PWHT Procedure Explained: Step-by-Step Guide to Post-Weld Heat Treatment

Written by Azmi Anees on April 27, 2026

The PWHT procedure is a controlled thermal approach used after welding to reduce residual stresses and improve metal strength. It helps prevent cracking, distortion, and early failure in industrial components, and follows precise steps of heating, soaking, and controlled cooling under strict conditions. 

In this blog, we explain the complete PWHT procedure step-by-step and why it is essential for industrial safety and performance.

You Might Also Like: What Does Heat Treatment Cost? 


Why the PWHT Procedure is Non-Negotiable for Industrial Safety

Post-weld heat treatment (PWHT) is a rigorously controlled thermal intervention designed to relax base metals at the microstructural level.

By bringing the component to a temperature just below its critical transformation point, PWHT safely dissipates dangerous, locked-in stresses. In most carbon and low-alloy steels, this temperature typically ranges between 550°C and 750°C, depending on material grade and applicable engineering codes.

Implementing a compliant PWHT procedure provides crucial metallurgical benefits:

  • Reduces hazardous residual welding stresses across the joint.
  • Lowers the long-term risk of catastrophic brittle fracture.
  • Prevents stress corrosion cracking in high-pressure chemical environments.

Check Out: Induction Heating vs Resistance Heating 


Preparing the Metal for a Flawless Heating Cycle

A successful PWHT procedure begins long before the specialized thermal control equipment is even powered.


Field technicians must carefully and systematically prepare the entire weld zone to guarantee perfect, uniform heat distribution. 


  • Proper surface preparation is the only reliable way to prevent localized hot spots that may permanently degrade or damage the metal.
  • Before applying any heat, crews must strip the weld area of grease, debris, moisture, and flammable chemical residues.

Crucial preparation steps for the PWHT procedure include:

  1. Grinding away surface spatter and thoroughly cleaning the immediate HAZ.
  2. Welding high-accuracy thermocouples directly to the metal for real-time monitoring.
  3. Wrapping the component in high-quality, high-temperature ceramic thermal insulation.
  4. Securing the insulation banding to prevent dangerous heat loss during the cycle.

Proper Insulation is Essential

Insulating the metal correctly is an absolutely vital step for maintaining a highly stable thermal environment

This is even more important for volatile outdoor field conditions where environmental factors like heavy wind, rain, and snow can disrupt the precise heating cycle if the metal remains poorly exposed.

Explore: Field Heat Treatment: A Comprehensive Guide


Executing the Controlled Heating Phase with Precision

Once technicians fully prep and insulate the component, they subject it to a carefully calculated temperature ramp-up.

  • The specific heating rate depends heavily on the base material's thickness, geometric complexity, and exact carbon content. Industry standards typically limit the heating rate to approximately 100-200°C per hour. According to the American Welding Society (AWS), rushing this initial phase can instantly induce severe thermal shock.
  • If the internal temperature climbs too rapidly, the outer surface will expand significantly faster than the cooler interior.
  • Rapid, uneven thermal expansion introduces fresh structural stresses. This effectively defeats the primary purpose of the entire PWHT procedure.

Automation for Controlled Heating

To maintain complete thermal control, technicians rely on advanced automation. This includes,

  • Deploying multi-zone computerized control consoles for synchronized heating.
  • Utilizing high-amperage electrical resistance heating pads for localized control.
  • Monitoring digital chart recorders to verify strict code compliance in real-time.

Automated controllers ensure the temperature rises at a steady, code-compliant pace. Such precise control safeguards the weld from sudden metallurgical damage.

Discover: How Does Induction Heating Work? A Complete Guide to the Induction Heating Process 


Sustaining the Critical Soaking Period at Target Temperature

When the target temperature is achieved, the critical soaking period begins.

This phase requires maintaining peak temperature for exactly one hour per 25 millimeters of total material thickness. During this sustained hold time, the steel's internal molecular structure blends, relaxes, and completely stabilizes.

  • Technicians monitor live data loggers to track heat dispersion.
  • Alarms trigger if the temperature fluctuates outside acceptable boundaries.
  • Power loads automatically adjust to compensate for localized ambient heat loss.
  • Strict monitoring is paramount during this stage of the PWHT procedure:
  • Even a minor drop in temperature during this hold period can result in a failed cycle.

Read More: Heat Treatment of Metals: Processes, Types, and Applications 


Managing the Controlled Cooling Phase for Weld Integrity

How a heavy metal component cools down is just as structurally important as how it initially heats up during the PWHT procedure.

Controlled Cooling is Critical

A gradual, highly controlled cooling ramp is a must to safely bring the heated metal back down to ambient temperatures. If the metal is allowed to cool down too rapidly through exposure, it will harden instantly. With this, all previous stress-relieving benefits are completely lost.

To execute a flawless cooling phase, operators must follow strict procedures:

  • Keep the insulation tightly wrapped during the entire cooling process so the temperature drops slowly and evenly.
  • Gradually step down the electrical power supply to avoid sudden thermal crashes.
  • Monitor all thermocouple data until reaching safe, handleable ambient temperatures.
  • Perform final Non-Destructive Examination (NDE) testing to officially verify internal weld integrity.

Only after the metal has safely reached ambient conditions can the equipment be stripped and the PWHT procedure marked as completely successful. 


Ready to implement precision thermal systems for your next project? Contact Axiom HT at 714-655-3205 for engineered solutions built around your schedule and site.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Preheating is applied before and during the welding process to slow the cooling rate and drive out moisture. Conversely, post-weld heat treatment is applied after the weld is completed, specifically to relieve built-up residual stresses and soften the hardened heat-affected zone.

Various international engineering and safety codes dictate thermal requirements and SOPs. The most common guidelines include the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code (BPVC), ASME B31.3 for process piping, and specific API codes for the petrochemical and refining industries.

When executed correctly by professionals, PWHT does not damage the base metal. However, precision and SOPs are key, and mistakes can unintentionally alter the steel's microstructure.

No. The mandatory requirement strictly depends on the material's chemical composition, the overall thickness of the joint, and the intended service environment.

While thermal processing is the absolute industry standard, some non-thermal methods do exist, such as vibratory stress relief (VSR) or ultrasonic impact treatment (UIT). However, these alternatives are often not permitted by major engineering codes for critical pressure-retaining applications.

Related Posts

On-Site Heat Treatment Specialists. Providing Electrical resistance, Combustion, Induction, and more.
Axiom Heat Treatment BBB Business Review
California714-655-3205
Axiom Heat Treatment
16042 Craig Ln.
Huntington Beach, CA 92647
© 2026 Axiom HT All Rights Reserved | Call: 714-655-3205 | Powered By Ouroai LLC