Equipment scope
- Checker body and regenerator packing
- Intermediate sections with vapor and condensation-related pressure
- Lower structural and load-bearing zones
- Insulation-support sections tied to heat economy
Hot-zone logic
Glass heat-storage systems must be read vertically. The checker body, chemically exposed intermediate levels, lower support structure, and backup insulation all belong to one thermal order, but they do not live under the same failure pressure. A credible route protects heat economy and structural continuity together.
Dominant failure pressures
- Alkali-bearing vapor and condensation-related corrosion
- Thermal fatigue across long operating campaigns
- Escalating heat loss when vertical zoning is weak
- Structural instability when lower support sections are underdesigned or underread
Material combination
- Magnesia checker brick for the main heat-storage body
- Magnesium spinel composite brick in chemically sensitive sections where a higher-discipline route is justified
- Burned magnesia brick in lower structural and load-bearing positions
- Lightweight microporous magnesia brick and related insulation-support logic in backup positions where heat-retention value is significant
Commercial value
This solution gives glass buyers a route that can be defended in terms of heat economy, campaign order, and structural reliability instead of mere brick count. It helps buyers review glass service with clear technical boundaries while keeping the route commercially serious and technically disciplined.