A05 vs A07 Impeller: How to Choose the Right Material
Published May 15, 2026 · By Coolair Group Engineering · 8 min read
When selecting replacement impellers for slurry pumps, material selection is one of the most critical decisions you'll make. The two most common high-chrome white iron materials used in mining slurry pump impellers are A05 (27% Chromium) and A07 (15% Chromium / 3% Nickel). While they may look similar, their metallurgical properties, wear characteristics, and ideal applications differ significantly.
This guide provides a comprehensive technical comparison to help you choose the right impeller material for your specific mining application.
Understanding the Materials
A05 — 27% Chromium White Iron
A05 is the industry-standard high-chrome white iron material for slurry pump wetted parts. With approximately 27% chromium content, it forms a dense network of M7C3 chromium carbides within a martensitic matrix. This microstructure gives A05 exceptional hardness and resistance to sliding abrasion — the dominant wear mechanism in most mining slurry applications.
The high chromium content also provides reasonable corrosion resistance in neutral to mildly alkaline slurries. However, A05's Achilles heel is its relatively low toughness. The hard carbide network that provides wear resistance also makes the material brittle, meaning it can crack under impact loading or thermal shock.
A07 — 15% Chromium / 3% Nickel Iron
A07 is a modified white iron that trades some hardness for improved toughness. With 15% chromium and 3% nickel, A07 has a different carbide morphology — the carbides are smaller and more evenly distributed, and the nickel promotes a tougher austenitic-martensitic matrix.
The result is a material that's approximately 20% less hard than A05 but significantly more resistant to impact and thermal shock. A07 also performs better in corrosive environments where the lower chromium content is offset by the nickel's contribution to corrosion resistance.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Property | A05 (27% Cr) | A07 (15% Cr / 3% Ni) |
|---|---|---|
| Chemical Composition | 27% Cr, 1.2% C, 0.5% Mn, 0.5% Si | 15% Cr, 3% Ni, 1.2% C, 0.5% Mn |
| Hardness (BHN) | 580–650 | 450–520 |
| Hardness (HRC) | 60–65 | 47–53 |
| Microstructure | M7C3 carbides in martensite | Smaller M7C3 carbides in austenitic-martensite |
| Abrasion Resistance | ★★★★★ Excellent | ★★★★☆ Very Good |
| Impact Toughness | ★★☆☆☆ Low | ★★★★☆ Good |
| Corrosion Resistance | ★★★☆☆ Moderate | ★★★★☆ Good (pH 4–10) |
| Thermal Shock Resistance | ★★☆☆☆ Low | ★★★★☆ Good |
| Cost (Relative) | Baseline | 5–10% higher |
| Typical Wear Life | 3,000–5,000 hours | 2,500–4,000 hours |
When to Choose A05
A05 is the right choice when:
- Sliding abrasion is the primary wear mechanism. This is the case for most mining tailings, cyclone feed, and mill discharge applications where hard particles rub against the impeller surface.
- The slurry is neutral to alkaline (pH 7–12). A05's high chromium content provides adequate corrosion resistance in these conditions.
- Impact loading is minimal. If your pump operates at steady state without frequent starts, stops, or large particle impacts, A05's brittleness is not a concern.
- Maximum wear life is the priority. In pure abrasion scenarios, A05 will typically outlast A07 by 20–40%, making it the more economical choice over time.
Typical A05 applications: Gold mine tailings pipelines, copper concentrator cyclone feeds, iron ore slurry transport, coal preparation plant circuits, phosphate mining slurry.
When to Choose A07
A07 is the right choice when:
- Impact loading is significant. If your slurry contains large particles (above 2mm), or if the pump experiences frequent starts and stops, A07's superior toughness prevents catastrophic cracking.
- The slurry is acidic or corrosive. A07's nickel content provides better corrosion resistance in slurries with pH below 6, including many gold leach circuits and acid mine drainage applications.
- Thermal shock is a risk. In applications where slurry temperature fluctuates significantly (e.g., dump leach operations), A07's thermal shock resistance prevents spalling and cracking.
- The pump handles a mixed particle size distribution. When slurry contains both fine abrasive particles and occasional coarse material, A07 provides a better balance of wear and impact resistance.
Typical A07 applications: Gold CIL circuit transfer pumps, copper heap leach pumps, acid plant slurry circuits, dredge pumps with variable particle sizes, mineral sand processing.
Decision Framework
Use this simplified decision framework to select the right material:
- Is the slurry pH below 6? → Choose A07 (better corrosion resistance)
- Does the slurry contain particles larger than 2mm? → Choose A07 (better impact resistance)
- Does the pump experience frequent starts/stops? → Choose A07 (better thermal shock resistance)
- Is the primary wear mechanism sliding abrasion in neutral/alkaline slurry? → Choose A05 (maximum wear life)
- Is cost per hour of operation the primary concern? → Calculate both: A05's longer life may offset its lower toughness in moderate applications
Real-World Performance Data
Based on our field data from over 200 mining operations across 15 countries, here are average service life comparisons:
| Application | A05 Average Life | A07 Average Life | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tailings pipeline (alkaline) | 4,200 hrs | 3,100 hrs | A05 |
| Cyclone feed (copper) | 3,800 hrs | 3,400 hrs | A05 |
| CIL circuit (gold, pH 10) | 3,500 hrs | 3,600 hrs | Equal — choose by cost |
| Heap leach transfer (pH 2) | 1,800 hrs (corrosion) | 3,200 hrs | A07 |
| Dredge pump (mixed particles) | 2,400 hrs (cracking) | 3,000 hrs | A07 |
| Mill discharge (iron ore) | 4,000 hrs | 2,800 hrs | A05 |
Can You Mix Materials?
In many cases, yes. A common and effective strategy is to use A05 impellers (which experience the highest velocity and abrasion) paired with A07 volute liners (which experience more impact from slurry direction changes). This hybrid approach optimizes both wear life and reliability while managing cost.
However, always consult with your pump manufacturer or parts supplier before mixing materials, as galvanic corrosion can occur between dissimilar metals in certain slurry conditions.
Conclusion
Neither A05 nor A07 is universally "better" — the right choice depends entirely on your specific operating conditions. A05 excels in high-abrasion, neutral-pH applications where maximum wear life is the goal. A07 shines in corrosive, high-impact, or thermally variable environments where toughness matters more than raw hardness.
At Coolair Group, we stock both materials and can help you analyze your operating conditions to recommend the optimal impeller material. Every order includes a spectroscopy report confirming the chemical composition matches the specified grade.
Related products:
- Slurry Pump Impeller — A05/A07 High Chrome
- Browse all slurry pump parts
- Warman pump compatible parts
- Gold mining pump applications
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