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
The pharmaceutical and herbal medicine industry relies heavily on controlled drying processes to preserve active ingredients, ensure product stability, and meet stringent regulatory standards. These drying operations鈥攚hether for herbal extracts, granules, or bulk medicinal materials鈥攃onsume significant thermal energy and generate substantial exhaust heat. Implementing heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems in this sector offers a compelling path to reduce energy costs, lower carbon emissions, and improve process consistency.
Pharmaceutical and herbal medicine drying typically involves hot-air circulation ovens, fluidized bed dryers, and spray dryers operating at temperatures ranging from 60掳C to 180掳C. The exhaust air from these systems carries away 30鈥?0% of the input thermal energy as waste heat. Key challenges include:
A mid-size herbal medicine manufacturer in southern China produces 5,000 tons of granule formulations annually. The plant operates 16 fluidized bed dryers and 8 hot-air circulation ovens across three production lines, running 20 hours per day, 300 days per year.
Prior to retrofit, exhaust air at 90鈥?20掳C was discharged directly into the atmosphere. Steam boilers consumed 18,000 tons of steam per year for drying operations, costing approximately 楼3.6 million annually. The facility's energy audit revealed that 42% of supplied heat energy was lost through exhaust stacks.
The facility installed a two-stage heat recovery system:
A self-cleaning pulse-jet filter system was integrated upstream of the heat exchangers to manage dust loading from herbal particulates, ensuring sustained heat transfer efficiency.
Total equipment investment: 楼2.1 million
Annual steam cost savings: 楼1.4 million
Annual maintenance cost (filters, cleaning): 楼85,000
Net annual savings: 楼1.315 million
Simple payback period: 1.6 years
10-year NPV (8% discount rate): 楼7.1 million
CO鈧?reduction per year: 1,820 tons
The investment recovered within 20 months of operation. With equipment lifespans exceeding 15 years and minimal degradation in heat transfer performance thanks to the filtration system, long-term returns are substantial.
Heat recovery in pharmaceutical and herbal medicine drying is not merely an energy-efficiency measure鈥攊t is a strategic investment that improves product quality, ensures regulatory compliance, and delivers rapid financial returns. As energy costs rise and carbon regulations tighten, facilities that adopt heat exchanger and ventilation recovery systems gain a decisive competitive advantage. The case study above demonstrates that with proper engineering鈥攑articularly dust management and corrosion-resistant materials鈥攈eat recovery can be seamlessly integrated into existing pharmaceutical drying operations with payback periods under two years.
The lithium battery industry has experienced explosive growth over the past decade, driven by electric vehicles, grid-scale energy storage, and portable electronics. As production scales to meet global demand, manufacturers face mounting pressure to reduce energy consumption, lower operating costs, and meet increasingly stringent environmental regulations. One of the most energy-intensive stages in lithium battery manufacturing is the electrode drying process, where N-Methyl-2-Pyrrolidone (NMP) solvent must be evaporated from coated electrode films. Heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems offer a proven pathway to capture and reuse thermal energy from NMP-laden exhaust streams, delivering significant cost savings and emissions reductions.
NMP is a high-boiling-point organic solvent widely used as a binder carrier in lithium-ion battery electrode coating. During the drying process, hot air evaporates the NMP from the coated foil, creating an exhaust stream saturated with NMP vapor at temperatures typically between 80 and 120 degrees Celsius. This exhaust stream represents a substantial amount of recoverable thermal energy that is often vented directly to atmosphere in older or less optimized production lines.
The most direct application of heat recovery in NMP drying lines involves using exhaust-to-supply air heat exchangers. Plate-type or rotary heat exchangers transfer thermal energy from the hot NMP-laden exhaust to the incoming fresh air, reducing the heating load on the oven primary heat source. Typical thermal recovery efficiencies range from 55 to 75 percent, depending on exchanger type and operating conditions.
Beyond thermal recovery, many modern systems integrate NMP condensation units where the exhaust is cooled below the solvent dew point. The condensed NMP is collected, purified, and returned to the coating process. Shell-and-tube heat exchangers using chilled water serve as condensers in these systems, while the recovered heat from the condensation cooling loop can be redirected to preheat other process streams.
Advanced facilities implement cascaded heat recovery: primary exhaust heat preheats supply air, secondary exhaust (post-condensation) heats facility hot water or HVAC systems, and tertiary recovery feeds low-grade absorption chillers or heat pumps. This layered approach pushes overall system efficiency above 80 percent in well-engineered installations.
When exhaust temperatures are insufficient to meet supply air requirements through direct exchange alone, heat pumps can upgrade the recovered energy to higher temperature levels. This is particularly valuable in cold climates or when production requires precise temperature control within narrow tolerances.
Consider a mid-scale lithium battery electrode production line processing approximately 50,000 m2 of electrode per month. Without heat recovery, the facility spends an estimated $180,000 to $250,000 annually on thermal energy for drying alone.
With a complete heat recovery system investment typically ranging from $150,000 to $300,000, the payback period falls between 12 and 24 months. For larger gigafactory-scale operations, savings scale proportionally, often achieving payback in under one year.
As the global lithium battery industry continues its rapid expansion, energy efficiency has become a critical competitive differentiator. Heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems provide a mature, reliable, and financially compelling solution for NMP solvent recovery and thermal energy reuse. By integrating these technologies into electrode drying lines, manufacturers can significantly reduce both operating costs and environmental impact while maintaining the high product quality standards that the battery market demands. For facilities still venting hot NMP-laden exhaust to atmosphere, heat recovery represents one of the most impactful upgrades available today.