,000 starts. However, it is best to use an argon-hydrogen gas mixture when cutting material greater than ½″ in thickness, at the upper end of your plasma system's capability. Generally air is the best secondary gas when using nitrogen plasma. CO2 works well-slightly improving surface finish, cutting speed, and parts life over air. But CO2 costs more than air and requires multiple manifolded gas cylinders or a bulk system to deliver adequate flow. Water is a good secondary to use with nitrogen plasma if the system allows. Using it when cutting aluminum and stainless creates a very smooth shiny cut surface. Water must be used as secondary gas with a water table.

Argon hydrogen

Argon hydrogen is the gas of choice for thick stainless and aluminum cutting (> 1/2″). The mixture typically used is 35% hydrogen and 65% argon, often called H-35. Argon hydrogen is the hottest burning plasma gas and provides the maximum cutting capability. (Argon hydrogen is used in water injection torches up to 1000 amps for cutting up to 6″ stainless). In multi-gas torches, Argon hydrogen provides a straight cut and a very smooth almost polished surface on stainless steel. Some jagged dross may occur along the bottom edge. Nitrogen is typically used as the shield gas with argon hydrogen. The disadvantage of this combination is its expense.

Illustrated guide to plasma gas selection:

Plasma Gas/Shield Plasma cutting mild steel Plasma cutting stainless Plasma cutting aluminum
Air/Air Good cut quality/speed. Economical Good cut quality/speed Economical Good cut quality/speed Economical
Oxygen (O2)/Air Excellent cut quality/speed. Very little dross Not recommended Not recommended
Nitrogen (N2)/CO2 Fair cut quality, some dross. Excellent parts life Good cut quality Excellent parts life Excellent cut quality. Excellent parts life
Nitrogen (N2)2/Air Fair cut quality, some dross. Excellent parts life Good cut quality Excellent parts life Good cut quality Excellent parts life
Nitrogen (N2)/H20 Fair cut quality, some dross. Excellent parts life Excellent cut quality. Excellent parts life Excellent cut quality. Excellent parts life
Argon Hydrogen/N2 Not recommended Excellent on thick >1/2″ Excellent on thick >1/2″

 

The best gas to use depends, mainly on three considerations: cut quality, productivity, and economy.

  • For mild steel, use an oxygen plasma gas and air shield gas for the best, clean cut quality, lowest dross levels, minimal rework, excellent weldability and highest cutting speed/productivity.
  • For best cut quality on stainless and aluminum under 1/2″ use nitrogen plasma and air secondary for a good balance of cut quality and affordability. For a slightly better and faster cut, use CO2 as the secondary. If your system allows, water shield will provide the best edge quality.
  • For best cut quality on thick stainless and aluminum use argon-hydrogen with nitrogen secondary. WARNING: your system must be equipped for safe operation with argon hydrogen gas.
  • For the most economical cutting, clean dry shop air is the best choice for cutting aluminum, mild steel, and stainless.

 

So does a plasma cutter need gas? As you just read, the resounding answer is yes.