Copper Alloy Etchants
Complete guide to selecting and applying etchants for copper alloys. Covers ammonium hydroxide, nitric acid, ferric chloride, and Weck’s reagents for pure copper, brass, bronze, and specialty copper alloys.
Alloy Classification & Preparation
Copper alloys are designated by UNS numbers spanning wrought (C1xxxx–C7xxxx) and cast (C8xxxx–C9xxxx) compositions.
UNS Designation System
Copper alloys classified by composition and processing method.
View designations
- C10000–C15999 — Wrought coppers (99%+ Cu)
- C16000–C19999 — High-copper alloys with minor additions
- C20000–C49999 — Wrought brasses (Cu-Zn)
- C50000–C52999 — Phosphor bronzes (Cu-Sn-P)
- C53000–C66999 — Cu-Si and special alloys
- C70000–C79999 — Cu-Ni and Cu-Ni-Zn alloys
- C80000–C99999 — Cast coppers, brasses, bronzes
Common Alloy Families
Major copper alloy groups with distinct properties and applications.
View families
- Pure copper — Excellent electrical/thermal conductivity
- Brasses (Cu-Zn) — Good strength and corrosion resistance
- Phosphor bronzes (Cu-Sn-P) — High fatigue strength
- Aluminum bronzes (Cu-Al) — High strength, corrosion resistant
- Silicon bronzes (Cu-Si) — Excellent welding characteristics
- Copper-nickels (Cu-Ni) — Marine corrosion resistance
- Beryllium coppers (Cu-Be) — Very high strength, non-sparking
Preparation Tips
Copper alloys are soft and prone to mechanical deformation during grinding.
View key considerations
- Use lower grinding pressures to minimize subsurface damage and smearing
- SiC papers preferred for initial grinding steps
- Final polishing with colloidal silica or alumina produces excellent results
- Copper alloys tarnish quickly—etch promptly after final polishing
- Clean thoroughly between preparation steps
Recommended Etchants
For a comprehensive searchable list, visit the Etchant Database.
| Etchant | Composition | Conditions | Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ammonium Hydroxide / H2O2 |
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| Nitric Acid Etch |
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| Ferric Chloride Etch |
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| Weck’s Copper Tint |
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Troubleshooting
Common etching issues and how to resolve them.
Over-etching
Surface appears too dark or grainy. Reduce etching time by 50% and monitor progress under the microscope.
Under-etching
Grain boundaries not clearly visible. Increase etching time by 15–30 seconds or ensure etchant is fresh.
Uneven Etching
Ensure sample is completely dry before etching and maintain consistent immersion or swabbing motion.
Rapid Tarnishing
Copper oxidizes quickly after polishing. Etch immediately after final polishing. Store samples in a desiccator.
Poor Contrast
Try Weck’s Copper Tint for color contrast, or adjust H2O2 concentration in the ammonium hydroxide etch.
Smearing Artifacts
If scratches or smearing visible after etching, re-polish using lighter pressure and finer abrasives, then re-etch.
Related Resources
Copper Alloy Prep Guide
Step-by-step preparation procedures for copper alloys.
View guideEtchant Selector Tool
Find the right etchant for any material.
Open toolEtchant Database
Searchable database of metallographic etchants.
Browse databaseMaterials Database
Look up procedures, classifications, and properties for hundreds of materials.
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