Pulverization × Career Path: Leader

43 jobs found.

Metal Powder Manufacturing Worker

A job that melts metal materials, processes them into powder form through processes such as atomization and pulverization, performs particle size control, and supplies them as raw materials for powder metallurgy and 3D printing.

Dolomite (dolomite) manufacturing worker

A job that manufactures industrial calcined dolomite by calcining, crushing, and pulverizing dolomite (calcined dolomite) raw materials.

Crushing Roll Operator (Ceramic Raw Materials)

Manufacturing operator who crushes ceramic raw materials using a crushing roll and adjusts them to the specified particle size and quality.

Stock Solution Pulverization Temperature Worker (Chemical Fiber Manufacturing)

Manufacturing operator who pulverizes the polymer stock solution, the raw material for chemical fibers, and adjusts and manages it at the appropriate temperature.

Raw Material Mill Operator (Cement Manufacturing)

In cement manufacturing, operates and monitors raw material mills (ball mills) to crush and finely pulverize raw materials.

Industrial Agar Manufacturing Worker

Manufacturing occupation that extracts and refines agar derived from seaweed from raw materials and turns it into products. Handles processes such as raw material processing, extraction, concentration, and drying through machine operation.

Blast Furnace Cement Manufacturing Worker

Manufacturing staff who fire raw materials such as limestone and clay at high temperatures to produce clinker, crush it, and produce cement.

Corn Starch Maker

A job that manufactures corn starch products by extracting, refining, drying, and pulverizing starch from corn.

Kombu Tea Manufacturing Worker

This occupation handles the entire manufacturing process from raw material selection for kombu tea to extraction, powdering, blending, sterilization, filling, and packaging, while performing quality control, hygiene management, and safe product supply.

Titanium Dioxide Manufacturing Worker

Titanium dioxide manufacturing workers produce titanium dioxide (TiO₂), used as white pigments, in plastics, paints, and more, through chemical processes.