5083 Aluminum Alloy: The Complete Engineering Guide to Marine-Grade Properties, Tempers, Welding & Applications
5083 aluminum is the most widely used marine-grade aluminum alloy in the world. As the highest-strength non-heat-treatable aluminum in commercial production, 5083 delivers a rare combination of excellent corrosion resistance in seawater, superb weldability, and high strength after welding that no other aluminum alloy matches. From LNG carrier tanks to patrol boat hulls, from ship superstructures to pressure vessels, 5083 is the alloy engineers specify when failure in a saltwater environment is not an option. This guide covers every engineering dimension of 5083 — from metallurgy to weld parameters to real-world application decisions.
⏱ 30-Second Summary
5083-H116/H321 delivers tensile strength up to 317 MPa (46 ksi) with ~13% elongation in H116 temper. It belongs to the 5xxx series (Al-Mg-Mn) and is the strongest non-heat-treatable aluminum alloy in widespread use. Its exceptional seawater corrosion resistance and excellent weldability (retaining ~95% of parent metal strength in the HAZ) make it the default choice for marine hulls, ship superstructures, LNG cargo tanks, and pressure vessels. Key trade-offs: not hardenable by heat treatment (only work-hardened tempers), temperature limits above 65 °C (150 °F) for sustained service to avoid sensitization, and moderate formability versus softer 5xxx alloys.
1. Metallurgical Foundation: The Al-Mg-Mn System
5083 belongs to the 5xxx series (Al-Mg-Mn), the work-hardenable aluminum alloy family. Unlike the heat-treatable 2xxx, 6xxx, and 7xxx series, 5083 achieves its strength through strain hardening (cold working) and Magnesium solid-solution strengthening. Magnesium atoms dissolved in the aluminum lattice distort the crystal structure, impeding dislocation motion and raising yield strength without requiring any thermal aging treatment.
The 5083 alloy was developed in the late 1940s and standardized by the Aluminum Association as AA 5083. Today it is specified across multiple international standards: ASTM B209 (sheet/plate), ASTM B928 (marine sheet/plate with H116/H321 tempers), EN AW-5083 / AlMg4.5Mn0.7 (European), AMS 4057/4058/4059 (aerospace), and DNV, Lloyd’s Register, Bureau Veritas marine classification rules.
| Element | 5083 (% Weight) | Role in Alloy System |
|---|---|---|
| Magnesium (Mg) | 4.0 – 4.9 | Primary strengthening element; solid-solution hardener; provides seawater corrosion resistance |
| Manganese (Mn) | 0.40 – 1.0 | Improves strength, refines grain structure, controls recrystallization |
| Iron (Fe) | 0.40 max | Impurity; forms Al-Fe-Mn intermetallics |
| Silicon (Si) | 0.40 max | Impurity |
| Chromium (Cr) | 0.05 – 0.25 | Improves stress-corrosion resistance; refines grain |
| Copper (Cu) | 0.10 max | Impurity; kept low to preserve corrosion resistance |
| Zinc (Zn) | 0.25 max | Impurity |
| Titanium (Ti) | 0.15 max | Grain refiner |
| Others (each) | 0.05 max | — |
| Aluminum (Al) | Balance | Matrix metal |
Key Insight: The 4-4.9% magnesium content is the “sweet spot” for the 5xxx series. It provides high strength and excellent corrosion resistance while remaining single-phase (no Al₃Mg₂ precipitation at service temperatures). Above ~5.5% Mg, the alloy becomes susceptible to sensitization — precipitation of β-phase (Al₃Mg₂) at grain boundaries during sustained exposure to 65-200 °C, which can cause intergranular corrosion and stress-corrosion cracking.
2. Temper Designations and Mechanical Properties
Because 5083 is a non-heat-treatable alloy, its tempers are denoted by the H_ system (strain-hardened, with or without thermal stabilization). The most important tempers for marine and structural applications are O (annealed), H111 (lightly work-hardened), H112 (as-fabricated), H116 (special marine temper), and H321 (the structural marine temper).
| Temper | Tensile Strength (MPa / ksi) | Yield Strength 0.2% (MPa / ksi) | Elongation (%) | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| O (Annealed) | 275 – 350 / 40 – 51 | 125 – 200 / 18 – 29 | 22 | Forming stock, deep drawing |
| H111 | 275 – 350 / 40 – 51 | 125 – 200 / 18 – 29 | 14 | Lightly worked; balance of formability and strength |
| H112 | 275 – 350 / 40 – 51 | 125 – 200 / 18 – 29 | 12 | Extrusions, plate from rolling |
| H116 | 305 min / 44 min | 215 min / 31 min | 10 | Marine sheet/plate — ASTM B928, corrosion-tested in seawater |
| H321 | 305 – 385 / 44 – 56 | 215 – 295 / 31 – 43 | 10 – 12 | Marine structural plate — stabilized for high-temp service |
| H32 | 280 – 320 / 41 – 46 | 205 – 250 / 30 – 36 | 8 – 10 | General sheet applications, tanks |
| H34 | 300 – 360 / 44 – 52 | 235 – 285 / 34 – 41 | 6 – 8 | Higher strength sheet, vehicle panels |
3. Marine-Grade Certification: H116 vs H321 Explained
For any application in or near seawater, specifying 5083-H116 or 5083-H321 is essential — these are the only tempers that pass the ASTM G67 nitric acid mass-loss test for susceptibility to intergranular corrosion. The test exposes the alloy to concentrated nitric acid at 30 °C for 24 hours, then measures the mass loss. Acceptable mass loss is < 15 mg/cm² for sheet up to 6.3 mm thick; alloys that fail the test are vulnerable to exfoliation corrosion in marine service.
| Property | H116 | H321 |
|---|---|---|
| Stabilization Treatment | Low-temperature thermal treatment | Low-temperature thermal treatment + work hardening |
| ASTM G67 Nitric Acid Test | Pass (≤ 15 mg/cm²) | Pass (≤ 15 mg/cm²) |
| Suitable for Sustained Service > 65 °C | Limited | Yes |
| Intergranular Corrosion Resistance | Excellent | Excellent |
| Primary Form Supplied | Sheet, plate | Plate, extrusions |
| Common Standards | ASTM B928 | ASTM B928, DNV, Lloyd’s, BV |
Marine Classification Requirement: For classed vessels (DNV, Lloyd’s Register, Bureau Veritas, ABS, CCS, RINA), the specification must be 5083-0/H111/H112/H116/H321 per the relevant rules. Class societies require both the mill certificate (EN 10204 3.1) confirming chemical composition and mechanical properties and a separate marine certification showing the ASTM G67 test result. Generic 5083 without marine certification is not acceptable for hull plating.
4. Corrosion Resistance in Seawater
5083 is the benchmark aluminum alloy for seawater service. Its 4-5% magnesium content forms a stable, self-healing aluminum-oxide (Al₂O₃) passive layer on the surface that resists chloride attack far better than other aluminum families. In ASTM B117 salt-spray testing, 5083-H116 shows no pitting or structural degradation after 1000+ hours, while 2024-T3 and bare 7075-T6 can pit within weeks in the same environment.
| Alloy / Temper | Seawater Corrosion Rate (mm/yr) | Pitting Resistance | SCC Susceptibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5083-H116 | < 0.025 | Excellent | Negligible |
| 5052-H32 | < 0.025 | Excellent | Negligible |
| 6061-T6 | 0.025 – 0.10 | Good | Low |
| 6063-T5 | 0.025 – 0.10 | Good | Low |
| 2024-T3 (bare) | 0.25 – 1.0 | Poor | High |
| 7075-T6 (bare) | 0.25 – 1.0 | Poor | High (esp. ST direction) |
5. Welding 5083: The Marine-Grade Welder’s Favorite
5083 is one of the most readily weldable aluminum alloys, and unlike the heat-treatable 6xxx/7xxx series, it retains most of its strength in the heat-affected zone (HAZ). This is because no precipitation-hardening phases dissolve during welding, so the HAZ remains close to parent-metal strength.
| Filler Wire | Joint Tensile Strength (MPa) | % of Parent Metal | Recommended Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| ER5183 | 295 – 305 | ~ 95% | Best overall — matches 5083 strength, marine service, cryogenic |
| ER5356 | 240 – 280 | ~ 85% | General welding, lower strength, better cosmetic bead |
| ER5556 | 300 – 310 | ~ 95% | High-strength welds, military marine |
| ER1100 | 110 – 130 | ~ 40% | Not recommended for 5083 — too soft |
Recommended GMAW (MIG) parameters for 5083 plate:
| Thickness (mm) | Wire Diameter (mm) | Current (A) | Voltage (V) | Shielding Gas (Argon %) | Gas Flow (L/min) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 1.0 | 110 – 130 | 20 – 22 | 99.99 Ar | 14 – 18 |
| 6 | 1.2 | 150 – 180 | 22 – 24 | 75 Ar / 25 He | 16 – 20 |
| 10 | 1.6 | 200 – 250 | 24 – 28 | 75 Ar / 25 He | 18 – 22 |
| 20+ | 2.0 | 280 – 350 | 28 – 32 | 50 Ar / 50 He | 20 – 25 |
6. Low-Temperature & Cryogenic Performance
Unlike steels and many other aluminum alloys, 5083 actually increases in strength as temperature drops, with no ductility loss. This makes it the alloy of choice for LNG (liquefied natural gas) carrier tanks at -162 °C, LPG vessels, and arctic offshore structures. The face-centered cubic (FCC) crystal structure of aluminum does not exhibit the ductile-to-brittle transition that body-centered cubic (BCC) steels do at low temperatures.
| Temperature (°C) | Yield Strength (MPa) | Tensile Strength (MPa) | Elongation (%) | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| + 20 (room) | 215 | 305 | 12 | Baseline |
| – 50 | 230 | 340 | 14 | Arctic marine |
| – 100 | 260 | 390 | 16 | Refrigerated transport |
| – 162 (LNG) | 300 | 450 | 18 | LNG carrier membrane/independent tanks |
| – 196 (LHe / LN₂) | 320 | 480 | 20 | Cryogenic vessels |
7. Major Applications by Industry
| Industry | Typical Application | Temper | Why 5083? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shipbuilding | Hull plating, superstructures, decks | H116 / H321 | Seawater corrosion resistance + weldability |
| LNG / LPG | Cargo tank secondary barriers | O / H321 | Cryogenic toughness to -196 °C |
| Naval / Coast Guard | Patrol boat hulls, fast attack craft | H116 / H321 | High strength + lightweight for speed |
| Rail / Road Tankers | Tanker trailers, cryogenic road tankers | O / H111 | Formability + toughness for impact |
| Pressure Vessels | ASME code vessels, storage tanks | O / H321 | ASME SB-209 / SB-928 qualified |
| Offshore | Helidecks, living quarters, jack-up legs | H116 / H321 | Splash zone corrosion resistance |
| Automotive | Bus bodies, RV frames, fuel tanks | H32 / H34 | Lightweight + formability |
| Defense | Armored vehicle hulls (when welded) | H116 / H321 | Ballistic performance + weldability |
| Architecture | Coastal building facades, decorative panels | H32 / H34 | Salt-air corrosion resistance |
8. 5083 vs Other Marine Alloys: Selection Guide
| Property | 5083 | 5052 | 5086 | 5454 | 6061-T6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yield Strength (MPa) | 215 | 193 | 185 | 215 | 276 |
| Tensile Strength (MPa) | 305 | 262 | 290 | 305 | 310 |
| Elongation (%) | 12 | 18 | 14 | 14 | 12 |
| Seawater Corrosion | Best | Best | Excellent | Excellent | Good |
| Weldability | Best | Excellent | Best | Excellent | Good (HAZ softens) |
| HAZ Strength Retention | ~95% | ~95% | ~95% | ~95% | ~ 60-70% |
| Formability (Bend Radius) | 2 – 3t | 1 – 2t | 2 – 3t | 2 – 3t | 3 – 4t |
| Sustained Service > 65 °C | H321 OK | H321 OK | H321 OK | Yes (H34) | Yes (T6) |
| Relative Cost | 1.20x | 1.00x | 1.15x | 1.10x | 1.05x |
Rule of thumb: Specify 5083 when the design requires (1) maximum strength of any non-heat-treatable alloy, (2) high HAZ strength after welding, (3) qualification under marine classification rules (DNV, Lloyd’s, ABS). For lower-stress hulls and trailers, 5052 is more economical and more formable. For high-temperature service (> 65 °C sustained), 5454-H34 or 6061-T6 is preferable.
9. Machining, Forming & Surface Treatment
5083 machines similarly to other aluminum alloys — it produces long, stringy chips, so chip breakers and high-pressure coolant are recommended. Surface treatment options include anodizing (decorative and hard), chromate conversion coating (Alodine 1200 for corrosion protection), and marine-grade paint systems.
| Process | Parameters / Notes | Best Temper |
|---|---|---|
| Bending (cold) | Min bend radius 2t (O/H32), 3t (H116) | O / H111 |
| Deep Drawing | Drawing ratio 1.8 – 2.0:1 max | O |
| Spinning | Reduction per pass 25-40% | O |
| Milling (carbide) | 300 – 800 m/min, 0.1 – 0.3 mm/tooth | H32 / H116 |
| Drilling | 100 – 200 m/min, peck at 3xD | Any |
| Sulfuric Anodizing | Type II 5-25 µm; harder film than 6061 | O / H32 |
| Hard Anodizing | Type III 50-75 µm (marine wear surfaces) | H32 / H116 |
10. Selection Framework: Is 5083 the Right Choice?
6-Step Selection Process:
- Confirm seawater exposure? → If yes, 5083-H116/H321 is the default; verify ASTM G67 pass on MTR.
- Will it be welded? → 5083 retains 95% of parent strength in HAZ; superior to 6061 for all-welded structures.
- Service temperature? → Below 65 °C: any temper. 65-150 °C: H321 required. Above 200 °C: specify 5454 or 6061.
- Forming required? → Deep draws: use O temper. Light bending: H32/H34/H116 are acceptable.
- Classification society? → DNV, Lloyd’s, ABS, BV all approve 5083 per their respective rules; ensure mill cert 3.1 per EN 10204.
- Verify on the MTR: → ASTM G67 test report, chemical analysis, mechanical test results, traceability code.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. What is the maximum service temperature for 5083 aluminum?
For sustained service above 65 °C (150 °F), specify 5083 in the H321 temper (or H116 for short exposure). Above 150 °C, magnesium in solid solution begins to precipitate as Al₃Mg₂ (β-phase) at grain boundaries, which can cause sensitization and intergranular corrosion. For service above 200 °C, alloys like 5454-H34 or 6061-T6 are preferred.
Q2. Can 5083 be heat treated to higher strength?
No. 5083 is a non-heat-treatable alloy — magnesium is the principal strengthening element but it remains in solid solution; it does not form age-hardening precipitates. The only way to increase strength is cold working (rolling, drawing), which produces the H-tempers (H32, H116, H321, etc.). If you need higher strength than 5083-H116 (~305 MPa tensile), move to 6061-T6 (~310 MPa) and accept the lower HAZ strength after welding, or 5083-based aluminum-matrix composites.
Q3. Is 5083 suitable for freshwater applications (not just seawater)?
Yes — 5083 performs excellently in freshwater as well. It is widely used for potable water tanks, hydropower penstocks, lock gates, and dam structures. Freshwater is significantly less aggressive than seawater (lower chloride content), so the corrosion rate is even lower. 5083 is approved under NSF/ANSI 61 for drinking water contact in many jurisdictions.
Q4. What is the difference between 5083 and 5086?
5083 has 4.0-4.9% Mg; 5086 has 3.5-4.5% Mg. The slightly higher magnesium in 5083 gives it ~5% higher strength (305 vs 290 MPa tensile). Both are marine-grade, both pass ASTM G67 in H116/H321 tempers, both are readily welded. 5083 is the stronger of the two and is preferred for high-stress applications like patrol boat hulls and military vessels. 5086 is slightly more formable and is widely used for small craft hulls and general marine sheet metal work.
Q5. Can 5083 be anodized? Does it anodize well?
Yes, 5083 can be anodized in both Type II (decorative, 5-25 µm) and Type III (hardcoat, 50-75 µm) processes. Because of the magnesium in solid solution, the anodic film is slightly grayer and less transparent than films on 6061 — colors appear softer. Hard anodizing produces an excellent wear surface (up to 60-65 HRC equivalent) suitable for marine bearing surfaces, hydraulic cylinders, and wear plates. For cosmetic applications, 5052 produces clearer, brighter anodized films.
Need 5083 Marine-Grade Aluminum in Certified Tempers?
Huaxiao-Alloy supplies 5083-H116 / H321 plate & sheet with full EN 10204 3.1 mill certification, ASTM G67 intergranular corrosion test reports, and DNV / Lloyd’s / BV / ABS marine classification support. Stock thicknesses from 2 mm to 200 mm. Custom cut-to-size, precision plate sawing, and CNC machining available.
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