What is P91 Material?

Written by Azmi Anees on May 30, 2026

P91 material is what forms the backbone of high-temperature, high-pressure systems in modern power and petrochemical plants today. 

From superior creep strength to strict PWHT requirements, this guide breaks down what P91 is, where it’s used, and why precision matters in P91’s fabrication and heat treatment. 

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What is P91 Material? Key Facts You Need to Know

Not all steel is created equal, especially at temperatures above 500°C (932°F).

  • P91 (formally designated ASTM A335 Grade P91) is a modified 9% chromium, 1% molybdenum ferritic-martensitic alloy steel, enhanced with vanadium, niobium, and nitrogen.
  • P91 belongs to the family of Creep Strength Enhanced Ferritic (CSEF) steels - a class engineered specifically for prolonged service at extreme temperatures without losing structural integrity.
  • Developed in the 1970s by Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), P91 was introduced to overcome the limitations of the then-standard P22 (2.25Cr-1Mo) steel.
  • Where P22 tops out around 565°C (1050°F), P91 sustains reliable performance up to 610°C (1130°F). In modern ultra-supercritical (USC) power plants, this makes a critical difference.
  • Roughly 20-40% thinner walled piping can be used with P91 compared to P22 under the same design conditions, reducing system weight and material costs significantly.
  • According to ASME standards, P91 carries a minimum tensile strength of 85,000 psi (585 MPa) and a yield strength of 60,000 psi (415 MPa). These numbers put it well ahead of predecessor grades.

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What is P91 Material? Inside The Chemistry That Makes It Work

P91's performance is rooted in its metallurgy. Here's a breakdown of the key alloying elements that make P91.

  • Chromium (8.0–9.5%). The primary driver of oxidation and corrosion resistance at elevated temperatures. It forms a stable, protective oxide layer on the surface that prevents scaling in steam environments.
  • Molybdenum (0.85–1.05%). Enhances hardenability, solid-solution strengthening, and resistance to creep deformation at high temperatures.
  • Vanadium (0.18–0.25%) and Niobium (0.06–0.10%). Form fine MX carbonitride precipitates within the martensitic matrix, acting as barriers to dislocation movement—the primary mechanism behind P91’s creep strength.
  • Nitrogen (0.03–0.07%). Stabilizes the austenitic phase and amplifies the strengthening effect of vanadium and niobium during high-temperature service.
  • Carbon (0.08–0.12%). Kept at a precise, controlled level to balance hardness with weldability; too much leads to cracking, too little weakens the tempered martensite.

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Where Is P91 Material Actually Used?

P91 shows up wherever the combination of heat, pressure, and long service life is non-negotiable.

Power generation: Steam piping, headers, and boiler tubes in fossil fuel and combined-cycle plants; designed for long high-temperature service life.

Petrochemical & refineries: Reactor piping, heat exchangers, and vessels requiring creep strength and long service life.

Oil & gas: Refinery piping and high-temperature components exposed to hydrogen service or elevated-pressure steam environments.

Nuclear & energy transition: CSP (Concentrated Solar Power) and SMR (Small Modular Reactors) projects demanding high-temperature thermal cycling. 

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The Microstructure Behind the Performance

The reason P91 performs so well under stress comes down to its microstructure — specifically, tempered martensite with a fine dispersion of M₂₃C₆ carbides and MX carbonitrides

  • During manufacturing, P91 is normalized at 1040-1080°C (1904-1976°F) to fully austenitize the steel, then air-cooled to develop a hard, martensitic structure.
  • It is then tempered at 730-780°C (1346-1436°F) to transform the brittle as-quenched martensite into a tough, creep-resistant tempered martensite.
  • The fine carbide and carbonitride precipitates formed during tempering pin grain boundaries and block dislocation movement, which is the physical mechanism behind its extraordinary creep resistance.
  • Long-term service can also lead to Laves phase formation, which contributes to damage over time.

Deviations from these parameters are not recoverable. Over-tempering above 790°C or under-normalizing below 1020°C can permanently destroy the precipitate structure. Room-temperature hardness tests then won't catch damage until the material is already in service.

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Why P91 Heat Treatment Is Critical

P91 material is one of the most demanding materials in industrial fabrication when it comes to welding and heat treatment. Miss a step, and the consequences show up months or years later as cracked welds, failed hardness tests, and costly shutdowns.


Preheat requirements:

  • Minimum preheat temperature: 204°C (400°F).
  • Purpose: Prevents hydrogen-induced cracking in the heat-affected zone (HAZ) by slowing the cooling rate and allowing hydrogen to escape.

Post-weld heat treatment (PWHT) parameters:

  • Temperature range: 730-770°C (1346-1418°F).
  • Hold time: Minimum 2 hours (1 hour per 25 mm of wall thickness).
  • Heating/cooling rate: Maximum 80°C/hour.
  • Temperature uniformity: Within ±30°C across the weld zone. Non-uniform PWHT is a major cause of HAZ failure in P91 joints.

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How P91 Compares to Other Chrome-Moly Grades

GradeCompositionTemperature / Pressure CapabilityKey StrengthsTypical ApplicationsLimitations
P111.25Cr-0.5MoSuitable for moderate temperatures and pressuresEntry-level chrome-moly steel; cost-effective for lower-criticality systemsLower-criticality piping and boiler systemsLimited creep strength and oxidation resistance at higher temperatures
P222.25Cr-1MoPerforms reliably up to ~565°CWidely proven in refinery and power applications; better high-temperature strength than P11Refinery piping, power plant systems, steam linesFalls short under ultra-supercritical (USC) steam conditions
P919Cr-1Mo-VNbDesigned for very high temperatures and pressures above 600°CSignificantly higher creep strength and oxidation resistance; enables thinner walls, lighter systems, and longer design lifeAdvanced thermal power plants, high-pressure steam piping, superheatersRequires stricter fabrication, welding, and heat-treatment controls
P929Cr-2Mo-VNb (with tungsten addition)Optimized for temperatures around 620°C - 650°CEnhanced creep performance over P91; ideal for advanced USC plantsMost advanced ultra-supercritical power plantsHigher material and fabrication complexity/cost

Need expert heat treatment for P91 and other critical alloys? Contact Axiom HT to ensure compliant, reliable, and performance-driven thermal processing for your next project.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Improperly treated P91 welds may show acceptable hardness at room temperature. However, they can still contain a degraded microstructure that may fail prematurely under creep loading.

P92 is an evolution of P91 with added tungsten (approximately 1.5–2.0%) in place of some molybdenum content. This change enhances creep strength at temperatures above 600°C and higher.

P91 requires strict PWHT control because its creep strength depends on a very fine precipitate structure that can be permanently damaged if temperature and time are not tightly controlled.

P91 can be welded using established processes such as GTAW, SMAW, and FCAW, but it requires strict procedural control throughout. Treating P91 like a standard chrome-moly alloy is one of the most common causes of field failures.

Yes, but only when properly heat treated and welded. Poor fabrication can lead to fatigue and cracking under thermal cycling.

In well-controlled service conditions, P91 systems can last 20-30+ years in high-temperature applications.

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