Two Grades of Fused Alumina — One Critical Decision
Fused alumina is the backbone of the abrasives and refractory industries. Whether you are grinding hardened steel, formulating a high-temperature castable, or polishing optical components, chances are your process relies on aluminium oxide grains produced in an electric arc furnace.
But not all fused alumina is the same. The two most widely traded grades — brown fused alumina (BFA) and white fused alumina (WFA) — differ in raw material, chemistry, crystal structure, and performance. Choosing the wrong grade can mean higher tool wear, inconsistent surface finishes, or premature refractory failure.
This guide breaks down the key differences and provides clear selection criteria for common applications.
How They Are Made
Brown Fused Alumina (BFA)
BFA is produced by fusing calcined bauxite in an electric arc furnace at approximately 2,000°C. Bauxite is a naturally occurring ore containing alumina, silica, iron oxide, and titania. The fusion process reduces some impurities but does not eliminate them entirely.
The resulting product is a tough, blocky crystal with Al₂O₃ content typically between 94% and 97%. The residual TiO₂ (1.5–4%) actually benefits toughness by creating sub-grain boundaries that resist fracture propagation.
White Fused Alumina (WFA)
WFA is produced by fusing Bayer-process calcined alumina — a refined, high-purity aluminium oxide powder — in an electric arc furnace. Because the feedstock is already purified, the fused product achieves Al₂O₃ content of 99.5% or higher, with Na₂O controlled below 0.3%.
The result is a hard, friable (easily fractured) crystal that self-sharpens during grinding by exposing fresh cutting edges as micro-fragments break away.
Chemical Composition Comparison
| Component | Brown Fused Alumina | White Fused Alumina |
|---|---|---|
| Al₂O₃ | 94–97% | ≥99.5% |
| TiO₂ | 1.5–4.0% | ≤0.01% |
| SiO₂ | 0.5–1.5% | ≤0.03% |
| Fe₂O₃ | 0.2–0.5% | ≤0.05% |
| Na₂O | 0.1–0.4% | ≤0.25% |
| CaO | 0.02–0.10% | ≤0.02% |
Physical Property Comparison
| Property | BFA | WFA |
|---|---|---|
| Mohs Hardness | 9 | 9 |
| Knoop Hardness (kg/mm²) | 2,000–2,200 | 2,000–2,300 |
| Toughness (relative) | High | Moderate |
| Friability | Low — grains resist fracture | High — grains self-sharpen |
| Crystal structure | Alpha alumina + TiO₂ inclusions | Pure alpha alumina |
| Color | Brown to dark brown | White to light grey |
| Bulk density (typical) | 1.65–1.85 g/cm³ | 1.55–1.75 g/cm³ |
| Specific gravity | 3.90–3.97 | 3.95–3.98 |
Application Selection Guide
When to Choose Brown Fused Alumina
- Sandblasting and surface preparation: BFA’s toughness gives it excellent durability for recycling in blast cabinets. A single batch can be reused 5–10 times before replacement.
- Heavy stock removal grinding: For rough grinding of carbon steel, cast iron, and non-ferrous metals, BFA’s resistance to fracture delivers longer wheel life.
- Refractory bricks and monolithics: BFA serves as an aggregate in alumina-based refractories rated up to 1,700°C, where its lower cost and adequate purity make it the standard choice.
- Anti-slip surfaces: Embedded in epoxy or concrete coatings for industrial flooring and stair treads.
- Cost-sensitive applications: BFA typically costs 30–50% less than WFA per ton, making it the default for high-volume, lower-purity requirements.
When to Choose White Fused Alumina
- Precision grinding of hardened steel and alloys: WFA’s friability produces a cooler cut with less workpiece burn. Essential for tool steel, bearing races, and aerospace components.
- Optical and semiconductor polishing: Purity above 99.5% prevents contamination of sensitive surfaces. Micropowder grades F230–F1200 are standard in lapping slurries.
- High-purity refractory applications: Steel ladle linings, glass furnace crowns, and other applications where iron or titania contamination is unacceptable.
- Ceramic body formulations: WFA powder serves as a sintering aid and structural component in advanced ceramics requiring controlled chemistry.
- Medical and dental abrasives: Purity and biocompatibility make WFA the preferred choice for dental blasting units and orthopedic implant surface finishing.
Price Considerations
The cost difference between BFA and WFA stems primarily from raw material cost. Bauxite (BFA feedstock) is an abundant ore mined in large volumes, while Bayer-process alumina (WFA feedstock) requires additional energy-intensive refining. As a result:
- BFA macro grits (F12–F220): approximately $500–$900 per metric ton FOB China
- WFA macro grits (F12–F220): approximately $800–$1,400 per metric ton FOB China
- WFA micropowders (F230–F1200): $1,200–$2,500+ per metric ton depending on fineness
For applications where BFA meets performance requirements, it offers significant cost savings. But substituting BFA into a process that genuinely needs WFA purity or friability will almost always cost more in the long run through higher reject rates, more frequent wheel dressing, or contamination-related failures.
Quick Decision Matrix
| Your Application | Recommended Grade | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Blast cabinet media (steel/iron) | BFA | Toughness, recyclability, cost |
| Grinding hardened tool steel | WFA | Cool cutting, no burn marks |
| Refractory castable (standard) | BFA | Adequate purity, lower cost |
| Refractory for glass contact | WFA | No iron/titania contamination |
| Optical lens polishing | WFA micropowder | Purity, controlled particle size |
| Floor coating aggregate | BFA | Toughness, cost |
| Ceramic sintering additive | WFA | Chemistry control |
| General metal deburring | BFA | Cost-effective for non-critical finish |
Conclusion
Brown and white fused alumina are complementary products, not substitutes. BFA excels in high-volume, toughness-dependent applications where moderate impurity levels are acceptable. WFA is the correct choice when purity, friability, or surface cleanliness are non-negotiable.
The most cost-effective strategy is to match the grade to the application — not to default to the cheapest option or the most expensive one. If you are unsure which grade suits your process, request samples of both and run a controlled trial. The right alumina grade will deliver measurable improvements in quality, consistency, and total cost of ownership.