AAC Block Production Machinery

-Abastecimento Soluções personalizadas para o seu negócio de blocos AAC

-Com 1500 Clientes globais

AAC Block Production Machinery

Overview of AAC Production Process

AAC production is a continuous process combining chemical reaction, mechanical handling, and high-pressure curing.

At system level, it always follows this chain:

Raw material preparation → Mixing → Casting → Pre-curing → Cutting → Autoclaving → Finished blocks

What matters is not only each step—but the transition between steps.

If one stage slows down, the entire line will accumulate bottlenecks.

Get Your AAC Plant Project
Autoclaved Aerated Concrete Blocks Manufacturing Machinery process

Is Your Raw Material Suitable for AAC Production?

Before selecting machinery, raw material condition is always the first checkpoint.

In most projects, we evaluate three key factors:

  • Fly ash or sand availability
  • Fineness and chemical stability
  • Consistency of supply
Tipo de matéria-primaProcessing RequirementSystem Impact
Cinzas volantesLower grinding loadStable reaction
AreiaRequires ball millingHigher energy consumption
Mixed materialsCustom adjustment neededSystem tuning required

We have seen projects fail not because of machinery, but because raw material variation was ignored during planning.

Step-by-Step Production Machinery

Here is how a standard AAC production line operates in practice:

AAC block manufacturing process

1. Preparação das matérias-primas

Grinding and slurry formation define the stability of the entire process.

2. Mixing System

Cement, lime, slurry, and aluminum powder are mixed under controlled timing.

3. Casting

The mixture is poured into molds where initial expansion begins.

4. Pre-curing

Blocks reach a semi-solid state suitable for cutting.

5. Cutting System

This stage determines dimensional accuracy.

6. Cura em autoclave

High-pressure steam reaction finalizes strength and structure. Each step has a fixed timing window. If one step is delayed, downstream processes are directly affected.

Process Flow Diagram Explanation

In real plant design, we always emphasize one principle:

The plant is not a sequence of machines—it is a synchronized flow system.

A typical production flow looks like this:

Raw materials → Slurry system → Mixing → Mold casting → Pre-curing chamber → Cutting system → Autoclaves → Finished storage

The most sensitive points in this flow are:

  • Transition from casting to pre-curing
  • Transition from pre-curing to cutting
  • Autoclave cycle synchronization

If these three points are balanced, the plant runs smoothly. If not, bottlenecks appear immediately.

Main Types in AAC Block Production Machinery Process

1. Equipamento de manuseamento de matérias-primas

AAC Production Line
AAC Blocks Manufacturing Machine

Triturador: Tritura matérias-primas como a areia e a cal até à granulometria especificada. Os trituradores de mandíbulas são utilizados para materiais duros e os trituradores de impacto são utilizados para trituração fina.

Rastreador: Utiliza a crivagem vibratória para remover as impurezas e garantir que as partículas da matéria-prima são uniformes em termos de tamanho.

Silo de armazenamento: Armazena matérias-primas pré-tratadas. Possui um medidor de nível e um dispositivo de remoção de poeiras para manter a produção em funcionamento contínuo e cumprir os requisitos de proteção ambiental.

Balança de pesagem: As balanças de correia ou em espiral medem com precisão as quantidades de matérias-primas para minimizar os erros de formulação.

2. Equipamento de mistura e formação de espuma

AAC Block Production Machinery

Misturador forçado: Mistura matérias-primas sólidas e água a alta velocidade para formar uma pasta uniforme, lançando as bases para a formação de espuma.

Tanque de mistura de pó de alumínio: Mistura a suspensão de pó de alumínio a baixa velocidade para evitar a sedimentação e garantir uma dispersão uniforme.

Sistema de espuma: A suspensão de pó de alumínio é injectada em proporção para reagir com a pasta e gerar bolhas, que são depois ligadas ao misturador para controlo automático.

3. Equipamento de fundição e de enformação

Moldes: Aço de alta resistência feito por medida com um tratamento de superfície especial, ajustável em tamanho para acomodar diferentes especificações de produtos.

Máquinas de fundição: Controlam com precisão o volume de injeção do chorume, e alguns estão equipados com deslocação automática para evitar a falta de material ou o transbordo.

Câmara de cura: Um ambiente de temperatura e humidade constantes assegura o arejamento e a fixação inicial da lama, resultando numa estrutura porosa uniforme.

4. Equipamento de corte

Mesa giratória: Acionado por um sistema hidráulico, roda suavemente os moldes e as peças em bruto, o que facilita a desmoldagem e o corte.

Serra de fio: Utiliza vários conjuntos de fios de aço de alta resistência para um corte de alta velocidade. Um sistema CNC assegura a precisão de corte até ao milímetro. Para equipamentos de serra de fio de grandes dimensões, pode efetuar cortes contínuos em várias estações.

5. Equipamento de cura em autoclave

Autoclaves: Grandes recipientes sob pressão curam peças em bruto a temperaturas de 180-200°C e pressões de 10-12 bar, formando hidratos de silicato de cálcio de alta resistência. Equipados com encravamentos de segurança.

6. Equipamento auxiliar

Caldeiras de vapor: Fornecimento de vapor estável para autoclaves e câmaras de cura, com várias opções de aquecimento disponíveis.

Compressor de ar: Fornece ar comprimido ao equipamento pneumático, assegurando o funcionamento correto das válvulas, braçadeiras e outros dispositivos.

Sistema de correias transportadoras: Transporta os materiais ao longo de todo o processo. Utiliza transportadores de correia ou de corrente (escolhidos com base nas necessidades do material) para um movimento automatizado e contínuo.

Sistema de controlo: Os sistemas PLC ou DCS monitorizam e ajustam os parâmetros de produção em tempo real. Registam os dados para gestão e rastreabilidade e ajudam a resolver problemas rapidamente.

Automation Impact on Production Stability

Automation is not only about reducing labor—it is about stabilizing output quality.

Nível de automatizaçãoOutput StabilityOperator DependencyRisk Level
ManualLowHighHigh
Semi-autoMédioMédioMédio
Totalmente automáticoHighLowLow

In AAC production, instability usually comes from human variation, not equipment failure. That is why most modern plants move toward higher automation levels.

Production Cost & Efficiency Optimization

Cost in AAC production is not fixed—it depends heavily on process efficiency.

Typical cost structure:

Cost FactorImpact Level
Raw materialHigh
Steam energyHigh
LaborMédio
ManutençãoMédio
Waste rateVery High

The biggest hidden cost is waste rate from cutting and curing imbalance.

ROI reference (typical 150,000 m³ plant)

ItemValue
Investment~$4–5M
Produção anual150,000 m³
Net Profit per m³$8–12
Período de retorno do investimento2–3 years

Efficiency improvement of even 3–5% can significantly change annual profit.

Common Production Problems & Solutions

From real project experience, most operational issues fall into four categories:

  • Block cracking after autoclave
  • Inconsistent density
  • Cutting deviation
  • Uneven curing strength
ProblemRoot CauseSolution
CrackingSteam imbalanceAdjust autoclave cycle
Density variationMixing inconsistencyImprove dosing system
Size deviationCutting misalignmentUpgrade wire system
Weak strengthRaw material fluctuationStabilize slurry system

Most problems are not “equipment failure”—they are system imbalance issues.

Our Case Study

In this project, the client initially focused on equipment purchase rather than process balance.

After commissioning, they faced:

  • Uneven production rhythm
  • Cutting delays
  • Autoclave underutilization

We re-evaluated the entire process flow and adjusted:

  • Cutting cycle synchronization
  • Material feeding timing
  • Autoclave scheduling

After optimization, production stabilized and reached designed capacity.


This project had a different challenge: environmental conditions.

High temperature and humidity affected:

  • Slurry stability
  • Pre-curing timing
  • Material handling consistency

We adjusted:

  • Mixing water ratio control
  • Pre-curing chamber insulation
  • Conveyor speed synchronization

Result:

  • Stable production under local climate conditions
  • Reduced material waste rate
  • Improved daily output consistency

FAQs

Q1: What is the most important part of AAC production?
The cutting system and autoclave system have the highest impact on final quality.

Q2: Can AAC production be fully automated?
Yes, modern plants can reach full automation, but system balance is still essential.

Q3: Why do some plants fail to reach designed capacity?
Usually due to process imbalance, not equipment quality.

Q4: How long does it take to stabilize production?
Typically 1–3 months after commissioning, depending on operator experience.

Q5: Can production be optimized after installation?
Yes, most improvements come from process tuning rather than equipment replacement.

Optimize Your Production Line with Our Engineers

If you are planning an AAC project or facing production instability, the key is not buying new machines—it is understanding how your current system is performing.

When we work with clients, we usually start from:

  • Raw material analysis
  • Production flow review
  • Bottleneck identification
  • Capacity matching

Based on this, we can help you define:

  • System optimization plan
  • Equipment upgrade suggestions
  • Efficiency improvement strategy

This approach is usually more effective than replacing individual machines.