Spécifications clés
- Al2O3 Hardness
- 1,200–1,400 HV (HRA 85–88)
- ZTA Hardness
- 1,400–1,600 HV (HRA 88–91)
- SiC Hardness
- 2,200–2,500 HV
- Wear Life Extension
- 2–3x vs. monolithic high-chrome or Mn steel
- Bonding Methods
- Mechanical interlock, metallurgical cast-in, active braze
- Matrix Materials
- High-Cr iron, Mn steel, tool steel
- Applications
- Blow bars, cone liners, VRM rollers, chute liners
- Standards
- ASTM A532 (matrix), ISO 6474 (ceramic grade ref.)
Ceramic Insert Technology for Crusher and Mill Wear Parts
Ceramic insert wear parts, also known as metal matrix composites (MMC), combine a ductile metal matrix with embedded ceramic inserts to deliver wear resistance far beyond what monolithic alloys can achieve alone. The concept is straightforward: high-hardness ceramic elements—typically ranging from 1,200 HV for standard alumina (Al2O3 at 92–95% purity) to 2,500 HV for silicon carbide (SiC)—are positioned within a cast metal body to absorb abrasive wear at the working surface, while the surrounding metal matrix (high-chrome iron at 600+ BHN, manganese steel, or tool steel) provides structural toughness and resistance to gross fracture. In crusher and milling applications processing abrasive rock such as granite, basalt, quartzite, and siliceous iron ore, this dual-material approach can extend service life by 2–3 times compared to conventional manganese steel or high-chrome white iron castings, depending on the operating conditions, feed material abrasiveness, and impact severity.
The practical challenge lies in reliably bonding two fundamentally dissimilar materials. Ceramics are inherently brittle, have thermal expansion coefficients approximately half that of steel (5–8 x 10^-6/K versus 11–13 x 10^-6/K), and do not wet or alloy with molten steel easily. The performance of any ceramic MMC part depends less on the ceramic grade itself and more on the quality and integrity of the ceramic-to-metal interface. Poor bonding—whether from inadequate insert preheat, incorrect pouring temperature, trapped porosity, or incompatible thermal expansion—leads to insert pull-out, spalling, and premature failure that can make an MMC part perform worse than the conventional casting it replaced. Understanding insert chemistry (Al2O3, ZTA, SiC, TZP), bonding methods (mechanical interlocking, metallurgical cast-in, active brazing), and failure modes (pull-out, thermal shock, impact fracture) is essential for selecting the right MMC solution for a given crusher or mill duty.
Key Characteristics of Ceramic Insert Wear Parts
Extreme Surface Hardness
Ceramic inserts provide localised hardness of 1200-1800 HV at the wear surface, far exceeding the 600-800 HV range of conventional high-chrome white iron. This resists micro-cutting and gouging by abrasive particles.
Retained Matrix Toughness
The metal matrix between inserts (typically high-chrome iron, manganese steel, or tool steel) absorbs impact energy and prevents catastrophic brittle fracture. The composite structure tolerates moderate impact loads that would shatter a monolithic ceramic body.
Tailored Insert Patterns
Insert placement is engineered to match the wear profile of each part. High-wear zones receive dense insert patterns while areas subject to impact or requiring ductility are left as unreinforced metal. This balances wear life with structural integrity.
Multiple Ceramic Grades Available
Alumina (Al2O3), zirconia-toughened alumina (ZTA), and silicon carbide (SiC) inserts each offer different hardness, toughness, and thermal shock resistance characteristics. Grade selection is matched to the application severity.
Proven Bonding Systems
Mechanical interlocking, metallurgical cast-in bonding, and active brazing methods each provide reliable ceramic-to-metal interfaces when correctly applied. Bond integrity is the single most important factor in MMC part performance.
Cost-Effective on High-Abrasion Duties
While MMC parts carry a higher unit cost than monolithic castings, the 2-3x wear life extension reduces cost per tonne processed and cuts downtime frequency. The economic case is strongest on high-tonnage, continuously running equipment.
Ceramic Insert Types and Properties
The choice of ceramic insert material determines the maximum achievable hardness, fracture toughness, and thermal shock resistance of the finished MMC part. Each grade represents a different trade-off between wear resistance and tolerance to impact and thermal cycling.
| Matériau | Dureté | Application | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Al2O3 (Alumina 92-95%) | 1200-1400 HV (HRA 85-88) | Standard abrasion-resistant liners, chute liners, grinding table segments, low-to-moderate impact zones | Lowest cost ceramic insert; brittle under impact; good for sliding abrasion |
| ZTA (Zirconia-Toughened Alumina) | 1400-1600 HV (HRA 88-91) | Blow bars, impact plates, hammer tips, cone crusher liners, VSI wear plates | Higher fracture toughness than pure alumina; tolerates moderate impact; preferred for most crusher MMC parts |
| SiC (Silicon Carbide) | 2200-2500 HV | Extreme abrasion zones in grinding mills, VRM roller tyres, specialised liner segments | Highest hardness; very brittle; poor thermal shock resistance; limited to low-impact, high-abrasion applications |
| Ceramic Preforms (Honeycomb/Foam) | 1200-1600 HV (varies by composition) | Large-area liners, chute plates, transfer point wear plates, hopper liners | Porous ceramic structure infiltrated by molten metal; good coverage but lower insert density than block inserts |
| TZP (Tetragonal Zirconia Polycrystal) | 1100-1300 HV | High-impact crusher parts where insert fracture is the primary failure mode | Highest toughness of all ceramic grades; lower hardness; niche use where impact dominates |
Al2O3 (Alumina 92-95%)
ZTA (Zirconia-Toughened Alumina)
SiC (Silicon Carbide)
Ceramic Preforms (Honeycomb/Foam)
TZP (Tetragonal Zirconia Polycrystal)
Hardness values are typical ranges for commercial grades. Actual values depend on supplier, purity, sintering process, and grain size. ZTA is the most commonly specified grade for crusher wear part applications.
Evaluating Ceramic MMC Parts for Your Application?
Our metallurgical engineers can assess your wear conditions, feed material, and crusher duty to recommend whether ceramic inserts will deliver a genuine cost-per-tonne benefit.
Applications by Crusher and Mill Type
Ceramic MMC technology is not universally applicable. It delivers the greatest benefit in high-abrasion, moderate-impact duties with consistent feed conditions. The following outlines where ceramic inserts are proven and where they should be used with caution.
HSI Impact Crushers
- Blow bars (ZTA inserts in high-chrome matrix) for clean aggregate and limestone
- Impact plates / aprons for secondary and tertiary positions
- Not recommended for demolition or recycling with tramp metal
Cone Crushers
- Mantle and concave liners with ceramic inserts for highly abrasive granite and basalt
- Best suited to secondary and tertiary cone positions with controlled feed
- Requires consistent feed gradation to prevent point-loading on inserts
VSI Crushers
- Rotor tips and wear plates with ZTA inserts for rock-on-iron configurations
- Anvil ring segments with ceramic reinforcement
- Feed material must be pre-screened to avoid oversized lumps
Vertical Roller Mills (VRM)
- Grinding roller tyres with embedded ceramic inserts for raw meal and cement grinding
- Table segments with ceramic-reinforced wear surfaces
- Well-proven application with consistent feed and controlled grinding pressure
Hammer Crushers / Mills
- Hammer tips with ceramic inserts for limestone and gypsum crushing
- Grate bars with ceramic reinforcement in high-abrasion zones
- Not recommended where feed contains large uncrushable objects
Ball and SAG Mills
- Shell liners and lifter bars with ceramic inserts for abrasive ore grinding
- Grate plates with ceramic reinforcement at discharge slots
- Impact during charge cascading limits insert density in SAG mill applications
Ceramic Inserts FAQ
Trouvez les réponses aux questions courantes sur ceramic inserts les matériaux, la sélection, la maintenance et les commandes. Vous ne trouvez pas ce que vous cherchez ?
Contacter notre équipeWhat is the difference between Al2O3 and ZTA ceramic inserts?
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What causes ceramic inserts to fail prematurely?
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How much longer do ceramic MMC parts last compared to conventional alloys?
Can ceramic inserts be repaired or re-tipped in the field?
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Related Innovation and Materials Technology
TiC Insert Technology
Titanium carbide inserts for extreme abrasion resistance in crusher and mill wear parts. Higher hardness than ceramic with excellent metallurgical bonding.
En savoir plusManganese Steel Alloys
Mn14-Mn22 manganese steel grades with work-hardening properties for impact-dominant crusher applications.
En savoir plusHigh-Chrome White Iron
Cr15-Cr28 high-chrome white iron alloys for abrasion-resistant crusher liners and grinding media.
En savoir plusMartensitic Alloys
Martensitic steel and iron grades combining high hardness with moderate toughness for balanced crusher wear part performance.
En savoir plusContenu technique révisé par l'équipe d'ingénierie ATF | Spécifications métallurgiques vérifiées selon les normes ASTM/ISO
Get Expert Guidance on Ceramic MMC Wear Parts
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