5 Key Factors Behind Ladle Shroud Cracking
Operators often see cracks and damage in ladle shrouds, long nozzles, and refractory parts. This happens because of a few main reasons:

Knowing these reasons helps teams stop corrosion, breaks across the part, and chemical damage. This helps ladle shrouds last longer.

Key Takeaways

·        Quick temperature changes can cause thermal shock. This can crack ladle shrouds. Heating slowly and checking the temperature can stop this damage.

·        Mechanical stress from moving and using parts can cause cracks. Storing parts carefully and handling them right helps lower this risk. Installing them the correct way also helps.

·        Hot slag can wear down and get into refractory materials. This makes them weaker. Using strong materials and checking slag conditions can protect the parts.

·        The quality of materials is important. Good raw materials and careful making of parts help stop cracks. Having the right amount of porosity makes parts stronger and better at handling shock.

·        Good design and alignment lower stress and stop leaks. Smooth shapes and tight fits help keep ladle shrouds and nozzles strong. Checking them often also helps.

1. Thermal Shock

Temperature Changes

 

When the temperature changes quickly, it puts stress inside refractory materials. During ladle preheating, the working layer gets hot on one side and stays cool on the other. This big difference in temperature causes strong pulling stress at the top of the working layer. Sometimes, this stress can get as high as 39.06 MPa. Damage often starts at the top and near the sidewall burner nozzles. If the ladle heats up too fast, alumina-magnesia castables get stiffer but weaker. The material turns more brittle and can break more easily. When steel is poured, the ladle shroud faces sudden heat, which also builds up stress.HYRE   

ladle shroud    tundish stopper   Sub entry nozzle


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