
In the mass production of Metal Injection Molding (MIM), many enterprises face a core dilemma in powder selection: opting for low-cost powder drives up the total process cost, while choosing high-end powder to ensure product performance leads to cost overruns and lost market competitiveness.
In fact, the performance upper limit, yield rate and whole-life cycle cost of MIM products are basically defined at the powder selection stage in the initial project setup. The choice between water atomization and gas atomization—two mainstream powder manufacturing processes—is the core fulcrum for balancing product performance and cost.
1. Atomization Technology: Defining the “Inherent Properties” of MIM Powder
The process performance of the entire MIM workflow is highly dependent on the core characteristics of metal powder, including particle morphology, sphericity, oxygen content and flowability. These characteristics are fundamentally determined by the atomization technology, and the intrinsic differences between the two mainstream processes directly result in distinctly different inherent properties of the powder:
- Gas Atomization (GA): High-pressure inert gas (nitrogen for mainstream applications, argon for high-end alloys) is used as the atomizing medium. Molten metal droplets are fully spheroidized under surface tension and solidified into powder during cooling in an inert atmosphere. Its core features are low oxygen content, high sphericity and excellent flowability.
- Water Atomization (WA): High-pressure deionized water serves as the atomizing medium. Molten droplets are shattered by high-speed impact and rapidly quenched, solidifying without full spheroidization. Its core features are high production efficiency, low cost, irregular particle morphology and relatively high oxygen content.
2. Core Comparison
The inherent properties of powder directly determine the mechanical performance, dimensional accuracy, corrosion resistance and batch consistency of finished MIM products, and even fundamentally define the cost boundaries of products:

As the comparison shows, the two powder processes have entirely different capability boundaries and cost models, and these differences directly determine the final profitability of MIM projects throughout their whole life cycle.
3. Cost Breakdown
The most common misconception in MIM project cost control is focusing solely on the unit procurement cost of powder while ignoring its impact on the total process cost. Powder procurement cost typically accounts for only 20% to 35% of the total cost of MIM products. The choice of atomization technology profoundly influences the final profit and loss of projects through multiple links such as yield rate, production capacity and compliance.
3.1 Direct Procurement Cost: The Explicit Advantage of Water Atomization
Water atomization features high production efficiency and low energy consumption. The unit procurement cost of conventional iron-based and stainless steel powders of the same material is 20% to 30% lower than that of gas atomized powder, making it a core cost reduction measure for high-volume economical products. Even with the additional reduction annealing process to optimize oxygen content, it still maintains a significant price advantage in large-scale production. However, this advantage only holds in suitable application scenarios; beyond the performance boundary, it will fall into the dilemma of “the cheaper, the more costly” due to surging hidden costs.
3.2 Total Process Hidden Costs: The Long-Term Value of Gas Atomization
The inherent properties of powder determine the hidden cost input of the entire MIM production process, which is also the core part most easily overlooked in selection:
- Yield Cost: Water atomized powder poses high molding difficulty and a high defect rate in injection molding, debinding and sintering. The mass production yield of complex structural components is 5% to 15% lower than that of gas atomized powder, directly increasing the allocation of fixed costs per unit product.
- Process Cost: Water atomized powder requires more complex binder formulations, with longer mixing and sintering cycles, faster equipment wear and lower unit production capacity. It also needs additional post-processing such as shaping and machining, leading to a significant rise in process and quality control costs.
- Compliance Cost: In scenarios with stringent compliance requirements such as medical devices and automotive safety components, conventional water atomized powder is difficult to stably meet long-term reliability requirements, which is prone to customer complaints and product recalls, resulting in huge hidden costs and brand losses. Gas atomized powder can stably comply with international standards such as ISO 13485 and IATF 16949, with lower compliance risks.
4. Practical Selection Guidelines
Water atomization and gas atomization are not mutually exclusive. The core logic of selection is to find the optimal balance between performance and cost based on the core demands of products.
- Prioritize Gas Atomization: Fields with stringent requirements for performance, compliance and reliability such as medical devices, aerospace and automotive safety components; precision parts with strict tolerance requirements such as thin-walled components and micro-features; highly reactive metal systems prone to severe oxidation in water such as titanium alloys, cobalt-chromium alloys and superalloys; high-volume mass production projects with high requirements for batch consistency.
- Prioritize Water Atomization: Economical products with cost control as the core such as civil hardware and home appliance parts; components with simple structures, uniform wall thickness and loose tolerance requirements; material systems insensitive to oxygen content such as low-alloy iron-based materials; low-cost, short-life cycle high-volume mass production projects.
- Optimal Compromise Solution: With the maturation of MIM technology, the industry’s demand for balancing powder performance and cost has become increasingly urgent, giving rise to the combined water-gas atomization process that integrates the core advantages of both.
This process adopts an integrated technology of gas atomization pre-atomization + water atomization secondary solidification. It not only ensures powder sphericity, flowability and low oxygen control through the gas atomization stage, but also retains the mechanical interlocking of particles through the water atomization stage, while significantly controlling raw material costs.
The final effect of “performance close to pure gas atomization, cost only 10% to 30% higher than conventional water atomization” is achieved, which is perfectly suitable for mass production scenarios such as consumer electronics, automotive components, high-end locks and tools. It has become one of the mainstream optimization directions of current MIM powder manufacturing technology.
5. Conclusion
Genuine precision manufacturing is never about choosing between “high quality” and “low cost”, but about finding the “just right” optimal solution for customers.
Yibi Precision has been deeply rooted in the MIM contract manufacturing sector for many years. Relying on its mature combined water-gas atomization process, we have broken the industry stereotype that “performance and cost cannot be achieved simultaneously”. We can customize end-to-end MIM solutions according to customers’ performance, compliance requirements and cost targets. At present, we have provided high-reliability and cost-effective contract manufacturing services for customers in dozens of countries and regions around the world, covering core fields such as medical devices, automotive electronics, locks and tools.
If you are struggling with the dilemma of balancing performance and cost in your MIM projects, we welcome you to send us a private message for communication. Yibi Precision will provide you with one-on-one customized process solutions and free technical evaluation.