5mm-6mm Pressureless Sintered Silicon Carbide Grinding Balls
Silicon Carbide (SiC), a typical covalently bonded compound, offers exceptionally high hardness, superior wear resistance, excellent high-temperature mechanical properties, and outstanding chemical stability, making it a key member of advanced structural ceramic materials. SiC grinding balls are produced from high-purity SiC powders through forming, high-temperature sintering, and precision finishing. They are widely used in crushing, ultra-fine grinding, and dispersion of high-hardness materials.
Manufacturing Processes
Forming Methods
- Roll forming - Ceramic feedstock is directly rolled into green balls of the required size. Simple, suitable for small to medium batches.
- Isostatic pressing - Includes wet-bag and dry-bag cold isostatic pressing. Dry-bag pressing offers high automation, uniform green density, and good sphericity, but demands good powder flowability and granulation quality.
- Extrusion + post-treatment - SiC powder, high-char-yield resin, and short fibers are mixed, extruded into balls, cured, and pyrolyzed to obtain carbon-ceramic preforms, which are then densified by silicon infiltration (reaction bonding), followed by grinding/polishing to achieve high dimensional accuracy.
Sintering Processes
SiC has >90% covalent bonding and extremely low self-diffusion coefficients, making sintering challenging. The main sintering techniques for 5-6 mm grinding balls are:
- Pressureless sintering (atmospheric sintering) - Performed in non-oxidizing atmosphere at 2000-2150 °C, achieving >98% theoretical density. Includes solid-state and liquid-phase sintering. No shape/size limitations, low cost, mature for mass production of 5-6 mm balls.
- Reaction sintering - Porous preforms (carbon + SiC) are infiltrated with molten silicon above 1500 °C, forming β-SiC. Low temperature, low shrinkage, near-net shape; suitable for complex precision shapes.
- Hot pressing - Mechanical pressure applied during heating enables fine-grained, high-density (≥99%) products at lower temperatures and shorter times. Limited die life, low batch output, high cost; used for small-batch high-performance products.
- Hot isostatic pressing (HIP) - Provides very high density and excellent sphericity, but high equipment investment and cost; not for large-scale production.
Sintering Process Comparison
| Process |
Sintering temp. (°C) |
Density (%) |
Advantages |
Application scope |
| Pressureless sintering |
2000-2150 |
≥98 |
Low cost, mass production |
High volume, 5-6 mm general purpose |
| Reaction sintering |
1500-1700 |
Near full |
Near-net shape, low shrinkage |
Complex, precision shapes |
| Hot pressing |
1800-2200 |
≥99 |
Fine grains, high density |
Small batches, high performance |
| Hot isostatic pressing |
1800-2000 |
≥99 |
Uniform density, superior sphericity |
Premium bearing-grade products |
Physicochemical Properties
Mechanical Properties
- Hardness - Mohs hardness 9.5, second only to diamond (10). Knoop hardness ~3000 kg/mm². Vickers hardness HV10 ≥22 GPa; premium grades reach HV0.5 ≥2600.
- Density - Bulk density 3.07-3.20 g/cm³, >60% lower than steel balls (~7.8 g/cm³), reducing equipment load and energy consumption.
- Elastic modulus - Young's modulus 380-430 GPa (~1.5× that of steel), ensuring excellent dimensional stability under heavy loads.
- Fracture toughness - ~3-4 MPa*m¹/², typical for brittle ceramics.
Thermal Properties
- Thermal conductivity - High: 120-200 W/(m*K) at 20 °C, exceeding that of many metals and ~3× that of silicon.
- Coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) - Low: 3.6-4.1×10⁻⁶/K (20-400 °C).
- Maximum service temperature - SSiC (pressureless sintered) up to 1800 °C in inert atmosphere; 1600 °C in air.
Chemical & Electrical Properties
Excellent corrosion resistance - resists almost all known reagents at room temperature. A dense SiO₂ layer forms upon oxidation, providing further protection. Suitable for strong acids, strong alkalis, and aggressive environments. SiC is a wide-bandgap semiconductor with high resistivity. It is non-magnetic and non-conductive, safe for magnetic field environments and applications requiring electrical insulation.
Key Physicochemical Indicators
| Property |
Typical value / range |
| Main composition (SiC content) |
≥95% (black SiC), ≥97% (green SiC), up to ≥99% |
| Bulk density |
3.07 - 3.20 g/cm³ |
| Mohs hardness |
9.5 |
| Vickers hardness (HV10) |
≥22 GPa (≥2600 HV0.5) |
| Elastic modulus |
380 - 430 GPa |
| Thermal conductivity (20 °C) |
120 - 200 W/(m*K) |
| CTE (20-400 °C) |
3.6 - 4.1×10⁻⁶/K |
| Flexural strength |
≥400 MPa |
| Compressive strength |
≥2200 MPa |
| Apparent porosity |
<0.2% |
Application Scenarios
Powder Processing
Due to low specific gravity and extreme hardness, 5-6 mm SiC balls are ideal grinding media for stirred mills (attritors). They are particularly suited for ultra-fine grinding of superhard ceramics such as SiC, Si₃N₄, B₄C, and TiC, achieving particle sizes from micron to sub-micron or even nano-scale. Homogeneous (SiC balls grinding SiC powder) or highly compatible media minimize contamination and preserve product purity.
New Energy Materials Processing
In ultra-fine grinding of Li-ion battery cathode materials (e.g., LiFePO₄, NMC), 5-6 mm SiC balls replace steel or ZrO₂ balls to avoid metallic contamination, improving battery cycle life and safety. In PV industry ultra-fine powder grinding, SiC balls offer comparable performance to expensive ZrO₂ balls at significantly lower cost.
High-Temperature & Corrosive Environments
SiC balls operate continuously at 1600 °C, exhibit low CTE, and resist thermal shock. They are used in drive systems of high-temperature calcining equipment, load-bearing parts in heat treatment furnaces, etc. Their excellent acid/alkali resistance makes them suitable for chemical reactors and electroplating sludge treatment.
Optical Glass & Hard-Brittle Materials
5-6 mm SiC balls are used for high-precision free grinding and polishing of optical glass, ceramics, sapphire, and silicon wafers. Green SiC balls (SiC >97%) are particularly effective for cemented carbide and glass, achieving surface roughness Ra <0.1 μm.
Pharmaceutical & Food Industries
SiC is non-toxic and poses no health risks. As grinding media, it avoids heavy metal leaching associated with metallic balls and complies with GMP and other hygiene standards.
Bearings & Valve Components
5-6 mm precision SiC balls are also used as corrosion-resistant bearing elements, suitable for deep-well drilling bearings, chemical reactor seals, and other applications demanding high wear and corrosion resistance.
Performance Advantages Over Other Grinding Media
Material Comparison
| Property |
SiC |
Al₂O₃ |
ZrO₂ |
Si₃N₄ |
Bearing steel |
| Density (g/cm³) |
3.07-3.20 |
3.75-3.95 |
5.6-6.0 |
~3.2 |
~7.8 |
| Mohs hardness |
9.5 |
9 |
8.5 |
~9 |
5-6 |
| Vickers hardness (HV10, GPa) |
≥22 |
~15 |
~12 |
~15-18 |
~6-8 |
| Elastic modulus (GPa) |
380-430 |
~300-350 |
~200-210 |
~300-320 |
~210 |
| Thermal conductivity (W/(m*K)) |
120-200 |
20-30 |
2-3 |
15-30 |
~45 |
| Fracture toughness (MPa*m¹/²) |
3-4 |
3-4 |
10-15 |
5-7 |
~50 |
| Max. service temperature (°C) |
1600+ |
1500-1600 |
≤600 |
1200 |
≤500 |
| Corrosion resistance |
Excellent |
Good |
Good |
Excellent |
Poor (rust) |
| Conductivity / magnetism |
Non-conductive, non-magnetic |
Insulating |
Insulating |
Insulating |
Magnetic & conductive |
Key Advantages of SiC Grinding Balls
- Highest hardness, best wear resistance - Mohs 9.5, wear life 2-5× that of Al₂O₃ balls.
- Highest thermal conductivity, superior heat dissipation - 120-200 W/(m*K), far exceeding Al₂O₃ and ZrO₂, rapidly removing grinding heat and preventing thermal degradation of sensitive materials.
- Best thermal stability - Operates above 1600 °C; ZrO₂ degrades above 600 °C, bearing steel above 500 °C.
- Outstanding corrosion resistance - Resists strong acids, alkalis, and aggressive media, unlike metallic balls that rust and introduce contaminants.
- Chemical inertness & low contamination - Minimal impurity pickup, ideal for high-purity applications (electronic materials, pharmaceutical ingredients, semiconductor powders).
- Light weight, energy saving - Density ~40% of steel, significantly reducing mill motor load and energy consumption.
- Excellent dimensional stability - Low CTE combined with high elastic modulus ensures precision under thermal variations.
- Cost-effective - Combines no contamination, no breakage, high grinding efficiency, and low wear; overall cost in superhard material grinding lower than ZrO₂ balls.
Compared with other ceramic grinding media, SiC offers irreplaceable advantages in extreme hardness, wear resistance, thermal conductivity, and high-temperature stability, especially for applications demanding high grinding efficiency, product purity, and elevated temperature operation. Its fracture toughness is lower than that of ZrO₂; thus, in coarse crushing dominated by high impact loads, careful selection is required. However, for fine and medium grinding in stirred mills (5-6 mm size), the brittleness limitation can be mitigated by proper ball-to-material ratio and process control.
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