Refractory materials encompass a wide range of types and applications, and thus, can be classified through various methods. The most widely adopted classification systems are based on chemical properties and chemical-mineral composition, as they effectively reflect the material structure, composition, dan kinerja. Below is a comprehensive classification of refractory materials.
1. Classification by Chemical Properties
Refractory materials are typically divided into three categories based on their chemical properties:
-
Acidic Refractories
Mainly composed of silicon dioxide (SiO₂). Typical products include silica bricks and zircon bricks, which are resistant to acidic slags. -
Basic Refractories
Primarily composed of magnesium oxide (MgO) and calcium oxide (CaO). This group includes magnesia bricks, magnesia-alumina bricks, magnesia-chrome bricks, and dolomite bricks, suitable for resisting basic slags. -
Neutral Refractories
Based on alumina (Al₂O₃), chromia (Cr₂O₃), and carbon, these include corundum bricks, high alumina bricks, and carbon bricks, offering resistance to both acidic and basic slags.
2. Classification by Chemical-Mineral Composition
This is the most widely used classification method in the industry. It includes:
-
Silica Refractories:
Silica bricks, fused quartz products. -
Silica-Alumina Refractories:
Clay bricks, semi-silica bricks, high alumina bricks, mullite bricks, corundum bricks. -
Magnesia-Based Refractories:
Magnesia bricks, magnesia-alumina bricks, magnesia-chrome bricks, dolomite bricks. -
Carbon-Based Refractories:
Carbon bricks, graphite-clay products. -
Zirconia-Based Refractories:
Zircon bricks, zircon-mullite bricks, zirconia-corundum bricks (AZS). -
Special Refractories:
High-purity materials with melting points above 2000°C, such as pure oxides, carbides, nitrides, borides, and metal ceramics.
3. Classification by Refractoriness
-
Common Refractories: 1580–1770°C
-
Advanced Refractories: 1770–2000°C
-
Super Refractories: >2000°C
4. Classification by Forming Process
-
Natural rock materials
-
Slurry casting refractories
-
Plastic forming refractories
-
Semi-dry pressed refractories
-
Ramming refractories (mechanical or manual)
-
Fused cast products
5. Classification by Firing Method
-
Unfired Bricks
-
Fired Bricks
-
Monolithic Refractories (Unshaped Materials)
6. Classification by Apparent Porosity
-
<3%: Ultra-dense products
-
3–10%: High-density products
-
10–16%: Dense products
-
16–20%: Sintered products
-
20–30%: Ordinary products
-
45–85%: Lightweight products
-
85%: Ultra-lightweight products
7. Classification by Chemical-Mineral Composition: Product Examples
Silica-Alumina Refractory Series
-
Silica Bricks (SiO₂ > 93%): for coke ovens, hot blast stoves, glass kilns
-
Semi-silica Bricks
-
Fireclay Bricks (Al₂O₃ 30–48%): for blast furnaces, hot blast stoves
-
High Alumina Bricks (Al₂O₃ 48–90%): including sillimanite, mullite, and corundum bricks
-
Mullite Bricks
-
Corundum Bricks: sintered, fused, chrome-corundum, corundum-mullite
Basic Refractory Series
-
Magnesia Bricks: fired, chemically bonded, asphalt bonded
-
Magnesia-Alumina Bricks
-
Magnesia-Chrome Bricks: direct bonded, fused cast
-
Dolomite Bricks
-
Magnesia-Dolomite Bricks
-
Magnesia-Silica Bricks
Zirconia-Containing Refractories
-
Zircon Bricks
-
Fused Cast AZS Bricks
-
Zircon-Mullite Bricks
Carbon-Containing Refractories
-
Alumina-Carbon Bricks: for ladles, sliding gates
-
Magnesia-Carbon Bricks: for converters, electric arc furnaces
-
Zirconia-Carbon Bricks
-
Dolomite-Carbon Bricks
-
Graphite-Clay Refractories
-
Silicon Carbide Bricks: clay-bonded, nitride-bonded, recrystallized
-
Carbon Bricks: for blast furnaces, electrolytic cells
Monolithic Refractories (Unshaped Materials)
-
Refractory Aggregates: dense and lightweight
-
Refractory Powder
-
Refractory Castables: dense, lightweight
-
Refractory Cement and Mortar
-
Ramming Mixes, Plastic Refractories, Spraying Mixes
-
Conclusion
Understanding the classification of refractory materials provides a systematic approach to selecting the right material for each industrial application. Among the numerous classification systems, chemical-mineral composition is the most comprehensive and widely adopted, as it directly reflects the refractory’s structure, performance, and suitability for high-temperature environments.