5050 Aluminum vs. AISI 316N Stainless Steel
5050 aluminum belongs to the aluminum alloys classification, while AISI 316N stainless steel belongs to the iron alloys. There are 31 material properties with values for both materials. Properties with values for just one material (3, in this case) are not shown. Please note that the two materials have significantly dissimilar densities. This means that additional care is required when interpreting the data, because some material properties are based on units of mass, while others are based on units of area or volume.
For each property being compared, the top bar is 5050 aluminum and the bottom bar is AISI 316N stainless steel.
Metric UnitsUS Customary Units
Mechanical Properties
Brinell Hardness | 36 to 68 | |
190 to 350 |
Elastic (Young's, Tensile) Modulus, GPa | 68 | |
200 |
Elongation at Break, % | 1.7 to 22 | |
9.0 to 39 |
Fatigue Strength, MPa | 45 to 100 | |
230 to 450 |
Poisson's Ratio | 0.33 | |
0.28 |
Shear Modulus, GPa | 26 | |
78 |
Shear Strength, MPa | 91 to 140 | |
420 to 690 |
Tensile Strength: Ultimate (UTS), MPa | 140 to 250 | |
620 to 1160 |
Tensile Strength: Yield (Proof), MPa | 50 to 210 | |
270 to 870 |
Thermal Properties
Latent Heat of Fusion, J/g | 400 | |
290 |
Maximum Temperature: Mechanical, °C | 180 | |
940 |
Melting Completion (Liquidus), °C | 650 | |
1440 |
Melting Onset (Solidus), °C | 630 | |
1400 |
Specific Heat Capacity, J/kg-K | 900 | |
470 |
Thermal Conductivity, W/m-K | 190 | |
15 |
Thermal Expansion, µm/m-K | 24 | |
16 |
Electrical Properties
Electrical Conductivity: Equal Volume, % IACS | 50 | |
2.3 |
Electrical Conductivity: Equal Weight (Specific), % IACS | 170 | |
2.7 |
Otherwise Unclassified Properties
Base Metal Price, % relative | 9.5 | |
19 |
Density, g/cm3 | 2.7 | |
7.9 |
Embodied Carbon, kg CO2/kg material | 8.4 | |
3.9 |
Embodied Energy, MJ/kg | 150 | |
53 |
Embodied Water, L/kg | 1190 | |
150 |
Common Calculations
Resilience: Ultimate (Unit Rupture Work), MJ/m3 | 4.1 to 24 | |
95 to 230 |
Resilience: Unit (Modulus of Resilience), kJ/m3 | 18 to 330 | |
180 to 1880 |
Stiffness to Weight: Axial, points | 14 | |
14 |
Stiffness to Weight: Bending, points | 50 | |
25 |
Strength to Weight: Axial, points | 15 to 26 | |
22 to 41 |
Strength to Weight: Bending, points | 22 to 33 | |
20 to 31 |
Thermal Diffusivity, mm2/s | 79 | |
4.1 |
Thermal Shock Resistance, points | 6.3 to 11 | |
14 to 26 |
Alloy Composition
Aluminum (Al), % | 96.3 to 98.9 | |
0 |
Carbon (C), % | 0 | |
0 to 0.080 |
Chromium (Cr), % | 0 to 0.1 | |
16 to 18 |
Copper (Cu), % | 0 to 0.2 | |
0 |
Iron (Fe), % | 0 to 0.7 | |
61.9 to 71.9 |
Magnesium (Mg), % | 1.1 to 1.8 | |
0 |
Manganese (Mn), % | 0 to 0.1 | |
0 to 2.0 |
Molybdenum (Mo), % | 0 | |
2.0 to 3.0 |
Nickel (Ni), % | 0 | |
10 to 14 |
Nitrogen (N), % | 0 | |
0.1 to 0.16 |
Phosphorus (P), % | 0 | |
0 to 0.045 |
Silicon (Si), % | 0 to 0.4 | |
0 to 0.75 |
Sulfur (S), % | 0 | |
0 to 0.030 |
Zinc (Zn), % | 0 to 0.25 | |
0 |
Residuals, % | 0 to 0.15 | |
0 |