Refractory Technician

ITI Refractory Technician Syllabus (English)

Course Overview

  • Trade Name: Refractory Technician
  • Duration: 2 Years (4 Semesters)
  • NSQF Level: Level 5
  • Eligibility: 10th Grade Pass with Science and Mathematics
  • Objective: To train candidates in selecting, installing, maintaining, and repairing refractory materials used in high-temperature industrial environments, equipping them for roles as refractory technicians, masons, or quality inspectors in steel plants, cement kilns, or glass furnaces, or for self-employment in refractory installation and maintenance services.
  • Certification: National Trade Certificate (NTC) by NCVT

Detailed Syllabus

Semester 1

Trade Theory

  • Introduction to Refractory Technology: Role of refractories, applications in steel, cement, and glass industries.
  • Safety Practices: PPE (heat-resistant gloves, helmets, masks), handling hot materials, fire safety, confined space protocols.
  • Refractory Materials: Types (fireclay, silica, alumina, magnesite), properties (thermal resistance, abrasion resistance).
  • Tools and Equipment: Trowels, ramming tools, mixers, vibrators; usage and maintenance.
  • Masonry Basics: Bricklaying patterns (English, Flemish), mortar types, bonding techniques.
  • Furnace Basics: Structure of furnaces, kilns, boilers; role of refractories in heat retention.
  • Engineering Drawing: Reading refractory layouts, furnace cross-sections, brick lining diagrams.

Trade Practical

  • Safety Drills: Using PPE, handling refractory dust, operating fire extinguishers, practicing confined space safety.
  • Tool Handling: Using trowels for mortar application, operating mixers, checking ramming tools.
  • Material Testing: Identifying refractory bricks (fireclay, alumina), checking for cracks or defects.
  • Bricklaying Practice: Laying fireclay bricks in English bond, preparing mortar mixes (1:4 ratio).
  • Furnace Inspection: Observing furnace linings, identifying refractory wear areas.
  • Drawing Interpretation: Marking brick layouts based on furnace lining diagrams.
  • Project Work: Constructing a small refractory wall section with proper bonding and alignment.

Hours: Theory: 160 hours | Practical: 240 hours


Semester 2

Trade Theory

  • Advanced Refractory Materials: Insulating refractories, castables, monolithic linings; composition and uses.
  • Installation Techniques: Dry and wet gunning, casting, ramming; achieving uniform linings.
  • Thermal Properties: Heat transfer, thermal expansion, insulation efficiency in refractories.
  • Refractory Testing: Cold crushing strength, porosity, thermal shock resistance; BIS standards.
  • Furnace Operations: Pre-heating, cooling schedules, refractory stress during operation.
  • Maintenance Basics: Identifying refractory damage (spalling, erosion), patching techniques.
  • Quality Control: Inspection of raw materials, ensuring compliance with industry standards.

Trade Practical

  • Material Preparation: Mixing castables, preparing gunning mixes, testing consistency.
  • Installation Tasks: Gunning refractory linings, casting monolithic sections, ramming corners.
  • Testing Practice: Conducting cold crushing tests, measuring porosity on brick samples.
  • Furnace Maintenance: Patching eroded linings, replacing damaged bricks, sealing joints.
  • Thermal Checks: Measuring furnace lining thickness, inspecting for thermal cracks.
  • Quality Inspection: Checking raw material certificates, verifying brick dimensions (±1mm).
  • Project Work: Installing a refractory lining section for a mock furnace with castables and bricks.

Hours: Theory: 160 hours | Practical: 240 hours


Semester 3

Trade Theory

  • Special Refractories: Zirconia, chromite, carbon-based refractories; applications in extreme conditions.
  • Advanced Installation: Anchoring systems, expansion joints, layered refractory linings.
  • Troubleshooting: Diagnosing refractory failures (chemical attack, thermal shock), root cause analysis.
  • Refractory Ceramics: Manufacturing processes, sintering, raw material selection.
  • Energy Efficiency: Role of refractories in reducing heat loss, insulation design for furnaces.
  • Safety Standards: OSHA guidelines, HAZOP studies, refractory dust exposure control.
  • Environmental Practices: Recycling refractory waste, managing emissions in furnace operations.

Trade Practical

  • Special Material Handling: Installing zirconia bricks, applying carbon-based linings.
  • Advanced Installation: Setting up anchors, constructing expansion joints, layering refractories.
  • Troubleshooting Tasks: Analyzing spalled linings, repairing chemical corrosion damage.
  • Ceramic Practice: Preparing refractory slurry, testing sintering on small samples.
  • Energy Optimization: Insulating furnace sections, measuring heat loss reduction.
  • Safety Audits: Conducting mock HAZOP studies, checking dust control systems.
  • Project Work: Repairing a simulated furnace lining with advanced refractories and joints.

Hours: Theory: 160 hours | Practical: 240 hours


Semester 4

Trade Theory

  • Automation in Refractories: Sensors for temperature monitoring, IoT for predictive maintenance.
  • Advanced Maintenance: Refractory relining, demolition techniques, large-scale repairs.
  • Project Management: Planning furnace shutdowns, cost estimation, workforce allocation.
  • Quality Assurance: ISO 9001 standards, six sigma in refractory installation, defect tracking.
  • Entrepreneurship: Starting a refractory service business, marketing, trends in industrial refractories.
  • Industry Trends: Green refractories, nanotechnology, lightweight insulating materials.
  • Regulatory Compliance: Pollution control norms, safety audits for refractory projects.

Trade Practical

  • Automation Tasks: Using sensors to monitor lining temperature, logging data for analysis.
  • Relining Work: Demolishing old linings, installing new refractory layers, testing integrity.
  • Project Execution: Planning a mock shutdown, coordinating tasks, documenting costs.
  • Quality Checks: Inspecting installations for defects, preparing QA reports, ensuring ISO compliance.
  • Field Exposure: Hands-on training in steel/cement plants or refractory workshops (4-6 weeks).
  • Environmental Tasks: Recycling used refractories, inspecting emission control systems.
  • Project Work: Complete refractory installation for a simulated industrial furnace, including relining and quality checks.

Hours: Theory: 160 hours | Practical: 240 hours


Additional Components
  • Workshop Calculation and Science
    • Calculations: Heat loss calculations, refractory volume estimation, mortar mix ratios.
    • Science: Thermal conductivity, chemical reactions in refractories, material science basics.
    • Hours: 80 hours/year
  • Engineering Drawing
    • Drawings: Furnace lining designs, refractory brick patterns, sectional views of kilns.
    • Hours: 80 hours/year
  • Employability Skills
    • Communication: Technical reporting, client interaction, teamwork in industrial settings.
    • IT Literacy: Using refractory design software, IoT platforms, online technical resources.
    • Soft Skills: Time management, resume writing, interview preparation.
    • Hours: 60 hours/year

Assessment and Certification

  • Exams:
    • Theory: Written exams per semester (MCQs, descriptive questions).
    • Practical: Tasks like bricklaying, lining installation, troubleshooting, quality inspections.
  • Evaluation Criteria: Installation accuracy, material selection, safety adherence, furnace uptime.
  • Certification: NCVT National Trade Certificate (NTC) upon passing all semesters, globally recognized.

Career Opportunities

  • Employment: Refractory technician, mason, quality inspector in steel plants, cement kilns, or glass furnaces.
  • Self-Employment: Refractory installation services, consultancy for furnace maintenance, material supply.
  • Further Studies: Diploma in Ceramic Technology, certifications in refractory engineering or quality control.

Trade Type