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
In today's digital economy, data centers and electrical infrastructure face unprecedented thermal challenges. With the rapid expansion of cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and 5G networks, heat generation in server rooms and electrical cabinets has reached critical levels. Traditional air conditioning systems struggle to maintain optimal operating temperatures while managing energy costs. This case study explores how advanced heat exchanger technology and ventilation heat recovery systems are revolutionizing thermal management in data centers and electrical installations.
A leading colocation data center in Shanghai, operating 2,500 server racks with a total IT load of 15MW, faced escalating cooling costs and thermal management challenges. The facility's traditional CRAC (Computer Room Air Conditioning) units consumed 40% of the total facility power, while hot spots persisted in high-density computing areas.
The facility implemented a comprehensive heat recovery and ventilation system utilizing plate heat exchangers and run-around coil systems. The solution captured waste heat from server exhaust air and repurposed it for multiple applications.
The implemented heat recovery system delivered measurable improvements across multiple performance indicators:
The financial performance of the heat recovery investment demonstrated compelling returns:
This case study demonstrates that heat exchanger and ventilation heat recovery systems deliver transformative results for data centers and electrical infrastructure. Beyond substantial energy savings and rapid ROI, the technology enhances operational reliability, extends equipment life, and supports corporate sustainability goals. As data processing demands continue growing, integrating heat recovery into thermal management strategies is no longer optional-it's essential for competitive, sustainable operations. Organizations investing in these systems today position themselves for lower operating costs, improved reliability, and enhanced environmental performance in an increasingly carbon-conscious marketplace.
The success of this implementation has prompted the data center to expand heat recovery systems to its other facilities, targeting group-wide PUE reduction to 1.3 or below by 2027. This scalable approach offers a replicable model for the industry, proving that advanced heat recovery technology is both economically viable and operationally superior to traditional cooling methods.
The rapid expansion of the electric vehicle (EV) market has driven unprecedented demand for lithium-ion batteries. Global battery production capacity is projected to exceed 3,000 GWh by 2030, with China, Europe, and North America leading manufacturing investments. A critical but often overlooked aspect of battery manufacturing is the recovery of N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP), a high-boiling-point solvent used in electrode coating. NMP recovery systems rely heavily on thermal energy??aking heat exchanger technology not just beneficial, but essential for cost-effective and environmentally compliant operation. This case study examines how advanced heat recovery systems are transforming energy efficiency in lithium battery manufacturing.
In lithium battery production, the electrode coating process involves applying a slurry containing NMP, active materials, binders, and conductive additives onto current collector foils (copper for anodes, aluminum for cathodes). The coated electrodes then pass through multi-zone drying ovens where NMP evaporates and is captured in exhaust air streams at temperatures ranging from 100?C to 180?C. Heat recovery ventilators transfer thermal energy from the hot, NMP-laden exhaust air to incoming fresh air, reducing the energy required to maintain oven temperatures by up to 50%. This application typically uses counter-flow plate heat exchangers or rotary heat wheels depending on space constraints and efficiency requirements.
NMP recovery typically uses condensation methods where exhaust air is cooled to 10-20?C to condense NMP vapor. Heat exchangers pre-cool the exhaust air using the cooled process air or chilled water, significantly reducing the refrigeration load and energy consumption of the condensation system. In a typical installation, primary heat recovery reduces the load on mechanical cooling systems by 60-70%, delivering substantial electricity savings. Manufacturers report NMP recovery rates increasing from 85% to over 95% when optimized heat recovery is implemented.
Battery manufacturing facilities require substantial makeup air to replace the air extracted by exhaust systems. A typical gigafactory may exhaust 200,000+ m?/h of air. Heat recovery ventilators capture waste heat from exhaust streams to pre-heat incoming makeup air, delivering energy savings of 30-50%. During winter months, this can reduce natural gas consumption for makeup air heating by more than 70%, providing both economic and carbon reduction benefits.
Consider a typical lithium battery manufacturing facility with an NMP recovery system processing 50,000 m?/h of exhaust air:
As lithium battery production scales to meet global EV demand, optimizing energy-intensive processes like NMP recovery is no longer optional??t's a competitive necessity. Heat exchanger and ventilation heat recovery systems deliver measurable ROI through reduced energy costs, improved solvent recovery rates, and enhanced environmental compliance. For battery manufacturers seeking to cut operating costs while meeting sustainability goals, investing in high-efficiency heat recovery technology is a proven strategy with rapid payback and long-term value. Leading manufacturers who have implemented comprehensive heat recovery systems report 30-50% reductions in energy intensity per kWh of battery capacity produced?? compelling benchmark for the industry.
The rapid expansion of the electric vehicle (EV) and energy storage markets has positioned lithium-ion battery manufacturing at the forefront of industrial innovation. However, the production of lithium-ion batteries is energy-intensive, particularly during the electrode coating and drying processes where N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) solvent is evaporated and recovered. Implementing heat recovery systems in these processes can dramatically reduce energy consumption, lower operating costs, and enhance environmental sustainability.
This case study examines how advanced heat exchanger technology and ventilation heat recovery systems are transforming lithium battery manufacturing by capturing and reusing thermal energy from NMP solvent recovery processes.
In lithium-ion battery production, the electrode manufacturing process involves coating current collector foils (copper for anodes, aluminum for cathodes) with a slurry containing active materials, binders, and solvents. NMP is the primary solvent used due to its excellent solubility and stability. After coating, the electrodes pass through large drying ovens where NMP is evaporated at temperatures ranging from 80°C to 160°C.
The NMP-rich exhaust air must then pass through a recovery system (typically condensation-based) to capture and recycle the expensive solvent. These processes involve significant thermal energy that, without recovery systems, would be wasted.
1. NMP Recovery System Pre-Heating
The exhaust air leaving the NMP recovery system is typically at 60-80°C. A heat recovery ventilator can transfer this thermal energy to incoming fresh air needed for combustion or make-up air, reducing the load on heating systems by 40-60%.
2. Drying Oven Make-Up Air Heating
Drying ovens require substantial amounts of heated make-up air to maintain optimal temperature profiles and remove evaporated solvents. Heat exchangers recover energy from the exhaust stream to pre-heat incoming combustion air or direct-fired make-up air units, significantly reducing natural gas or electricity consumption.
3. HVAC System Load Reduction
Battery manufacturing facilities require strict temperature and humidity control. Ventilation heat recovery systems capture energy from exhaust air to condition incoming outdoor air, reducing the HVAC load by up to 50% in climate-controlled production areas.
4. Process Water and Thermal Oil Heating
Recovered heat can be used to pre-heat process water or thermal oil used in other manufacturing steps, such as electrolyte mixing or room heating, creating a cascaded energy recovery system.
Energy Efficiency Gains: Heat recovery systems typically achieve 50-75% thermal efficiency, meaning more than half of the waste heat is converted into usable energy. For a typical lithium battery plant, this translates to 15-30% reduction in overall energy consumption.
Environmental Compliance: By reducing fossil fuel consumption, heat recovery systems directly lower CO2 emissions, helping manufacturers meet increasingly stringent environmental regulations and corporate sustainability goals.
Solvent Recovery Enhancement: Optimized heat recovery improves the efficiency of NMP condensation systems by maintaining optimal temperature differentials, increasing solvent recovery rates from 92-95% to 97-99%.
Equipment Longevity: Modern heat exchangers with anti-corrosion coatings (PTFE, fluoropolymer) withstand the aggressive chemical environment of NMP recovery systems, ensuring 10+ year service life with minimal maintenance.
Compact Design: Plate heat exchangers and regenerative thermal oxidizers (RTO) with integrated heat recovery offer high thermal performance in a compact footprint, ideal for space-constrained battery manufacturing facilities.
Investment Costs: A typical heat recovery system for a mid-sized battery manufacturing plant (10 GWh annual capacity) costs ,000 to ,000, depending on system complexity and heat exchanger type.
Energy Savings: Based on average natural gas prices (-8/MMBtu) and electricity rates (.08-0.12/kWh), annual energy savings range from ,000 to ,000.
Payback Period: Most installations achieve payback within 18 to 36 months. High-energy-cost regions and larger facilities see faster returns, often under 18 months.
Additional Financial Benefits:
10-Year NPV (Net Present Value): For a ,000 investment, the 10-year NPV typically ranges from ,000 to .5 million, assuming a 10% discount rate.
As lithium battery manufacturing scales to meet exploding demand, energy efficiency has become a critical competitive differentiator. Heat recovery systems in NMP solvent recovery processes offer a proven, cost-effective pathway to reduce operating expenses, enhance environmental performance, and improve process stability.
With payback periods under three years and substantial long-term savings, heat exchanger and ventilation heat recovery systems represent one of the highest-ROI investments available to battery manufacturers. Companies that implement these systems not only strengthen their bottom line but also position themselves as leaders in sustainable manufacturing—an increasingly important factor for customers, investors, and regulators alike.
For battery manufacturers seeking to optimize energy use and reduce costs, partnering with experienced heat recovery system providers ensures customized solutions that maximize thermal efficiency while maintaining the strict process control required for high-quality battery production.
Data centers face unprecedented cooling challenges as power densities increase. This case study examines how heat exchanger technology delivers energy savings and improved reliability.
Modern data centers consume 30-40% of their power for cooling. Traditional air cooling struggles with rack densities exceeding 20kW, leading to hot spots and equipment degradation.
A Southeast Asian telecom deployed indirect evaporative cooling with plate heat exchangers across 200+ edge data centers:
| Metric | Improvement |
|---|---|
| PUE (Power Usage Effectiveness) | Reduced from 1.8 to 1.35 |
| Water consumption | 65% reduction |
| Energy costs | 25% savings |
| Equipment lifespan | Extended by 60% |
Payback period: 2.8 years
10-year NPV: .2M per 1MW facility
IRR: 28%
Advanced heat exchangers transform data center cooling from a cost center to a strategic advantage. With compelling ROI and sustainability benefits, these solutions are essential for modern data center operations.