Division 01 — Metallurgical / Refractories
Refractories Materials
Refractory materials are the heat-resistant linings, coatings, and consumables that withstand the extreme temperatures of melting and casting — furnace and ladle linings, patching compounds, and protective coatings.
In every foundry, refractories are the first line of protection between molten metal at temperatures of 650–1650 °C and the structural shell of furnaces and ladles. A refractory lining that fails mid-heat is a process safety incident; one that wears unevenly shortens service life and introduces contamination into the melt. CFC Egypt manufactures a range of refractory patching compounds — EGYPATCH M and EGYPATCH F for furnace and ladle repair, and EGYPATCH 220 for specialist applications — from our Sadat City plant. These products allow foundries to extend lining service life between full relining shutdowns through targeted spot repair. For full lining systems — castables, ramming mixes, shaped refractories, and insulating materials — CFC's Trading Division sources and supplies a comprehensive refractory range complementing our manufactured products. Cross-reference also the Patching Materials category within Ferrous Metal Treatment.
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O que abrange
Foundry refractory materials divide into functional groups based on their application in the melting and casting process.
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Materiais de remendo
Refractory patching compounds (EGYPATCH M, EGYPATCH F, EGYPATCH 220) for spot repair of worn furnace linings, ladle linings, and mould surfaces. Applied cold or warm to damaged areas between heats, patching materials restore the minimum lining thickness required for safe operation, extending service life between full relining campaigns. EGYPATCH M is magnesia-based for high-temperature ferrous applications; EGYPATCH F is fireclay-based for grey and ductile iron ladles and furnaces.
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Furnace & Ladle Linings
Complete refractory lining systems for induction furnaces, cupolas, electric arc furnaces, and casting ladles — castables, ramming mixes, pre-formed shapes, and trowelling materials selected for the specific metal, temperature, and service conditions. Sourced and supplied through the CFC Trading Division. Contact us to discuss your lining requirements, vessel dimensions, metal type, and target service life.
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Refractory Coatings
Colloidal and refractory wash coatings applied to the working face of a lining to seal the surface, reduce metal penetration, and extend refractory life between patches. Refractory coatings are distinct from mould coatings: they are applied to metal-handling equipment (ladles, runners, filters) rather than to the mould face, and are formulated for multiple heat cycles rather than single use.
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Insulating Materials
Insulating castables, boards, and blanket materials applied behind or between working and safety linings to reduce heat losses and furnace energy consumption, and to control temperature gradients across the lining structure. Effective thermal insulation reduces the energy cost of melting and holding, and extends the service life of the working lining by limiting the temperature swings it experiences during heating and cooling cycles. Lightweight insulating bricks (thermal conductivity 0.5–1.0 W/m·K, bulk density 0.8–1.2 g/cm³) are available for hot-face and back-up insulation.
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Shaped Refractory Bricks
A full range of shaped bricks graded by alumina content: siliceous fireclay (25–30% Al₂O₃) for tunnel kilns, boiler linings and industrial chimneys; fireclay (35–45%) for general furnace, lime-kiln, glass-furnace, petrochemical-reactor and incinerator linings; aluminous fireclay (50–65%) for cement preheaters, cement rotary kilns and steel ladles; high-alumina (70–85%) for blast furnaces, EAF, kiln burning zones and aluminium-melting furnaces; and phosphate (chemically) bonded high-alumina (up to 85% Al₂O₃) for high-wear, high-hot-strength service. Lightweight insulating bricks complete the brick programme.
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Unshaped (Monolithic) Products
Monolithic refractories cast, gunned or trowelled to shape: traditional hydraulic-bonded castables (40–97% Al₂O₃) for furnace floors and kiln-lining patches, low-cement castables (LCC) for higher density and hot strength in ladle linings and tundishes, and lightweight insulating castables for thermal barriers in boilers and process heaters. Jointing mortars include air-setting wet mortars (30–72% Al₂O₃, low shrinkage, high hot strength) and heat-setting dry mortars such as ACR-HM80, rated to 1650 °C.
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Specialty Refractories
Cordierite-bonded products (ACR-Cord1 and ACR-Cord2) supplied as thermal-shock-resistant kiln furniture for the ceramic and tile industry; calcined kaolin used as a binder and raw material for castables and mortars; and custom shapes — ladle, sleeve and nozzle — manufactured to drawing for steelmaking flow control.
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Where They're Used
Refractory materials are required wherever molten metal is held, transferred, or poured. Every foundry and steel plant depends on the integrity of its refractory linings for safe, continuous operation.
Induction Furnaces
Induction furnaces are the most common melting equipment in modern iron and steel foundries. Their refractory lining — typically a dry-vibrated silica or alumina crucible — is subject to intense thermal cycling, metal turbulence from induction stirring, and chemical attack from slag. Lining wear patterns are well-defined; targeted patching at the slag line and crucible base between heats can extend lining life significantly. Patching materials must bond quickly to the base lining and withstand the next heat without slumping or spalling.
Casting Ladles
Casting ladles carry molten metal from the furnace to the moulds and are subject to severe thermal shock — from cold to 1500 °C and back — on every production cycle. Ladle linings require high refractoriness, resistance to thermal shock cracking, and chemical stability against the metal and its treatment additions (magnesium in ductile iron, fluxes in copper alloys). Ladle patching between heats at the metal line and nozzle area extends service life and maintains metal temperature between furnace and mould.
Electric Arc Furnaces (EAF)
Electric arc furnaces for steel melting operate at the highest temperatures in the foundry — up to 1650 °C — and use basic (magnesia or dolomite) refractory linings compatible with the basic oxidising slag of the steelmaking process. EAF linings experience intense arc radiation, metal turbulence, and slag attack; patching at the hot-spot zones (directly under the arc and at the slag line) is performed between every heat in many operations. High-strength, rapid-setting magnesia patching materials are essential for maintaining productivity without extended cooling cycles.
Runners, Troughs & Transfer Channels
Monolithic castable refractories line the runners, transfer troughs, and pouring basins through which molten metal flows from the ladle to the mould. These surfaces must be smooth enough to prevent turbulent metal flow, chemically stable against metal attack, and strong enough to withstand repeated thermal cycling. Patching compounds applied to worn areas extend trough and runner service life before full relining is required, maintaining metal flow quality and minimising inclusion risk from refractory erosion.