Industrial Gases and Technologies for Arc Welding

Select the Welding Gases Best Suited to Your Priorities

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A Welding Gas that Aligns with Your Materials, Processes and Expectations

There is no single gas composition that can satisfy the diversity of physical and metallurgical challenges in arc welding, especially when you consider that gas-shielded arc welding spans four different (main) processes (GMAW , FCAW, TIG/plasma and root backing) and a virtually unlimited number of metallic alloys. So it helps to start out by understanding the physical impact of a welding gas on your process and - ultimately - on your welding outcome.

Here at Linde, we have never limited the role of our welding gas products just to "shielding" against ambient air. If we did, a simple molecule like carbon dioxide would work on all materials and for all processes. But this is not the case in industrial practice. Understanding how single gas components act in the arc and the welding zone enables us to consider all capabilities of a welding gas beyond shielding and to leverage these to the benefit of our customers.

Main Components of Welding Gases and Mixes
Benefits of Welding Gases
What Does the Welding Gas Do? How Does this Benefit the Welding Result?
Shields the arc and the molten pool against ambient air contamination Obtain the desired metallurgical and mechanical integrity
Influences arc ignition, discharge and stability Help to create reproducible welds of stable quality with lower defect rates
Controls electrochemical reactions and heat distribution at the cathode and anode Lower welding fume emissions from the overheated wire electrode; improve weld surface and wetting on components
Influences heat transfer from arc to molten pool and component Improve control over heat input, avoid overheating and enable higher welding speeds
Controls metal oxidation resulting from O2 and CO2 content Less oxides, less silicates on weld surface and reduced burn-off of valuable alloying elements from filler
Reduces oxidation with H2 Enhance corrosion resistance in stainless steel welding and root backing
Influences molten metal viscosity for droplet detachment and wetting behavior Reduce spatter; improve joint performance under dynamic load; eliminate undercuts
Stabilizes austenite phase through gas metallurgy, adding N2 to the blend Engineer austenite/ferrite ratio for better corrosion resistance of duplex steel welds
Reduces heat input to molten wire tip with lower CO2 content Can reduce welding fume emissions from the arc
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Comprehensive Portfolio to Match All Needs

The addition of chemically active components affects the reactivity of the welding gas, affecting not only the metallurgical outcome but also the arc behavior. Industry best practice is generally guided by standards like ISO 14175 or its national versions, typically grouping welding gases by their chemical reactivity.

Added to all this material and process diversity is the challenge of job-specific standard requirements. Often, welding is just one fabrication step in a comprehensive metal fabrication value chain and many of the steps are regulated by industry standards.

In addition, every enterprise sets its own criteria for success. Those criteria can vary over time with progress being driven by ever-escalating competitive pressures and new metal fabrication trends such as:

  • Upgrades to new high-performance alloys and advanced arc processes
  • Digitalization of value chains, robots, cobots and additive manufacturing
  • Rising awareness around occupational safety and health (OSH)

As a leading gas partner to welding companies, we offer a comprehensive welding gases portfolio that can be adapted to support your individual needs. Our gases and mixes are aligned with local regulations and industry preferences, but always reflect our solid understanding of gas and arc physics. Please contact your local Linde representative to see what gases and blends are available in your area.

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In a Variety of Packages

We offer a wide choice of supply modes to match individual consumption requirements. These start with small, compressed gas cylinders such as those used by craftspeople, extending all the way to on-site, stationary liquid bulk Ar or CO2 tanks, enabling large industrial metal fabrication sites to mix their blends on site. Across all supply modes, we deliver the same consistently high quality standards - whether that be for purity or moisture content in the case of gases or for mixing accuracy in the case of multicomponent blends. In fact, our welding gases usually exceed the minimum requirements specified in international standards like ISO 14175 and its national variants. We can also help with dedicated products and quality certificates if you require even higher purities for demanding welding tasks or if you work with reactive materials.

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And a Selection of Names

Our welding gases portfolio is marked under different local brands worldwide, including:

CORGON®, CRONIGON®, VARIGON®, ALUGON®, FORMIER®, MIGMIX GOLDTM, STARGOLDTM, STARGONTM, ARGOSHIELD®, SPECSHIELD® and STAINSHIELD®. Contact your local Linde representative to check availability in your region.

Gas Metal Arc Welding

Discover how our tailored GMAW (MAG/MIG) welding gases and gas mixes can help you meet your job expectations

Cored Wire Arc Welding

Explore how our gases and innovative blends can help you increase process flexibility and arc stability in FCAW/MCAW operations

Tungsten Inert Gas Welding

Dive into our shielding gases for TIG/plasma welding to combine versatility with higher quality and process stability

Gas Trailing & Root Backing

See how root and shielding trail gases can protect your weldment against oxidation for cleaner results

Other Arc Joining Processes

Talk to our experts to explore how you can benefit from our expertise in more "exotic" processes such as stud welding and arc brazing

Ready for the next step?

Share your priorities and expectations with one of our experts and let us advise on the welding gas or blend best equipped to enhance your competitiveness.
Contact your Local Linde Representative