I strongly agree with some of the comments above...
I also believe that long industry experience with this specific combination of flange bolting is important here
SnTman: This is very common combination of materials/construction. If your flanges are adequately designed (as it appears they are) I'd not worry about them. Unless the bolting is tightened very near yield, I'd not worry about them either.
AGREED
Christine74: B7 stud bolts are commonly torqued to 70-80% of yield which is around 80,000 psi, but flanges designed per Appendix 2 are only designed for bolt loads of 25,000 psi. Yet this rarely (if ever) causes damage to the flanges. I don't expect any issues here but if you're concerned you can always insulate the bolts.
AGREED - I have seen the B7s torqued to 80ksi on stainless flanges and in satisfactory service for many years. Insulation of bolts causes long term maintenanceaccess issues ... IMHO
davefitz:One can use belleville washers ( spring loaded washer) to account for differential expansion between the ferritic bolts and the austenitic flanges.
DISAGREE: I believe that, as a general policy, this will cause more problems than this is worth. There will be clearance issues and new maintenance assembly requirements. Extra long stud bolts, flat washers will cause problems. There is a near infinitesimal difference in actual expansion between the SS material and the B7. Stick with the tried and true combination ..
Again, all of the above in based on my experience and opinion
MJCronin
Sr. Process Engineer