Drying behavior of dense refractory ceramic castables. Part 1 General aspects and experimental techniques used to assess water removal
A. P. Luz, M. H. Moreira, M. A. L. Braulio, C. Parr, V. C. Pandolfelli

TL;DR
This paper reviews the drying process of dense refractory ceramic castables, focusing on theoretical aspects, phase transformations, and experimental techniques to improve water removal and prevent spalling during heating.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the drying mechanisms, phase transformation effects, and advanced experimental methods used to assess water removal in dense refractory castables.
Findings
Drying is critical to prevent spalling and damage.
Advanced imaging techniques like NMR and neutron tomography are useful.
Understanding water removal mechanisms remains complex.
Abstract
Despite the continuous evolution on the performance of refractory ceramic products, monolithic materials still require special attention during their processing steps as various phase transformations may take place during the curing, drying and firing stages. Drying is usually the longest and the most critical process observed during the first heating cycle of refractory linings, as the enhanced particle packing and reduced permeability of the resulting microstructure may lead to recurrent explosive spalling and mechanical damage associated with dewatering and the development of high steam pressure at the inner regions of such dense materials. In this context, this review article mainly addresses (i) the theoretical aspects related to the drying process of dense refractories, (ii) the influence of the phase transformations derived from the binder additives, and (iii) the usual and…
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