Custom ceramic nozzles are used in industrial equipment where standard metal or plastic nozzles cannot provide enough wear resistance, corrosion resistance, high-temperature stability, electrical insulation, or dimensional stability.
Unlike standard off-the-shelf nozzles, custom ceramic nozzles are usually manufactured according to customer drawings, samples, assembly requirements, or specific working conditions. Material selection, bore design, tolerance control, surface finish, and application environment all affect the final performance of the nozzle.
At CERAMPRO, we manufacture custom ceramic nozzles based on customer drawings and application requirements. This article explains how to choose ceramic nozzle materials, what shapes can be customized, which tolerances matter, and what information is needed for quotation.
A custom ceramic nozzle is a precision ceramic component designed to control the flow direction, speed, spray pattern, abrasive media, gas, powder, liquid, or cleaning fluid in industrial equipment.
Compared with common metal nozzles, ceramic nozzles are often selected when the application involves:
Because different applications require different nozzle structures, many ceramic nozzles are not standard products. They need to be customized according to drawings, equipment layout, material requirements, and working conditions.
Choosing the right ceramic material is one of the most important steps in custom ceramic nozzle design. Each ceramic material has different advantages in wear resistance, toughness, corrosion resistance, thermal stability, machinability, and cost.
| Material | Main Advantages | Typical Nozzle Applications |
|---|---|---|
| Alumina Ceramic | Cost-effective, good wear resistance, electrical insulation, chemical stability | Standard wear-resistant nozzles, powder spraying, sandblasting, industrial fluid control |
| Silicon Carbide Ceramic | Very good wear resistance, corrosion resistance, thermal stability | Harsh blasting environments, continuous operation, industrial cleaning, abrasive flow |
| Boron Carbide Ceramic | Excellent hardness and long service life | Heavy-duty abrasive blasting, long-life nozzles, severe wear applications |
| Zirconia Ceramic | Better toughness and impact resistance than many ceramics | Nozzles requiring higher mechanical toughness or improved impact resistance |
| Boron Nitride Ceramic | High-temperature stability, non-wetting behavior, good thermal shock resistance | High-temperature nozzles, molten metal-related applications, special thermal processes |
| Aluminum Nitride Ceramic | High thermal conductivity and electrical insulation | Thermal management, electronics, semiconductor-related nozzle components |
There is no single ceramic material that is best for every nozzle application. The right choice depends on how the nozzle will be used.
Alumina ceramic is often selected when the customer needs a balance between wear resistance, cost, and manufacturing feasibility. It is suitable for many standard industrial nozzle applications.
Silicon carbide ceramic is usually preferred when the application involves stronger abrasive media, continuous operation, corrosion, or higher temperature.
Boron carbide ceramic is suitable for heavy-duty abrasive blasting and applications where long service life is more important than initial material cost.
Zirconia ceramic may be considered when the nozzle requires better mechanical toughness or improved resistance to impact-related damage.
Boron nitride ceramic can be used in high-temperature applications or processes involving molten metals where non-wetting behavior is required.
Custom ceramic nozzles can be produced in many different shapes depending on the equipment structure, media flow, assembly method, and application environment.
Straight bore nozzles have a simple cylindrical inner hole. They are commonly used when the application requires a stable and direct flow path.
Tapered bore nozzles are designed with a gradually changing inner diameter. They may be used to control flow velocity, spray direction, or pressure distribution.
Threaded ceramic nozzles are used when the nozzle needs to be installed directly into equipment or connected with other components. Since ceramics are brittle compared with metals, thread design should avoid excessive assembly stress.
Flanged nozzles are designed with a shoulder or flange structure to support positioning, assembly, or sealing. They are commonly used when the nozzle must be fixed in a specific position.
Multi-hole ceramic nozzles are used when the flow needs to be distributed through several small holes. These nozzles require careful control of hole diameter, spacing, and alignment.
Some ceramic nozzles are designed with non-standard outer shapes, special grooves, stepped structures, side holes, or assembly features. These parts are usually manufactured based on detailed drawings.
For special-shaped ceramic nozzles, manufacturing feasibility should be evaluated before production, especially when the design includes thin walls, small holes, sharp corners, or tight tolerance areas.
Tolerance control is very important for custom ceramic nozzles because small dimensional changes can affect flow performance, assembly, sealing, or service life.
The inner diameter controls media flow, pressure, spray pattern, and bore stability. For abrasive blasting and fluid control applications, inner diameter accuracy is often one of the most important inspection items.
The outer diameter affects how the nozzle fits into holders, assemblies, or equipment bodies. If the outer diameter is too loose or too tight, installation problems may occur.
Concentricity between the inner hole and outer diameter is important when the nozzle must maintain stable flow direction or precise alignment in equipment.
Nozzle length may affect assembly position, flow distance, and sealing structure. This is especially important for stepped or flanged ceramic nozzles.
For long bore nozzles, bore straightness can influence flow direction and process consistency. This may be important in precision fluid control, gas flow, or blasting applications.
Surface finish can affect sealing, wear behavior, cleaning performance, and flow stability. For certain applications, the inner bore or sealing surface may require precision grinding or polishing.
Ceramic materials are strong in wear resistance and hardness, but they are more brittle than metals. Therefore, ceramic nozzle design should consider both performance and manufacturability.
Sharp internal corners may increase stress concentration. Adding suitable radii can help improve part reliability during handling, assembly, and use.
Very thin walls may be difficult to manufacture and may increase breakage risk. Wall thickness should be designed according to ceramic material, nozzle size, and working conditions.
Ceramic components should not be assembled with excessive force. If the nozzle is threaded, clamped, or pressed into another component, the assembly design should avoid concentrated stress.
Ceramic machining after sintering is more difficult than metal machining. Small holes, deep holes, complex grooves, and tight tolerances should be reviewed before production.
A high-hardness material is not always the best choice. The final material should match abrasive media, temperature, corrosion, impact load, and expected service life.
Custom ceramic nozzles are used in many industries where wear, corrosion, high temperature, electrical insulation, or precision flow control is required.
Ceramic sandblast nozzles are used in abrasive blasting equipment, sandblasting machines, shot blasting systems, rust removal, and coating preparation.
Ceramic nozzles help maintain stable flow and longer service life in surface cleaning, coating preparation, powder spraying, and industrial cleaning equipment.
In fluid systems, ceramic nozzles may be used when the media is abrasive, corrosive, or requires stable flow performance over time.
Ceramic nozzles can be used in precision systems where contamination control, dimensional stability, insulation, or wear resistance is important.
Some ceramic nozzle materials, such as boron nitride or silicon carbide, can be used in thermal processes where metal materials may deform, oxidize, or react with the working environment.
Ceramic nozzles are used in powder flow, spray systems, and cleaning equipment where nozzle wear can affect flow consistency and process stability.
To evaluate a custom ceramic nozzle project accurately, it is helpful to provide as much information as possible.
Recommended information includes:
If the customer does not know which ceramic material to choose, CERAMPRO can help evaluate material options based on the actual working environment.
CERAMPRO provides custom ceramic nozzle manufacturing support from material selection to precision machining and inspection. We work with customer drawings and application requirements to develop ceramic nozzle solutions for industrial equipment.
Our capabilities include:
A customer developing abrasive flow equipment needed a custom nozzle with better wear resistance than the original metal component. The existing metal nozzle wore quickly, which changed the bore diameter and affected process consistency.
After reviewing the drawing, abrasive media, working pressure, and expected service life, CERAMPRO recommended alumina ceramic and silicon carbide ceramic options for sample testing.
For the standard working condition, alumina ceramic provided a cost-effective solution. For the more severe abrasive flow condition, silicon carbide ceramic was selected because it offered better wear resistance and longer bore stability.
This case shows why custom ceramic nozzle material selection should be based on application conditions, not only material hardness or initial cost.
Yes. CERAMPRO supports custom ceramic nozzle manufacturing based on 2D drawings, 3D models, samples, or application requirements.
It depends on the application. Alumina ceramic is cost-effective for standard wear applications. Silicon carbide ceramic is better for harsh abrasive or corrosive environments. Boron carbide ceramic is suitable for heavy-duty wear applications. Zirconia ceramic may be considered when better toughness is required.
Yes, threaded ceramic nozzles can be manufactured, but the design should avoid excessive assembly stress because ceramics are more brittle than metals.
Tolerance capability depends on material, size, structure, hole depth, and processing difficulty. For precision ceramic nozzles, CERAMPRO evaluates the drawing and confirms feasible tolerances before production.
Ceramic nozzles usually have higher initial material and processing costs. However, they may reduce replacement frequency and maintenance costs in high-wear applications.
Please provide drawings, material requirements, dimensions, tolerances, quantity, working media, pressure, temperature, and application environment.
If you need custom ceramic nozzles for abrasive blasting, surface treatment, powder spraying, fluid control, semiconductor equipment, or other industrial applications, CERAMPRO can help evaluate the right ceramic material and manufacturing solution based on your drawings and working conditions.
Contact CERAMPRO to discuss your custom ceramic nozzle project.