Different atomization gas temperatures change the gas velocity, particle diameter, particle velocity, and particle deformation time during impact. [Display omitted] • Gas velocity can almost be doubled by consuming half of the gas amount by using hot gas atomization (T G : 293–1227 K). • Gas temperature influences the particle size, velocity, temperature, and cooling rate. • Hot gas atomization reduces the particle deformation time during impact and thus reduces the deposit porosity. • Hot gas atomization extends the process window for spray forming of steel tubes. The velocity and thermal behavior (temperature, enthalpy, solid fraction) of atomized droplets in a metal spray play the most important role in the spray forming process. These properties mainly determine the materials yield and the final product quality (e.g., porosity, microstructure) of the as-sprayed materials. Changing the gas temperature in the atomization process directly influences these droplet properties in the spray. To understand the droplet behavior in the spray at various atomization gas temperatures (i.e., room temperature RT 293 K, 573 K, 873 K), numerical simulations using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) techniques have been performed and validated by experiments. A series of atomization runs (powder production and spray-forming with AISI 52100 steel) has been conducted at different atomization gas temperatures and pressures with a close-coupled atomizer (CCA). The in-situ temperature detection of the deposit surface (pyrometer) and in the substrate (thermocouples) has been performed to observe the effect of particle properties on the deposit. The result shows that hot gas atomization provides smaller droplets with faster velocity in the spray, affecting the droplet impact and deformation time in the deposition zone. A higher solid fraction of the smaller droplets by hot gas atomization also reduces the deposit surface temperature. Increasing the substrate diameter further decreases the deposit surface temperature without compromising the deposit quality (i.e., porosity) and also refines the grain size. Pre-heating of the substrate up to 573 K results in lower porosity in the vicinity of the substrate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]