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Application · Chemical

Technical ceramics for the chemical industry

Acids, alkalis and fluids loaded with abrasive solids attack metal on two fronts: corrosion and wear. CT CEDUR technical alumina is inert to both — it does not corrode, does not contaminate the processed product, and resists abrasion at 9 Mohs hardness.

The problem

Corrosion + abrasion: the double attack on metal

In a chemical plant, wear rarely comes alone. Acidic or alkaline fluids corrode the metal surface, and suspended solids erode the attacked layer — each mechanism accelerates the other. Valves lose calibration, bushings and seals leak, pumps and piping swap parts at every shutdown. And in sensitive processes, corroded metal also contaminates the product itself.

Technical ceramics break that cycle: alumina is chemically inert to aggressive acids, alkalis and solvents under typical process conditions, and its hardness (9 Mohs, over 1,300 HV) virtually eliminates erosion. The result is a component that does not corrode, does not contaminate and does not lose geometry — learn more in our guide on what technical ceramics are.

Inerteto acids, alkalis and solvents
9 MohsCT CEDUR alumina hardness
99,7%Al₂O₃ purity (CT CEDUR 99HH)
100%custom-engineered parts
Restriction orifice plates in technical ceramic for corrosive fluids
CT CEDUR orifice plates — flow control with no erosion or corrosion of the calibrated bore.

Where ceramics are applied in chemical plants

Components we supply

Braskem is among the clients running CT CEDUR components from CETARCH.

Technical ceramic bushings and sleeves for pumps handling corrosive fluids
CT CEDUR bushings and sleeves — friction and chemical attack with no corrosion or wear.

Material: high-purity CT CEDUR alumina

For chemical duty, the reference formulation is CT CEDUR 99HH — 99.5% to 99.7% Al₂O₃, sintered above 1,600 °C virtually free of glassy phase. High purity maximizes chemical inertness and allows thin, complex parts; for abrasive fluids that are less chemically aggressive, engineering may specify 94HH or 96HH.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Do ceramics resist every chemical?

Alumina is inert to aggressive acids, alkalis and solvents under typical process conditions. For each application, CETARCH engineering evaluates the fluid, temperature and concentration and specifies the right CT CEDUR formulation — when in doubt, high-purity 99HH is the most chemically resistant.

Do ceramics contaminate the processed product?

No. Unlike corroded metal, which releases particles and ions into the fluid, high-purity alumina is chemically stable and does not contaminate the product — a decisive advantage in sensitive processes.

Is it worth replacing metal parts that corrode fast?

Yes — that is exactly where the payback is highest. Components currently replaced due to corrosion plus abrasion (orifice plates, bushings, pump internals) last multiple campaigns in ceramic, cutting shutdowns, maintenance and total cost of operation.

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