Heat exchanger
Cross flow heat exchanger,<br />Counter flow heat exchanger,<br />Rotary heat exchanger,<br />Steam Heating Coil
We specialize in the production of cross flow and counter flow heat exchangers, rotary heat exchangers, heat pipe heat exchangers, as well as air conditioning units and heat recovery units developed using heat exchange technology
Cross flow heat exchanger,<br />Counter flow heat exchanger,<br />Rotary heat exchanger,<br />Steam Heating Coil
Waste heat recovery from flue gas,Heat pump drying waste heat recovery,Mine exhaust heat extraction
Hygienic Air Handling Unit,<br />AHU With Heat Recovery,<br />Thermal wheel AHU,<br />AHU chilled water coil
Heat recovery fresh air ventilator,Heat pump fresh air ventilator,Unidirectional flow fresh air fan,Air purifier
Air to air heat exchangers are widely used in boiler flue gas waste heat recovery, heat pump drying waste gas waste heat recovery, food, tobacco, sludge, printing, washing, coating drying waste gas waste heat recovery, data center indirect evaporative cooling systems, water vapor condensation to remove white smoke, large-scale aquaculture energy-saving ventilation, mine exhaust heat extraction, fresh air system heat recovery and other fields
If you have a need for air to air heat exchangers, you can contact us
This case study examines how a leading hyperscale data center operator implemented advanced plate heat exchanger technology and ventilation heat recovery systems to reduce cooling costs by 42% while improving PUE (Power Usage Effectiveness) from 1.68 to 1.31. The project, completed at a 15MW facility in Northern Europe, demonstrates the significant energy savings potential of modern heat recovery solutions in data center applications.
Modern data centers face unprecedented cooling challenges as server densities continue to increase. The subject facility, housing over 200,000 servers across 8,000 sq meters of white space, was experiencing:
The facility implemented a three-tier heat recovery architecture:
Twelve units of counter-flow plate heat exchangers (model: HX-8500-IEC) were installed to enable indirect free cooling. The exchangers maintain separation between facility air and external air while achieving 78% sensible heat recovery efficiency. Key specifications:
Electrical rooms housing UPS systems, switchgear, and PDUs were retrofitted with enthalpy heat recovery ventilators. These units recover both sensible and latent heat from exhaust air, pre-conditioning incoming fresh air. The system handles 450,000 m³/h total ventilation air across the facility.
A closed-loop glycol system captures server heat exhaust (typically 25-35°C) and upgrades it via heat pumps to supply the facility's office heating and domestic hot water. This eliminated 100% of natural gas consumption for space heating (previously 850 MWh/year).
| Metric | Before | After | Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual Cooling Energy (MWh) | 18,500 | 10,730 | -42% |
| PUE (annual average) | 1.68 | 1.31 | -22% |
| Free Cooling Utilization | 31% | 78% | +47 pp |
| Electrical Room Cooling Cost | $42,000/month | $18,500/month | -56% |
The total project investment was $1.85 million, broken down as:
Annual Savings:
Payback Period: 4.0 years
10-Year NPV (8% discount rate): $1.42 million
IRR: 24.8%
This case study demonstrates that heat exchanger and ventilation heat recovery systems deliver substantial energy and cost savings in data center environments. The 42% reduction in cooling energy, combined with improved temperature uniformity and ASHRAE compliance, makes a compelling business case. For data center operators targeting sustainability goals or facing rising energy costs, heat recovery retrofits offer a proven path to improved PUE and reduced OPEX. As server densities continue to increase with AI and high-performance computing workloads, proactive thermal management through advanced heat recovery will become not just an efficiency measure, but an operational necessity.
This case study is based on actual implementation data. Facility names and specific financial details have been generalized to protect client confidentiality.
This case study examines how a leading hyperscale data center operator implemented advanced plate heat exchanger technology and ventilation heat recovery systems to reduce cooling costs by 42% while improving PUE (Power Usage Effectiveness) from 1.68 to 1.31. The project, completed at a 15MW facility in Northern Europe, demonstrates the significant energy savings potential of modern heat recovery solutions in data center applications.
Modern data centers face unprecedented cooling challenges as server densities continue to increase. The subject facility, housing over 200,000 servers across 8,000 sq meters of white space, was experiencing:
The facility implemented a three-tier heat recovery architecture:
Twelve units of counter-flow plate heat exchangers (model: HX-8500-IEC) were installed to enable indirect free cooling. The exchangers maintain separation between facility air and external air while achieving 78% sensible heat recovery efficiency. Key specifications:
Electrical rooms housing UPS systems, switchgear, and PDUs were retrofitted with enthalpy heat recovery ventilators. These units recover both sensible and latent heat from exhaust air, pre-conditioning incoming fresh air. The system handles 450,000 m³/h total ventilation air across the facility.
A closed-loop glycol system captures server heat exhaust (typically 25-35°C) and upgrades it via heat pumps to supply the facility's office heating and domestic hot water. This eliminated 100% of natural gas consumption for space heating (previously 850 MWh/year).
| Metric | Before | After | Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual Cooling Energy (MWh) | 18,500 | 10,730 | -42% |
| PUE (annual average) | 1.68 | 1.31 | -22% |
| Free Cooling Utilization | 31% | 78% | +47 pp |
| Electrical Room Cooling Cost | $42,000/month | $18,500/month | -56% |
The total project investment was $1.85 million, broken down as:
Annual Savings:
Payback Period: 4.0 years
10-Year NPV (8% discount rate): $1.42 million
IRR: 24.8%
This case study demonstrates that heat exchanger and ventilation heat recovery systems deliver substantial energy and cost savings in data center environments. The 42% reduction in cooling energy, combined with improved temperature uniformity and ASHRAE compliance, makes a compelling business case. For data center operators targeting sustainability goals or facing rising energy costs, heat recovery retrofits offer a proven path to improved PUE and reduced OPEX. As server densities continue to increase with AI and high-performance computing workloads, proactive thermal management through advanced heat recovery will become not just an efficiency measure, but an operational necessity.
This case study is based on actual implementation data. Facility names and specific financial details have been generalized to protect client confidentiality.
Commercial buildings account for a significant share of global energy consumption, with ventilation and space conditioning representing up to 40% of total energy use. As building codes tighten and sustainability targets grow more ambitious, property owners and facility managers are turning to heat recovery ventilation (HRV) systems to deliver fresh air without the energy penalty. This case study explores how enthalpy and plate heat exchangers are transforming ventilation strategies in modern commercial buildings.
Commercial buildings??ffice towers, hotels, shopping malls, hospitals, and educational facilities??ust maintain continuous fresh air supply to meet occupancy health standards. However, introducing outside air means either heating it in winter or cooling and dehumidifying it in summer. This creates a fundamental tension:
Without heat recovery, a typical 50,000 m? office building in a temperate climate can waste over 1,200 MWh annually just conditioning ventilation air.
In dense urban office towers, hundreds of occupants generate significant internal heat gains while requiring constant fresh air. A plate heat exchanger installed in the air handling unit (AHU) recovers up to 85% of the energy from the exhaust airstream. During winter, the outgoing warm air preheats incoming cold air; during summer, the cool exhaust pre-cools the supply. This dramatically reduces the load on chillers and boilers.
Hospitals demand 100% fresh air in many zones??perating rooms, isolation wards, and laboratories cannot use recirculated air. Enthalpy heat exchangers recover both sensible and latent heat, maintaining precise humidity levels while recovering up to 75% of total energy. This is critical where energy recovery must not compromise air quality or cross-contamination prevention.
Guest rooms require individual climate control with continuous fresh air. Decentralized HRV units installed above ceilings or in mechanical closets recover energy from bathroom and room exhaust, reducing the central plant load. A 300-room hotel can cut ventilation energy costs by 35??0% with properly sized heat recovery systems.
Consider a 40,000 m? Class A office building in a mixed-humid climate (similar to Shanghai or Atlanta):
With a typical installed cost of ,000??250,000 for the heat recovery system (including AHU integration and controls), the simple payback period is 1.2 to 1.7 years. Over a 15-year lifecycle, the net present value of savings exceeds .5 million at a 6% discount rate. Additionally, the reduced peak load may allow downsizing of chillers and boilers, saving another 10??5% on initial mechanical system costs.
Heat recovery ventilation is no longer optional for high-performance commercial buildings??t is a baseline expectation in modern design. Whether upgrading existing AHUs or specifying new installations, plate and enthalpy heat exchangers deliver compelling energy savings, rapid payback, and meaningful contributions to green building certifications. As energy costs rise and decarbonization mandates accelerate, building owners who invest in HRV today will enjoy lower operating costs and higher asset value for decades to come.
Data centers and electrical cabinet installations are among the fastest-growing energy consumers worldwide. With global data traffic doubling every few years, the demand for reliable, efficient cooling has never been greater. Traditional air-conditioning systems struggle to keep pace with rising heat loads, driving operators to seek smarter thermal management strategies. Heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems offer a proven path to reduce energy consumption while maintaining precise temperature control.
Modern data centers generate enormous amounts of waste heat. A single server rack can produce 20ndash;40 kW of thermal energy, and large facilities may dissipate tens of megawatts. This presents several critical challenges:
In facilities where hot and cold aisles are implemented, plate heat exchangers recover thermal energy from exhaust air and transfer it to incoming fresh air. This pre-conditions ventilation air without requiring additional compressor-based cooling, cutting HVAC energy use by 30ndash;50% during mild seasons.
Electrical cabinets in industrial environments often cannot use open ventilation due to dust, moisture, or corrosive gases. Heat exchangers provide sealed cooling loops that dissipate internal heat to the ambient environment without exposing sensitive electronics. This extends component life by 2ndash;3 times compared to forced-fan cooling alone.
Data center waste heat, typically discharged at 35ndash;45?C, can be upgraded via heat pumps and distributed to adjacent office buildings, district heating networks, or greenhouses. Shell-and-tube and brazed plate heat exchangers serve as the interface between the data center cooling loop and the secondary heating circuit, enabling energy cascading.
The economic case for heat exchanger integration in data centers is compelling:
For a mid-sized 5 MW facility, total annual savings from heat recovery and cabinet cooling optimization typically reach substantial figures, making the technology one of the highest-ROI investments in data center infrastructure.
As digital infrastructure continues to expand, the thermal management of data centers and electrical cabinets demands smarter, more efficient solutions. Heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems deliver measurable energy savings, improved equipment reliability, and meaningful carbon reductionsmdash;all with rapid payback. Whether retrofitting an existing facility or designing a new hyperscale campus, integrating heat recovery technology should be a core element of any data center sustainability strategy. The combination of operational cost savings and environmental compliance makes this an investment that pays for itself many times over.