May 8, 2026 · viseray
Calcined vs Reactive Alumina: How to Choose the Right Grade
Calcined and reactive alumina serve different purposes in refractories and ceramics. Understand the key differences in alpha content, surface area, and sintering behavior to select the right material.
Same Chemistry, Different Behavior
Calcined alumina and reactive alumina are both Al₂O₃. Chemically, they’re identical. But their physical properties — alpha-phase content, specific surface area, and particle size distribution — are completely different. Choosing the wrong one can mean the difference between a castable that flows at 4.5% water and one that needs 7%.
Calcined Alumina: The Workhorse
Calcined alumina is produced by heating aluminum hydroxide or transition alumina to 1100–1400°C. At these temperatures, most of the material converts to the stable alpha phase.
Key characteristics:
- Alpha-Al₂O₃ ≥ 92% — the material is phase-stable. It won’t shrink further in service.
- BET surface area typically 0.5–3 m²/g — relatively low, meaning low water demand.
- D50 from 2 to 80 μm — wide range available for different packing requirements.
Calcined alumina is the standard choice for refractory castables. It provides the filler fines that pack between tabular alumina aggregates. Its low surface area keeps water demand down, and its high alpha content ensures dimensional stability at temperature.
Reactive Alumina: The Sintering Agent
Reactive alumina is calcined at lower temperatures (often with mineralizers) to produce a powder with much higher surface area and controlled, fine particle size.
Key characteristics:
- Alpha-Al₂O₃ typically 50–96% — varies by grade. Lower-alpha grades contain transition alumina phases.
- BET surface area 3–15 m²/g — 5 to 10 times higher than standard calcined alumina.
- D50 typically 0.5–5 μm — much finer, submicron to a few microns.
The high surface area and fine particle size make reactive alumina an active participant in the sintering process. It doesn’t just fill space — it bonds the matrix together during firing, improving hot strength and reducing porosity. This is why reactive alumina is essential in low-cement and ultra-low-cement castables.
How to Choose
| Application | Recommended Grade | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Standard refractory castable | Calcined (AF-C) | Low cost, low water demand, phase-stable |
| Low-cement castable (LCC) | Reactive (AF-R) + calcined blend | Reactive alumina fills interstitial voids, improves hot strength |
| Advanced ceramics | Reactive (AF-R), fine grades | High sinterability, controlled microstructure |
| Polishing compounds | Calcined, graded (AF-P) | Controlled particle shape, consistent cut rate |
| Kiln furniture, precast shapes | Tabular (AF-T) aggregate + reactive fines | Thermal shock resistance + matrix strength |
A Practical Note on Water Demand
If you’re reformulating a castable and your water demand is too high, don’t just add more dispersant. Check your alumina source first. Switching from a calcined alumina with BET 4 m²/g to one with BET 1.5 m²/g can reduce water demand by 1–2 percentage points — without changing any other component of your mix.
Next Steps
Need help selecting the right grade for your application? See our calcined alumina and reactive alumina product pages for detailed specifications, or request a technical consultation with your target specs.