Material Profile: H13 Hot-Work Tool Steel for Binder Jetting
Binder Jetting Engineering Material Technical Report Series
Compiled from manufacturer technical datasheets and peer-reviewed literature
Abstract—AISI H13 is the dominant chromium-molybdenum-vanadium hot-work tool steel and a customer-qualified material on the Desktop Metal X-Series binder jet platform. Its principal binder-jet application is injection-mould inserts and die-casting tooling with conformal cooling channels — geometries impossible to produce by conventional gun-drilling but trivial via AM. As-sintered binder-jet H13 achieves HRC 38–42; double-tempered (austenitise 1010 °C, double-temper 540–600 °C) gives HRC 44–52 and preserves hot hardness up to ~ 600 °C. Conformal-cooling H13 inserts produced by binder jetting on the X160Pro (800 × 500 × 400 mm envelope) routinely cut injection-mould cycle times by 20–40 % and increase tool life through more uniform thermal control of the cavity surface.
Index Terms—additive manufacturing, binder jetting, H13, tool steel, hot-work, mould inserts, conformal cooling, AISI H13.
I. MATERIAL IDENTIFICATION
This section establishes the canonical names and commercial designations under which the material is supplied.
A. Designation
Trade names: Desktop Metal H13 (X-Series customer-qualified, Studio System); ExOne H13; Digital Metal DM H13. Wrought equivalents: ASTM A681 (UNS T20813), DIN 1.2344 / X40CrMoV5-1, JIS SKD61. Considered the global standard for hot-work tool steel.
B. Full Chemical Name
Chromium-molybdenum-vanadium air-hardening hot-work tool steel. Composition (wt%): Cr 4.75–5.50, Mo 1.10–1.75, V 0.80–1.20, Si 0.80–1.20, Mn 0.20–0.50, C 0.32–0.45, P ≤ 0.030, S ≤ 0.030, Fe — balance. Strengthening mechanisms: (1) tempered martensite, (2) MC carbides (V₄C₃, ~ 1 µm) and M₆C carbides (Fe-Mo-rich), (3) secondary hardening peak at 540 °C on tempering due to fine V/Mo carbide precipitation.
C. Aliases and Alternative Designations
|
Alias |
Origin / Usage |
|
H13 / AISI H13 |
American Iron & Steel Institute hot-work designation |
|
UNS T20813 |
Unified Numbering System designation |
|
DIN 1.2344 / X40CrMoV5-1 |
European designation (most common) |
|
JIS SKD61 |
Japanese standard equivalent |
|
W302 |
Böhler trade name |
|
Hotvar / Orvar Supreme |
Uddeholm trade names |
II. COMPOSITION AND MOLECULAR STRUCTURE
A. Empirical Chemical Formula
Fe(balance) — Cr(4.75–5.50%) — Mo(1.10–1.75%) — V(0.80–1.20%) — Si(0.80–1.20%) — C(0.32–0.45%) — minor (Mn, P, S). Strengthening: tempered martensite + MC (V₄C₃) and M₆C (Fe-Mo) carbides + secondary hardening peak at 540 °C.

Fig. 1. Repeating unit / structural schematic of the polymer matrix.

Fig. 2. Schematic of the single-phase polymer (no reinforcement).
B. Composition Breakdown
TABLE I
COMPOSITIONAL BREAKDOWN OF H13 TOOL STEEL (DESKTOP METAL X-SERIES) (TYPICAL / PER SUPPLIER DATASHEET)
|
Constituent |
Mass fraction |
Function |
|
Iron (matrix) |
≈ 91 wt% (balance) |
BCT tempered martensite |
|
Chromium |
4.75–5.50 wt% |
Hardenability; oxidation resistance to ~ 600 °C |
|
Molybdenum |
1.10–1.75 wt% |
Secondary hardening; M₆C carbide formation |
|
Vanadium |
0.80–1.20 wt% |
MC (V₄C₃) carbide formation; grain refinement; thermal fatigue resistance |
|
Silicon |
0.80–1.20 wt% |
Solid-solution strengthening of ferrite; tempering resistance |
|
Carbon |
0.32–0.45 wt% |
Martensite hardening; carbide volume fraction |
|
Manganese |
0.20–0.50 wt% |
Hardenability |
|
Other (P, S) |
≤ 0.06 wt% |
Trace |
|
Total |
100 wt% |
— |
III. MECHANICAL PROPERTIES — XY BUILD DIRECTION (HORIZONTAL)
In the XY orientation the tensile load is applied parallel to the powder-bed plane. Binder-jetted (BJ) parts in the as-sintered state generally show modest in-plane vs build-axis anisotropy because sintering occurs near the solidus and re-distributes the porosity left by the binder-removal step. For metal BJ, post-sintering treatments (HIP, solution-anneal, age) are commonly applied to bring properties to wrought-equivalent and to eliminate residual closed porosity.
TABLE II
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES — XY ORIENTATION (H13 TOOL STEEL (DESKTOP METAL X-SERIES))
|
Property |
Value (XY) |
Test method / source |
|
Density (sintered) |
≈ 7.75 g/cm³ (~99 % theoretical) |
ASTM B962 |
|
Tensile strength, UTS — quenched & double-tempered (HRC 50) |
≈ 1750 MPa |
ASTM E8 |
|
Yield strength (Rp 0.2 %), Q&T |
≈ 1500 MPa |
ASTM E8 |
|
Tensile (Young's) modulus |
≈ 215 GPa |
ASTM E111 |
|
Elongation at break, Q&T |
≈ 9 % |
ASTM E8 |
|
Hardness, Q&T (HRC 44–52 typical) |
Up to HRC 52 |
ASTM E18 — secondary hardening peak |
|
Hot hardness @ 540 °C |
≈ HRC 35 |
Hot-work suitability |
|
Charpy V-notch impact (Q&T) |
≈ 12–15 J |
ASTM E23 |
IV. MECHANICAL PROPERTIES — Z BUILD DIRECTION (VERTICAL)
In the Z orientation the tensile load is applied perpendicular to the printed layers. Binder-jet metal parts typically exhibit Z-direction strength within 5–15 % of XY in the as-sintered state, since the inter-layer interface effectively dissolves during high-temperature sintering. For sand-mould materials, Z-direction strength is dominated by inter-layer binder bonding and is generally 60–90 % of XY in transverse strength.
TABLE III
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES — Z ORIENTATION (H13 TOOL STEEL (DESKTOP METAL X-SERIES))
|
Property |
Value (Z) |
Test method / source |
|
Density (sintered) |
≈ 7.75 g/cm³ |
ASTM B962 |
|
Tensile strength, UTS, Q&T |
≈ 1720 MPa (≈ 98 % of XY) |
ASTM E8 |
|
Yield strength (Rp 0.2 %), Q&T |
≈ 1480 MPa (≈ 99 % of XY) |
ASTM E8 |
|
Tensile (Young's) modulus |
≈ 213 GPa |
ASTM E111 |
|
Hardness, Q&T |
≈ HRC 50–52 |
ASTM E18 |
Binder-jet H13 is essentially isotropic after high-temperature sintering and Q&T heat treatment. The austenitisation at 1010 °C followed by air-quench produces a uniform martensitic microstructure independent of build orientation. Double-tempering at 540 °C / 2 h × 2 cycles ensures full carbide precipitation and dimensional stability for tooling applications.
V. RECOMMENDED PROCESS PARAMETERS
Values summarised below give consensus operating windows from public datasheets (Desktop Metal, ExOne, voxeljet, cprint3d). Specific machines and parameter sets may differ within ±10 %; the supplier's verified parameter sheet always supersedes this table. For metal binder jetting, complete green-state cure (~200 °C) and a high-temperature de-bind / sinter cycle (typically 1 100–1 380 °C in H₂ / Ar / vacuum) are mandatory after print. For sand binder jetting, parts are usable directly after print (with optional microwave or oven post-cure).
TABLE IV
RECOMMENDED BINDER-JETTING PROCESS PARAMETERS FOR H13 TOOL STEEL (DESKTOP METAL X-SERIES)
|
Parameter |
Range |
Notes |
|
Print system |
Desktop Metal X-Series (InnoventX / X25Pro / X160Pro) |
Customer-qualified material |
|
Build volume (X160Pro) |
800 × 500 × 400 mm (160 L) |
Largest BJ envelope — tool inserts up to ~ 1 m possible |
|
Build volume (X25Pro) |
400 × 250 × 250 mm (25 L) |
Mid-volume mould insert production |
|
Layer thickness |
50 µm typical, 30–80 µm range |
Material-dependent |
|
Powder particle size (d50) |
≈ 15–25 µm |
MIM-grade gas-atomised |
|
Binder type |
Proprietary aqueous polymer (Desktop Metal) |
200 °C cure |
|
Sinter cycle |
1280–1320 °C / 4–6 h in pure H₂ |
Reducing atmosphere |
|
Sintering shrinkage |
≈ 17–20 % linear (isotropic) |
Live Sinter™ compensated |
|
Mandatory heat treatment |
Austenitise 1010 °C / 30 min, air quench, double-temper 540–600 °C / 2 h × 2 |
Standard H13 Q&T cycle |
|
Optional surface treatment |
Nitriding (570 °C / 24 h gas nitride) for HV 1100 surface |
Extends die-cast tool life ~3× |
VI. GLASS TRANSITION TEMPERATURE (TG)
Reported / typical Tg: Not applicable (metallic alloy).
Critical thermal limits: austenitisation 1010 °C (Ac₁ ≈ 860 °C, Ac₃ ≈ 915 °C); martensite start Ms ≈ 310 °C; secondary hardening tempering peak at 540 °C; service-temperature limit ≈ 540 °C continuous (above this, tempering progresses and hardness drops); melting range 1410–1460 °C.
VII. HEAT DEFLECTION TEMPERATURE (HDT)
Heat deflection temperature is the temperature at which a standard bar deflects 0.25 mm under a specified flexural load (ASTM D648 / ISO 75).
TABLE V
HEAT DEFLECTION TEMPERATURE OF H13 TOOL STEEL (DESKTOP METAL X-SERIES) UNDER STANDARD TEST LOADS
|
Test load |
HDT |
Standard / source |
|
Continuous service temperature |
≈ 540 °C |
Above this, tempering / softening progresses |
|
Tempering peak (secondary hardening) |
≈ 540 °C |
Standard 2nd / 3rd temper temperature |
|
Austenitisation temperature |
1010 °C |
Standard Q&T cycle |
|
Solidus / Liquidus |
≈ 1410 / 1460 °C |
Alloy melting range |
VIII. DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS AND STANDARDS
A. Conformal cooling — the killer application
Traditional injection-mould cooling channels are gun-drilled straight bores — they cannot follow the cavity geometry. Binder-jet H13 lets engineers route channels 1–3 mm beneath the cavity surface, parallel to its contour, dramatically improving cooling uniformity. Documented case studies (BMW, Whirlpool, Danfoss) show 20–40 % cycle-time reduction and 2–3× tool life increase.
B. Hot hardness preserved to ~ 600 °C
Vanadium and molybdenum carbides (MC + M₆C) resist over-aging at die-casting / hot-forging temperatures. Hot hardness at 540 °C ≈ HRC 35 (vs HRC 20 for D2 or A2 cold-work tool steels) — the reason H13 has dominated hot-work tooling for 60 years.
C. Superior thermal-fatigue resistance
Fine MC carbides and good through-hardenability give H13 exceptional thermal-fatigue resistance — critical for die-cast moulds that experience 100 000+ thermal cycles between hot metal injection and water-spray cooling. Binder-jet H13 inserts achieve thermal-fatigue performance equivalent to wrought H13 after Q&T.
D. Air-hardening — minimal distortion
H13's air-quench hardenability eliminates oil or water quench, dramatically reducing distortion during heat treatment. Critical for thin-wall conformal cooling channels (~ 1 mm wall) which would crack under aggressive water quench.
E. Customer-qualified vs fully qualified
On Desktop Metal X-Series, H13 is 'customer-qualified' rather than fully Desktop-Metal-qualified — meaning print parameters and sinter recipes have been demonstrated by individual customers but Desktop Metal does not yet publish a formal material datasheet. Full qualification expected during 2025–2026 as adoption grows.
IX. REPRESENTATIVE APPLICATIONS
H13 Tool Steel (Desktop Metal X-Series) is typically deployed in the following applications:
1) Injection-mould inserts with conformal cooling: Front-line application: tool inserts for plastic injection moulding where cycle time and cavity-surface uniformity drive part quality.
2) Die-casting dies (aluminium, magnesium): Aluminium die-cast moulds for automotive structural parts; Mg die-cast for aerospace housings — H13 hot hardness essential.

(Source : GSC-3D)
3) Hot-forging dies (small to medium): Open and closed die forging tooling for steel and Cu alloys, leveraging H13's thermal-fatigue resistance.
4) Extrusion dies (Al): Aluminium extrusion bridge / mandrel tooling, especially for complex hollow sections requiring conformal cooling.
5) Plastic mould bases and tooling components: Mould bases, ejector pins, slides where dimensional stability and toughness matter.
X. REFERENCES
[1] ASTM A681-08(2022), “Standard Specification for Tool Steels Alloy,” ASTM International, 2022.
[2] DIN EN ISO 4957:2018, “Tool steels,” European Committee for Standardization.
[3] Böhler Edelstahl, “W302 — Hot Work Tool Steel,” Technical bulletin.
[4] Uddeholm, “Orvar Supreme — Hot-work Tool Steel,” Technical bulletin, 2022.
[5] C. Mapelli et al., “Microstructural evolution of binder-jetted H13 tool steel,” Materials Science and Engineering A, vol. 829, 142124, 2022.
[6] ASTM E8/E8M-22, “Standard Test Methods for Tension Testing of Metallic Materials,” ASTM International, 2022.
[7] ASTM B962-17, “Standard Test Methods for Density of Compacted or Sintered Powder Metallurgy (PM) Products Using Archimedes' Principle,” ASTM International, 2017.
[8] ASTM E18-22, “Standard Test Methods for Rockwell Hardness of Metallic Materials,” ASTM International, 2022.
[9] ASTM F3318-22, “Standard for Additive Manufacturing — Finished Part Properties — Specification for AlSi10Mg with Powder Bed Fusion — Laser Beam,” ASTM International, 2022.
[10] ISO/ASTM 52900:2021, “Additive manufacturing — General principles — Fundamentals and vocabulary,” ISO, 2021.
[11] ISO/ASTM 52904:2024, “Additive manufacturing — Process characteristics and performance — Practice for metal powder bed fusion process to meet critical applications,” ISO, 2024.
[12] MPIF Standard 35-MIM, “Materials Standards for Metal Injection Molded Parts,” Metal Powder Industries Federation, 2022 ed.
[13] Desktop Metal, “Material Properties of Binder Jet Parts,” Desktop Metal Technical White Paper. [Online]. Available: https://www.desktopmetal.com/resources/material-properties-of-binder-jet-parts
[14] Desktop Metal, “Why Binder Jetting?” Desktop Metal Application Note. [Online]. Available: https://www.desktopmetal.com/resources/why-binder-jetting-1
[15] Desktop Metal, “Materials portfolio overview,” Desktop Metal product page. [Online]. Available: https://www.desktopmetal.com/materials/
(Image Source : Markforged)