You can braze Titanium.
You need to remove the oxide and then plate to prevent re-oxidation.
We did research on this maybe 15 years ago and published it. Nobody seemed to care much. Our conclusion was that plating titanium for brazing was pretty much solving a problem no one had. We were electroplating with cobalt.
Here is another take on the issue.
Plating Clinic in Product Finishing
For more plating items go to ...
ARTHUR S, KUSHNER
Kushner Electroplating School, Sunnyvale, CA
platingclinic@pfonline.com
Electroless Nickel on Titanium Revisited
One of our readers had a suggestion for getting a stronger bond between electroless nickel and the titanium substrate. The suggestion is to add a bake step after the deposition of the electroless nickel. The original question and answer is repeated below with the bake step added.
Q. How can we deposit electroless nickel on titanium parts?
A. The key to getting a good adhesive layer of electroless nickel on titanium is proper
preparation of the titanium substrate. In the book, Electroless Nickel Plating, Wolfgang
Riedel, ASM International,
the following procedure is suggested:
1. Vapor degrease
2. Blast using 220 mesh alumina at 4 bar
3. Rinse thoroughly
4. Etch using 400 g/L HN03 + 5 g/ L HF for 5 minutes
5. Rinse thoroughly
6. Activate using a Wood's nickel strike
7. Rinse thoroughly
8. Electroless nickel plate
9. Bake at 750°F for 30-60 minutes
(added step)
The important thing to remember is that titanium forms a rather tenacious oxide on the
surface almost instantaneously when exposed to the atmosphere. Hence, the steps in the
above procedure must be performed rapidly
Thomas J. Walz
Carbide Processors, Inc.
Good engineering starts with a Grainger Catalog.