Air plasma torches and consumables are designed for use with air.....which is roughly 80% nitrogen and 20% oxygen. Since most shops already have a compressed air system, this makes for an inexpensive way to provide gas for a plasma cutter. The oxygen content provides a bit of an exothermic boost on steels, and even helps remove dross on stainless and steel as compared to using pure nitrogen. Using pure nitrogen on steel will make for an ugly, drossy cut at lower speeds.
First though....definitely do not put pure oxygen in any plasma torch that is not specifically designed for oxygen use. There are components in the air flow control system, the torch leads, the consumables and the torch body that will burn in the presence of pure oxygen......and oxygen fire can easily destroy the torch, the leads, the power supply and possibly your shop! Just don't do it!
I have heard of users experimenting with premixed air supplies with a higher than 20% oxygen content.....as high as about 40%. This will minimize dross on steel, likely will improve cut speeds, and will increase cut kerf width.....and probably will shorten nozzle and electrode life. I don't recommend this either....as there could be issues with the mixing of the oxygen and air that could get the oxygen supported fire started....why take the chance?
Contrary to popular belief, industrial plasma systems that use oxygen as the plasma gas (and air as the shield gas) create faster cuts with better edge angularity and lower cost per foot of cut as compared to an air plasma. The lower cost can be traced to: 1. longer consumable parts life (liquid cooled consumables with highly accurate gas flow controls) 2. Faster cut speeds 3. Better cut quality resulting in less secondary operations (grinding, dross removal, weld edge preparation, etc.). You will pay more to buy these systems, and pay less on a day to day basis to use them.
Oxygen plasma cutting is typically used on industrial cnc operations, many are the latest technology high definition class plasma systems (such as Hypertherm's HPR130XD through HPR800XD) and all have liquid cooled torches and consumables, microprocessor controlled gas flow circuits and power supplies.
Jim Colt Hypertherm