Home › Blog › Conformal Cooling with H13 Tool Steel
H13 (DIN 1.2344 / AISI H13) is the most widely used hot-work tool steel in injection molding and die casting worldwide. Mold shops have decades of experience machining it, heat treating it, and running it in production. So when the conversation turns to conformal cooling channels built by metal 3D printing, the first question from many tooling engineers is straightforward: can we print H13?
The answer is yes — but with significant caveats. Unlike maraging steel (MS1 / 18Ni300), which prints easily on standard LPBF machines, H13 demands specialized equipment, carefully optimized parameters, and a controlled heat treatment sequence. This guide covers everything a mold maker needs to know before specifying H13 for a conformally cooled insert.
H13 is not just a familiar material — it is the foundation of the entire injection mold and die casting ecosystem. There are compelling technical and practical reasons why tooling engineers prefer it over alternative alloys:

For shops running hundreds of H13 mold bases, specifying the same steel for conformal inserts means no changes to heat treatment vendors, polishing procedures, or weld repair protocols. The insert drops into the existing workflow.
Despite its desirability, H13 is one of the more difficult tool steels to process by Laser Powder Bed Fusion (LPBF). The root cause is its chemical composition — specifically, its carbon content and high hardenability.
H13 contains approximately 0.40% carbon along with 5.0% Cr, 1.3% Mo, and 1.0% V. This gives H13 a carbon equivalent (CE) well above 0.5, making it highly susceptible to cold cracking during rapid solidification. During LPBF without adequate preheating, cooling rates reach 106 °C/s — fast enough to transform the melt pool directly into untempered martensite with hardness exceeding 60 HRC and near-zero ductility.
The layer-by-layer thermal cycling in LPBF creates steep thermal gradients. In H13, these gradients generate residual stresses that can exceed the material's fracture toughness, causing:
The cracking problem is solved by preheating the build plate to 500°C or higher — above the martensite start (Ms) temperature of H13 (approximately 300–340°C). This keeps the as-built material in a ductile bainitic state rather than brittle martensite, dramatically reducing residual stress and eliminating cracking. However, this preheating requirement means H13 cannot be printed on standard LPBF machines that only offer 200°C preheat capability.

Achieving crack-free, fully dense H13 builds requires careful optimization of both thermal management and laser parameters. The following table summarizes validated parameter sets from published research and production experience:
| Parameter | Recommended Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Build plate preheat | 500–600°C | Critical — must exceed Ms temperature |
| Laser power | 280–370 W | Higher power for thicker layers |
| Scan speed | 600–1000 mm/s | Slower speeds improve density |
| Layer thickness | 30–50 μm | 30 μm for best surface finish and density |
| Hatch spacing | 80–120 μm | Overlap ratio 30–40% |
| Scan strategy | 67° rotation | Stripe or checkerboard with inter-layer rotation |
| Volumetric energy density | 60–90 J/mm³ | E = P / (v × h × t) |
| Atmosphere | Argon or Nitrogen | O2 < 0.1% |
| Powder size distribution | 15–45 μm | Gas-atomized, spherical morphology |
The scan strategy significantly affects residual stress distribution in H13 builds. A 67-degree rotation between layers distributes thermal stress across multiple orientations, preventing stress accumulation along any single direction. Island (checkerboard) scanning with small island sizes (5 mm × 5 mm) further reduces peak residual stress by limiting the length of continuous scan tracks.
For conformal cooling inserts with internal channels, down-skin and up-skin parameters must be separately optimized to maintain channel dimensional accuracy and surface roughness. Overhang angles below 45 degrees require support structures or adjusted parameters to prevent channel collapse.
When printed with proper preheating and optimized parameters, LPBF H13 achieves mechanical properties that match or approach wrought H13:
| Property | LPBF H13 (Printed + HT) | Wrought H13 (Conventional) |
|---|---|---|
| Density | >99.5% (7.75–7.80 g/cm³) | 7.80 g/cm³ |
| Hardness (heat treated) | 50–54 HRC | 48–54 HRC |
| Ultimate tensile strength | 1800–2050 MPa | 1820–2000 MPa |
| Yield strength | 1400–1650 MPa | 1480–1600 MPa |
| Elongation at break | 3–6% | 5–8% |
| Thermal conductivity | 24–25 W/m·K | 24–25 W/m·K |
| Impact toughness (unnotched) | 12–18 J | 15–22 J |
| Hot hardness at 500°C | 42–46 HRC | 42–47 HRC |
Printed H13 with proper heat treatment achieves hardness and tensile strength equivalent to wrought H13. Ductility is slightly lower due to the fine cellular solidification microstructure, but this is not limiting for injection mold or die casting applications where compressive loads dominate.
Unlike maraging steel which requires only a simple aging treatment, H13 demands a multi-step heat treatment cycle to achieve its target properties. The following protocol is validated for LPBF H13 conformal cooling inserts:
Temperature: 650°C for 2 hours, furnace cool to below 100°C
Performed before removal from the build plate to prevent distortion. Relieves residual stress from the LPBF process without significantly altering the microstructure. The part remains on the build plate during this step.
Remove the part from the build plate by wire EDM or bandsaw. Perform rough CNC machining of datum surfaces, mounting features, and waterline connections. Leave 0.3–0.5 mm stock on all precision surfaces for finish machining after hardening.
Temperature: 1020–1040°C for 30–45 minutes (soak time depends on section thickness)
Quench: Gas quench (vacuum furnace preferred) or oil quench
Ramp rate: approximately 10°C/min from room temperature to austenitizing temperature, with intermediate holds at 650°C and 850°C (20 minutes each) to ensure uniform temperature distribution and minimize thermal shock.
First temper: 550–600°C for 2 hours, air cool to room temperature
Second temper: 550–600°C for 2 hours, air cool to room temperature
Double tempering ensures complete transformation of retained austenite and achieves the target hardness of 50–54 HRC. The tempering temperature determines final hardness — use 550°C for 54 HRC or 600°C for 50 HRC. A third temper is sometimes performed for critical die casting applications.
After heat treatment, finish-machine all precision surfaces by hard milling or grinding. Polish cavity surfaces to required finish (SPI A-2 or better for optical parts). Apply surface treatments (nitriding, PVD coating) if required for wear resistance.
| Temper Temperature | Expected Hardness | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|
| 540°C | 54–55 HRC | High-wear applications, glass-filled materials |
| 560°C | 52–54 HRC | General injection molding, most conformal cooling inserts |
| 580°C | 50–52 HRC | Die casting, need for higher toughness |
| 600°C | 48–50 HRC | Maximum toughness, large die casting dies |
The most common alternative to H13 for 3D-printed conformal cooling inserts is MS1 (also known as 18Ni300 or 1.2709 maraging steel). Both steels achieve similar room-temperature hardness, but their processing characteristics and high-temperature performance differ substantially:
| Property | H13 (1.2344) | MS1 / 18Ni300 (1.2709) |
|---|---|---|
| Carbon content | 0.40% | <0.03% |
| Printability (LPBF) | Difficult — requires 500°C+ preheat | Easy — prints on standard machines |
| Required preheat | 500–600°C | 80–200°C (or none) |
| Heat treatment | Complex (austenitize + quench + double temper) | Simple (age harden at 490°C for 6h) |
| Hardness (heat treated) | 50–54 HRC | 50–54 HRC |
| Hot hardness at 500°C | 42–46 HRC | 32–36 HRC |
| Max operating temperature | 600°C+ | 400°C |
| Thermal fatigue resistance | Excellent | Good |
| Weldability to H13 base | Excellent (same material) | Difficult (dissimilar metals) |
| Thermal conductivity | 24–25 W/m·K | 20–25 W/m·K |
| Corrosion resistance | Moderate (5% Cr) | Low (requires coating for corrosive resins) |
| Powder cost (approx.) | $80–120/kg | $70–100/kg |
| Number of capable service bureaus | Limited (~20% of LPBF providers) | Widely available (>80% of providers) |
| Build rate | Slower (higher preheat = longer cooldown) | Standard |
For the majority of injection molding conformal cooling applications — commodity resins at standard mold temperatures — MS1 is the pragmatic choice. It prints faster, on more machines, with simpler heat treatment, and achieves the same room-temperature hardness. Reserve H13 for the specific scenarios described in the next section.
Despite MS1's processing advantages, there are applications where H13 is technically superior or practically necessary:
Aluminum and zinc die casting subjects the tool to molten metal temperatures of 660–700°C (aluminum) or 400–420°C (zinc). H13 is the established die casting tool steel because of its thermal fatigue resistance and hot hardness retention. MS1 would soften and degrade rapidly under these conditions. For conformally cooled die casting inserts, H13 is the only viable choice among printable tool steels.
Processing resins like PEEK, PEI (Ultem), PPS, and LCP requires mold temperatures of 150–220°C, with melt temperatures exceeding 350°C. While MS1 can technically operate at these temperatures, H13 provides better long-term stability and resistance to heat-related property degradation over hundreds of thousands of cycles.
When a conformal cooling insert must be retrofitted into an existing H13 mold base, metallurgical compatibility matters. Using an H13 insert in an H13 base ensures:
Some automotive OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers specify H13 (or equivalent P20, S7) in their tooling standards. In these cases, MS1 may not be acceptable regardless of its equivalent mechanical properties, because the customer's tooling specification does not list maraging steel as an approved grade. Using H13 avoids the need for a material deviation request.
The 500°C+ preheat requirement limits the field of compatible LPBF systems. Not all metal 3D printers can process H13. The following machines are validated for crack-free H13 production:
| Machine | Max Preheat | Build Volume | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trumpf TruPrint 2000 | 500°C | ∅200 × 200 mm | Industry reference for H13. Induction preheating for uniform temperature. |
| SLM Solutions SLM 280 2.0 | 500°C | 280 × 280 × 365 mm | Twin-laser option for higher productivity. Preheating module available. |
| EOS M 290 (HT option) | 500°C | 250 × 250 × 325 mm | High-temperature build plate option required. Most widely installed LPBF platform. |
| Concept Laser M2 (GE) | 400°C (500°C with upgrade) | 250 × 250 × 280 mm | Requires preheating upgrade for reliable H13 processing. |
| Trumpf TruPrint 3000 | 500°C | ∅300 × 400 mm | Larger build volume for bigger inserts. Industrial preheating system. |
Standard LPBF machines with only 200°C preheat — including the base EOS M 290, Renishaw AM400, and many Chinese LPBF systems — cannot reliably process H13. Attempting to print H13 on these machines will result in cracking, delamination, and failed builds. Always verify the machine's preheat capability before specifying H13.
Roughly 80% of LPBF service bureaus worldwide can print MS1/18Ni300, but only about 20% have machines capable of H13 processing. When evaluating suppliers for H13 conformal cooling inserts, always ask: what machine and preheat temperature will be used? Request density reports and metallographic cross-sections from previous H13 builds as qualification evidence.
As-printed LPBF H13 has a surface roughness of Ra 8–15 μm, which is too rough for injection mold cavity surfaces and for internal cooling channel performance. Post-processing is essential:
After finish machining, printed H13 accepts the same surface treatments as wrought H13:
Application: Aluminum (A380) structural die casting, thin-wall automotive bracket. Conventional cooling with straight-drilled baffles created a persistent hot spot at a T-junction intersection, causing soldering (aluminum sticking to die surface) and requiring die spray every 3 cycles.
Solution: H13 conformal cooling insert printed on Trumpf TruPrint 2000 at 500°C preheat. Heat treated to 52 HRC. Channels follow the T-junction geometry at 8 mm from cavity surface with 4 mm diameter.
Results:
Application: PEEK (polyetheretherketone) electrical connector housing for aerospace. Mold temperature 200°C, melt temperature 380°C. Conventional cooling could not maintain uniform temperature across the thin-wall (0.8 mm) connector pins, causing short shots and dimensional variation exceeding +/-0.05 mm tolerance.
Solution: H13 core insert with conformal channels printed on SLM 280 2.0. Channel diameter 3 mm, wall-to-channel distance 5 mm. Heat treated to 50 HRC, then nitrided for wear resistance against the glass-filled PEEK compound (30% GF).
Results:
Application: PC (polycarbonate) automotive tail light lens. Existing H13 mold base running for 5 years with conventional cooling. Persistent sink marks on thick-section light guide features were causing 6% cosmetic reject rate. Customer required H13 material for the replacement insert to match existing mold base.
Solution: Drop-in H13 conformal cooling insert designed as a direct replacement for the existing conventional core. Printed on EOS M 290 with 500°C preheat option. Heat treated to 52 HRC and polished to SPI A-2. Laser-welded into the existing H13 mold base pocket — no base modifications required.
Results:
Yes, H13 can be 3D printed via LPBF, but it requires machines with build plate preheating of 500°C or higher to prevent cracking. With proper preheating and optimized laser parameters, printed H13 achieves density above 99.5% and hardness of 50 to 54 HRC after heat treatment, matching wrought H13 performance for injection mold and die casting applications.
3D-printed H13 achieves 50 to 54 HRC after a standard austenitize-quench-double-temper cycle. The exact hardness depends on tempering temperature: 540°C yields 54 to 55 HRC, while 600°C yields 48 to 50 HRC. This matches the hardness range of conventionally manufactured H13.
For most injection molding applications below 300°C mold temperature, MS1 (18Ni300 maraging steel) is the preferred choice because it prints without high-temperature preheating and requires simpler heat treatment. Choose H13 when you need hot hardness above 400°C (die casting, high-temp resins like PEEK), when the insert must fit an existing H13 mold base for metallurgical compatibility, or when customer specifications require H13.
H13 requires LPBF machines with build plate preheating of 500°C or higher. Compatible systems include the Trumpf TruPrint 2000, SLM Solutions SLM 280 2.0 with preheating module, EOS M 290 with high-temperature build plate option, and Trumpf TruPrint 3000. Standard machines with only 200°C preheat cannot reliably process H13.
H13 has approximately 0.40% carbon and high alloy content, giving it strong hardenability. During LPBF without adequate preheating, the rapid cooling rate causes the material to form untempered martensite, which is extremely brittle. Combined with high residual stresses from layer-by-layer thermal cycling, this leads to cold cracking and delamination. Preheating the build plate to 500°C keeps the part above the martensite start temperature, preventing brittle martensite formation during the build.