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Case Study: Why Failure Often Starts During Shutdown, Not Production?

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Case Study: Why Failure Often Starts During Shutdown, Not Production?

May 6, 2026
Latest company case about Case Study: Why Failure Often Starts During Shutdown, Not Production?
Why SiC Component Failure Often Begins During Shutdown Rather Than During Operation

Problem

In many high-temperature kiln systems, operators observe an unusual phenomenon:

Components remain stable during production
But cracks or failures appear after shutdown

This raises an important engineering question:

Why does failure occur during cooling instead of during high-temperature operation?


Initial Assumption

The common assumption is:

  • Highest temperature = highest risk
  • Full production load = maximum stress

Therefore:

Failure should occur during operation.

However, field observations often show the opposite.


Field Observation

Typical shutdown-related failure characteristics include:

  • Cracks appearing after cooling
  • Edge fracture near supports
  • Delayed crack propagation
  • No sudden failure during production

In many cases:

Components operate normally at high temperature for long periods
But fail after repeated shutdown cycles.


Engineering Analysis

The key reason is:

Stress conditions during shutdown are fundamentally different from those during operation

At stable operating temperature:

  • Temperature distribution becomes relatively uniform
  • Thermal expansion reaches equilibrium
  • Structural deformation stabilizes

During shutdown:

  • Temperature gradients rapidly change
  • Different materials cool at different rates
  • Structural constraints become critical

This creates highly unstable stress conditions.


Mechanism 1 — Reverse Thermal Gradient Formation

During operation:

  • The component may be uniformly heated

During shutdown:

  • Outer surfaces cool first
  • Internal regions remain hot

This creates:

  • Reverse thermal gradients
  • Internal tensile stress

In ceramics:

Tensile stress is especially dangerous.


Mechanism 2 — Differential Contraction

Different parts of the system cool differently:

  • SiC component
  • Metal support
  • Spring structure
  • Refractory support

Each material has:

  • Different thermal expansion coefficients
  • Different cooling rates

Result:

  • Uneven contraction
  • Additional stress at contact regions

Mechanism 3 — Constraint-Induced Stress During Cooling

At high temperature:

  • Some structures become more compliant
  • Stress can partially relax

During cooling:

  • Structures stiffen again
  • Thermal contraction becomes restricted

Stress accumulates near:

  • Supports
  • Edges
  • Contact zones

Mechanism 4 — Existing Damage Propagation

During operation:

  • Microcracks may already exist
  • Surface weakening may develop gradually

Shutdown acts as:

the final triggering stage

Cooling stress causes:

  • Existing defects to propagate
  • Edge cracks to grow rapidly

Failure appears “suddenly," but damage accumulated over time.


Why Failure Often Appears at Edges

Shutdown-related stress is strongest at:

  • Supports
  • Contact points
  • Geometric discontinuities

Therefore:

  • Edge chipping
  • Corner cracking
  • End fracture

are commonly observed.


Why Production May Look Stable

At operating temperature:

  • The structure is already thermally expanded
  • Stress distribution may actually be more stable

In some systems:

Cooling is more dangerous than heating.


Typical Misdiagnosis

Shutdown failure is often incorrectly labeled as:

  • Thermal shock
  • Material quality problem
  • Insufficient strength

However, the real cause is usually:

thermal gradient + constraint + accumulated damage


Practical Example

In kiln roller systems:

  • Rollers may survive continuous operation
  • Cracks appear after shutdown cycles

Observed failure locations:

  • Roller ends
  • Support interfaces
  • Contact zones

Not the center span.


Engineering Insight

Failure is not determined only by peak temperature

It is determined by:

  • Temperature distribution
  • Cooling behavior
  • Structural constraints
  • Stress accumulation over time

Design Implications

To reduce shutdown-related failure:

  • Control cooling rate
  • Reduce thermal gradients
  • Optimize support flexibility
  • Avoid excessive structural constraint
  • Improve edge geometry

Conclusion

Failure often starts during shutdown because:

  • Thermal gradients reverse during cooling
  • Differential contraction increases stress
  • Existing microdamage propagates under tensile stress

Cooling can be more critical than operation itself.


Key Takeaway

High temperature does not always represent the highest risk

In many ceramic systems, the most dangerous moment is shutdown.

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