When Hot Metal Temperature Exceeds 1520°C – Is Your Taphole Clay Still Reliable?

13/05/2026
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Modern blast furnace operations are pushing boundaries – higher productivity, higher injection rates, and increasingly, higher hot metal temperatures. When your taphole regularly sees liquid iron at 1520°C or above, standard taphole clay can fail catastrophically:

  • Premature erosion → taphole becomes too shallow

  • Sudden “breaks” → uncontrolled iron flow, safety hazards

  • Excessive sintering → difficult to drill, damaged equipment

So the question is not “Can you produce 1520°C iron?” but rather – “Is your taphole clay designed for that reality?”

At Beifang Alloy, we have developed high-performance taphole clay specifically for high-temperature, high-productivity blast furnaces. This article guides you through evaluating suppliers when your hot metal temperature consistently exceeds 1520°C.

1. Procurement Needs: Redefining Your Specification Under High-Temperature Conditions

When hot metal temperature rises above 1520°C, your procurement requirements must change. Standard clay designed for 1450–1480°C will simply not perform.

Critical Specification Adjustments

Parameter Conventional Clay (≤1480°C) High-Temperature Clay (≥1520°C)
Refractoriness under load (RUL) >1500°C >1580°C
SiC content 5–8% 10–15%
Alumina (Al₂O₃) content 30–35% 38–45%
Marsh value (plasticity) 40–50% 45–55% (to maintain workability at higher temps)
Sintering speed Moderate Controlled – neither too fast nor too slow

Key Procurement Questions to Ask Yourself

  • What is your average taphole temperature measured at the iron notch? (Not theoretical, but actual measured)

  • How often do you experience unplanned taphole breaks during high-temperature campaigns?

  • What is your current taphole clay consumption per ton of hot metal (kg/tHM) during high-temperature periods?

Beifang Alloy Suggestion: If your average measured taphole temperature exceeds 1500°C, you should immediately request high-temperature grade taphole clay with verified RUL >1580°C.

2. Industry Research: How High Temperature Destroys Taphole Clay

To evaluate suppliers properly, you must first understand the failure mechanisms when temperature climbs above 1520°C.

Three Main Failure Modes

1. Softening erosion
The clay’s binder phase (often pitch or resin) softens too early. Under iron flow pressure, the taphole expands rapidly. Result: fluted or oval-shaped taphole, difficult to maintain depth.

2. Thermal spalling
Rapid temperature change between tapping (1520°C+) and idle periods (ambient) causes cracking. Cracks propagate, leading to sudden “blow-outs.”

3. Over-sintering
Some clays become too hard when exposed to extreme temperatures. Your drill rig struggles to open the taphole, bits break, and tapping is delayed – losing production.

What the Market Offers

Supplier Type Performance at >1520°C Risk Level
Local small mixers (no R&D) Untested – often fail within 2–3 taps 🔴 High
General refractory makers (standard products) Moderate – some batches work, others don’t 🟡 Medium
Ferroalloy-integrated suppliers (e.g., Beifang Alloy) Designed for high temp – consistent 🟢 Low

Industry Fact: Many taphole clay suppliers do not even test refractoriness under load (RUL). If they cannot provide an RUL certificate for >1580°C, do not trust them with your 1520°C+ iron.

3. Procurement Guide: 5 Dimensions for Evaluating High-Temperature Taphole Clay Suppliers

When your hot metal exceeds 1520°C, your supplier evaluation becomes more demanding. Here is the updated five-dimension model for high-temperature conditions.

Dimension 1: Raw Material Selection for High Temperature (Weight: 35% – increased)

What to check:

  • Are they using high-purity bauxite (low Fe₂O₃, low TiO₂)?

  • Silicon carbide (SiC) grade – black SiC or metallurgical grade? Black SiC performs better at >1520°C.

  • Graphite content – 2–4% improves thermal shock resistance.

  • Any use of recycled refractory waste? (Avoid at all costs for high-temp applications.)

Beifang Alloy advantage: As a ferroalloy producer, we source and test our own SiC, high-alumina aggregates, and graphite – no corners cut.

Dimension 2: High-Temperature Performance Testing (Weight: 25%)

Required test reports (each batch):

  • Refractoriness under load (RUL) – minimum 1580°C, ideally 1600°C+

  • Apparent porosity – 22–28% (lower = better slag resistance)

  • Bulk density – >2.0 g/cm³

  • Thermal shock resistance – >20 cycles

Red flag: Supplier says “Our clay works at high temperature” but cannot provide RUL data.

Dimension 3: Field Technical Support (Weight: 20%)

What to demand:

  • Supplier technician on-site during first high-temperature campaign

  • Real-time adjustment of mud gun pressure (too high = over-compaction; too low = loose taphole)

  • Ability to adjust sintering agent dosage based on your specific temperature profile

Dimension 4: Delivery & Packaging for High Humidity (Weight: 10%)

High-temperature clays often contain more hygroscopic components. Demand:

  • Vacuum-sealed / moisture-proof bags (not just woven plastic)

  • Maximum 30 days of inventory at your site before use

Dimension 5: Cost per Ton-Hour (Weight: 10% – new metric)

Stop evaluating by price per ton. Use cost per tapping hour instead:

Cost per tapping hour = (Clay price per ton) ÷ (Average tapping hours before taphole repair)

A superior high-temperature clay may cost 20% more but lasts 50% longer – lower total cost.

4. Supplier Comparison: Two Real-World Examples

Case Scenario

  • Blast furnace: 1080m³

  • Hot metal temperature: Consistently 1520–1540°C

  • Tapping frequency: 12–14 taps per day

Metric Standard Supplier (General Grade) High-Temp Supplier (Beifang Alloy Grade)
Clay price per ton $480 $580
Average taphole life (taps before repair) 30–35 taps 60–70 taps
Taphole depth fluctuation ±0.4m ±0.15m
Unplanned breaks per month 3–4 0–1
Drill bits consumed per shift 3–4 1–2
Effective cost per tap $14–16 $8–10

Conclusion: The higher-priced high-temperature clay delivers nearly half the effective cost, plus dramatically improved safety and operational stability.

Why Beifang Alloy for 1520°C+ Taphole Applications?

  1. We understand extreme heat – as a ferroalloy factory, our own furnaces run >1600°C. We formulate taphole clay for conditions we live in daily.

  2. Full raw material traceability – no third-party mystery aggregates. From SiC to graphite to bauxite – we know exactly what goes into every batch.

  3. Documented RUL performance – every shipment includes certified refractoriness under load (>1580°C) test results.

  4. Fast technical response – our engineers will be at your furnace room during the first high-temperature trial. We adjust in real time, not after the fact.

Request a High-Temperature Taphole Clay Trial

If your blast furnace routinely produces hot metal at 1520°C or higher, don’t gamble with underperforming clay.

📞 Contact Beifang Alloy today:

  • Website: www.beifangalloy.com

  • Email: info@hnxyie.com

  • Free offer: High-temperature clay sample + RUL test report + on-site trial support

Beifang Alloy – Engineered for the heat you actually run.

Whatsapp: +86 17637210171
Tel: +86 18821346688
info@hnxyie.com