As heavy industries continuously cut maintenance expenses and boost production efficiency, standard and customized alumina ceramic tiles have turned into the preferred lining option to solve severe equipment abrasion troubles.
Made from 92% to 95% high-purity alumina powder through high-temperature sintering, these ceramic tiles own ultrahigh hardness and outstanding chemical inertness. They resist abrasion 8–15 times better than ordinary manganese steel liners and stay stable against most acid and alkali erosion. Their smooth inner surface avoids material adhesion and blockage inside chutes, hoppers and cyclone separators.
Available in square, hexagonal and curved shapes, alumina tiles fit flat and irregular equipment surfaces flexibly. Users fix tiles with high-strength epoxy glue or embed them into rubber-backed panels for strong shock absorption. When partial damage occurs, broken pieces can be replaced separately to save repair cost and downtime.
Currently, alumina ceramic tiles gain steady market growth across multiple fields. Mining operators line ore transfer chutes; cement factories apply tiles on cyclone inner walls for clinker conveying; power plants use them for coal ash pipelines. Most clients cut annual maintenance expenditure by over 40% after switching from metal liners.
Local ceramic producers keep optimizing product formulas and dimensional precision, supplying tailor-made sizes according to clients' actual working conditions. Industry engineers point out that affordable cost plus long service life make alumina tiles highly cost-effective.
Driven by global industrial upgrading, alumina ceramic tiles will expand into new energy powder processing and solid waste recycling fields, retaining steady growth in the global wear-resistant liner market.




