Furnaces (industrial) Information
Industrial furnaces are built of several kinds of high temperature (refractory) materials to hold the process material and hold in the heat without breaking down during the several months that they usually run. General specifications, configuration, atmosphere and control, and general features are all important to consider when searching for industrial furnaces.
Specifications
Important specifications to consider when searching for industrial furnaces include:
- process temperature
- height
- width or tube outer diameter
- length of the chamber or tube
- pressure range
The process temperature is the maximum temperature at which the unit may operate and still maintain rated performances. The height refers to the internal height dimension of the unit. The width refers to the internal width dimension of the unit, or for tube industrial furnaces, the outer diameter of the tube. The length is the length dimension of the unit, or on tube furnaces, the heated length. The pressure range is the pressure range through which the unit can operate.
Types
Choices for configuration for industrial furnaces include ashing, box or muffle, bottom loading, top loading, tube, bench or cabinet, belt, continuous or conveying, pusher, and walk-in or truck-in.
- Ashing is also referred to as charring; this is the step in a graphite furnace AA program that is designed to remove matrix constituents that might interfere with the measurement of the analyte.
- Box furnaces are convenient furnaces to use. As the name implies, the furnace has a box shape and a box-shaped interior.
- Bottom loading furnaces load the sample or product to be treated through the bottom of the chamber via a platform elevator.
- In a top loading furnace, the product to be processed is loaded from the top.
- Cabinet or bench furnaces describe small batch equipment typically mounted on integral stands.
- Batch industrial furnaces and ovens are typically suited for processing quantities of product in a single batch.
- A belt furnace has a continuous belt, carrying the unprocessed substrates through the furnace. In general, continuous or conveying conveyor units tend to be oriented toward automated production of greater quantities of small-to-medium-sized products.
- A pusher furnace is a type of continuous furnace in which parts to be heated are periodically charged into the furnace in containers, which are pushed along the hearth against a line of previously charged containers thus advancing the containers toward the discharge end of the furnace, where they are used.
- Walk-in or truck-in furnaces describe larger size batch equipment, typically with double doors and integral carts, shelves, etc.
Features
Common atmospheres for industrial furnaces include air or oxidizing, inert, reducing, salt bath, and vacuum. Furnaces may have either a single set point or a programmable controller to adjust temperature and temperature stability. Choices for heat source include arc, combustion, electrical or resistance, indirect or contact or conduction, induction, infrared or radiant, natural gas, propane, oil, other fuel, RF or microwave or dielectric, and steam.
Applications
Common applications for industrial ovens include aging, annealing, baking, brazing or soldering, burn-off, curing, drying, firing or sintering, foundry or melting, heat treating, hot pressing, laboratory, preheating, and quenching. Other features include over-temperature protection, three-zone or multi-zone, computer interface, application software, view ports, and service or entry holes.
Related Information
CR4 Community—Hot Air Furnace Problem
CR4 Community—Microwave Heating for Industrial Furnaces
Engineering360—Use of CHP to Boost Energy Efficiency
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- Aging
- Air / Oxidizing
- Annealing
- Bench / Cabinet
- Box
- Brazing / Soldering
- Burn-off
- Combustion
- Computer Interface
- Continuous / Conveying
- Curing
- Drying
- Electric / Resistance
- Firing / Sintering
- Foundry / Melting
- Heat Treating
- Induction
- Inert
- Laboratory
- Natural Gas
- Over-Temperature Protection
- Preheating
- Programmable
- Quenching
- RF / Microwave / Dielectric
- Reducing
- Service / Entry Holes
- Single Set Point
- Three Zone / Multi-Zone
- Top Loading
- Tube
- Vacuum
- View Ports
- Walk-in / Truck-in
- furnace wiring diagram
- lead melting pot
- muffle furnace
- chromalox electric furnace
- furnace refractory
- crucible furnace
- high temperature furnace
- plasma arc furnace
- sintering furnace
- Basic Oxygen Furnace
- Czochralski equipment
- Czochralski furnace
- ladle furnace
- metal melting pot
- plasma furnace
- crystal growth equipment
- furnace thermocouple
- retort
- three zone furnace
- tube furnace
- air curtain furnace
- DC furnace
- EFG furnace
- furnas relay
- heat pump trane
- indirect arc furnace
- laboratory arc melting furnace
- mellen furnace
- sight glass furnace
- vacuum arc melting furnace