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
As digital infrastructure expands at an unprecedented pace, the thermal management of data centers and electrical cabinets has become one of the most pressing engineering challenges of our era. Traditional air-conditioning systems, while effective, consume enormous amounts of energy and struggle to keep pace with the rising heat densities of modern server racks and high-voltage switchgear. Heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems are emerging as a smarter, more sustainable alternative — delivering precise cooling, significant energy savings, and extended equipment lifespans.
This case study examines how a mid-sized cloud computing facility in Southeast Asia integrated plate heat exchangers and closed-loop ventilation heat recovery units into its infrastructure, achieving measurable improvements in efficiency, reliability, and total cost of ownership.
The facility operated 1,200 server racks across three halls, with an average power density of 8 kW per rack. Legacy precision air conditioners (PACs) were running at near-maximum capacity year-round, accounting for over 42% of the facility's total electricity consumption. Key pain points included:
The engineering team replaced 60% of the legacy PAC units with high-efficiency brazed plate heat exchangers connected to a free-cooling water loop. During the region's cooler months (approximately 7 months per year), outdoor ambient air pre-cools the water loop to below 18 degrees C, allowing the heat exchangers to handle the full server cooling load without mechanical refrigeration — a mode known as free cooling or economizer mode.
During peak summer months, the heat exchangers operate in hybrid mode, with a small chiller providing supplemental cooling. The result is a dramatic reduction in compressor runtime and associated energy consumption.
For the outdoor electrical cabinets and indoor switchgear rooms, the team deployed IP55-rated air-to-air heat exchangers with internal circulation fans. These units maintain a sealed internal environment — preventing dust, moisture, and insects from entering — while continuously transferring heat from the cabinet interior to the outside air. A built-in anti-condensation heater activates automatically when the dew point risk is detected.
This approach eliminated the need for filtered ventilation openings and reduced maintenance interventions by over 60%.
A heat recovery unit was installed on the primary exhaust air stream of the server halls. The recovered thermal energy now pre-heats domestic hot water for the facility's staff areas and provides supplemental space heating during winter, offsetting approximately 180,000 kWh of gas consumption annually.
After 12 months of operation, the facility conducted a comprehensive performance audit. The results were compelling:
The internal rate of return (IRR) over a 10-year asset life was calculated at 62%, making this one of the highest-performing capital projects the facility had undertaken in a decade.
The principles demonstrated in this case study apply equally to:
In each scenario, the combination of sealed heat exchange and intelligent heat recovery addresses the twin imperatives of reliability and sustainability.
This case study demonstrates that heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems are not merely incremental improvements to data center and electrical cabinet cooling — they represent a fundamental rethinking of how thermal energy is managed in critical infrastructure. By treating waste heat as a resource rather than a problem, facility operators can simultaneously reduce operating costs, improve equipment reliability, and meet increasingly stringent sustainability targets.
For data center operators, industrial facility managers, and electrical engineers evaluating their next cooling upgrade, the message is clear: the technology is proven, the economics are compelling, and the environmental case is undeniable. Heat recovery is no longer a niche solution — it is the new standard.
The lithium battery industry has experienced unprecedented growth, driven by the global transition to electric vehicles and renewable energy storage solutions. However, battery manufacturing processes, particularly electrode coating, consume significant amounts of energy and generate high-temperature exhaust streams containing N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) solvents. Implementing efficient heat recovery systems in these applications presents both environmental and economic opportunities for manufacturers worldwide.
NMP solvent recovery systems in lithium battery production facilities operate at elevated temperatures, typically between 80 degrees Celsius and 150 degrees Celsius, creating ideal conditions for heat exchanger implementation. This case study examines how advanced plate heat exchanger technology transforms waste heat into valuable thermal energy, reducing operational costs while supporting sustainability initiatives.
The electrode coating process represents the most energy-intensive stage in lithium battery manufacturing. During coating operations, NMP solvents evaporate from cathode slurries, requiring extensive thermal management. Modern exhaust treatment systems capture these solvent vapors while simultaneously recovering thermal energy through:
Continuous coating lines require precise temperature control within drying chambers. Exhaust air from these chambers typically exits at temperatures between 120 degrees Celsius and 180 degrees Celsius, carrying significant thermal energy. Plate heat exchangers positioned at these exhaust points can recover up to 85% of this thermal energy for reuse in:
The condensation process for NMP recovery generates substantial waste heat. Heat exchanger networks integrated with condensation systems capture this thermal energy, creating cascading heating opportunities throughout the facility. These systems typically achieve overall thermal efficiencies exceeding 90% when properly designed and maintained.
Modern plate heat exchangers designed for NMP solvent applications deliver exceptional thermal performance. Corrugated plate patterns create turbulent flow conditions that enhance heat transfer coefficients while minimizing fouling. Key performance characteristics include:
NMP solvent applications demand stringent material selection to ensure long-term reliability. Heat exchangers constructed from stainless steel 316L or higher-grade alloys provide excellent corrosion resistance against NMP and its degradation products. Gasket materials specifically selected for chemical compatibility ensure leak-free operation throughout the equipment service life.
Modular plate heat exchanger designs accommodate future capacity expansions without complete system replacement. Adding or removing plates allows manufacturers to adjust heat transfer capacity in response to production volume changes, providing valuable operational flexibility for growing battery manufacturing operations.
A mid-sized lithium battery manufacturing facility producing 5 GWh annually implemented comprehensive NMP solvent heat recovery across four coating lines. The analysis revealed:
Additional benefits include reduced thermal oxidizer fuel consumption, improved NMP recovery rates, and enhanced workplace comfort through reduced ambient heat release. These secondary benefits contribute an estimated 15-20% improvement to overall project economics.
Beyond economic returns, NMP heat recovery delivers meaningful environmental benefits. Reduced natural gas consumption directly decreases greenhouse gas emissions, supporting corporate sustainability commitments and regulatory compliance requirements. The case study facility achieved:
NMP solvent heat recovery represents a compelling opportunity for lithium battery manufacturers to simultaneously improve operational economics and environmental performance. Advanced plate heat exchanger technology delivers high efficiency thermal recovery in the demanding conditions characteristic of battery production environments. With typical payback periods under three years and substantial environmental benefits, these systems merit serious consideration for any facility seeking to optimize its energy utilization strategy.
As the battery manufacturing industry continues expanding to meet global electrification demands, efficient heat recovery will play an increasingly critical role in ensuring sustainable production practices. Forward-thinking manufacturers implementing these systems today position themselves for competitive advantage in an industry where energy efficiency and environmental stewardship are becoming essential success factors.
As global digital infrastructure expands at an unprecedented pace, data centers and electrical control cabinets have become among the most energy-intensive facilities in the modern economy. Cooling alone accounts for roughly 30 to 40 percent of total energy consumption in a typical data center. With rising electricity costs and increasingly stringent carbon-reduction targets, facility operators are under mounting pressure to adopt energy-efficient thermal management strategies. Heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems have emerged as proven technologies that dramatically reduce cooling energy while maintaining optimal operating temperatures for critical IT and electrical equipment.
Data centers house high-density computing equipment, including servers, storage arrays, and networking devices, that generate substantial amounts of waste heat. Internal ambient temperatures can quickly exceed 35 to 40 degrees Celsius without proper cooling, leading to hardware degradation, throttling, and even catastrophic failures.
Electrical cabinets in industrial environments face a similar challenge. Variable-frequency drives, UPS systems, PLC controllers, and power distribution units all generate heat that must be continuously removed. In outdoor or harsh industrial settings, such as mining sites, steel plants, or offshore platforms, ambient conditions further complicate thermal management.
Traditional compressor-based air conditioning systems, while effective, consume large amounts of electricity and require frequent maintenance. For many applications, especially in moderate climates, passive or hybrid cooling solutions using air-to-air heat exchangers offer a far more efficient alternative.
Air-to-air plate heat exchangers provide a simple yet highly effective solution: they transfer heat from the hot internal air to the cooler external air without mixing the two airstreams. This means sensitive electronic equipment remains sealed off from dust, humidity, and corrosive gases present in the external environment, while still benefiting from free cooling.
Modern heat exchanger systems designed for data center and cabinet cooling applications offer several compelling advantages:
The financial case for heat exchanger-based cooling is straightforward and compelling. Consider a mid-size edge data center with a 50 kW continuous heat load located in a region with 6,000 free-cooling hours per year:
For industrial electrical cabinets with smaller heat loads (2 to 5 kW), the economics are even more favorable. Payback periods of 6 to 12 months are common, driven by the low capital cost of compact heat exchanger modules and the high energy cost of continuous compressor operation in 24/7 industrial environments.
Additionally, operators benefit from reduced maintenance costs (no refrigerant top-ups, fewer compressor replacements), lower carbon emissions supporting ESG reporting, and improved equipment lifespan due to more stable operating temperatures.
Heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems represent a mature, reliable, and financially proven approach to cooling data centers and electrical cabinets. As digitalization drives exponential growth in computing infrastructure and industrial automation expands the footprint of sensitive electronics worldwide, the demand for energy-efficient cooling solutions will only intensify. Organizations that invest in heat exchanger-based cooling today gain an immediate competitive advantage through lower operating costs, reduced environmental impact, and enhanced equipment reliability, positioning themselves for sustainable growth in an increasingly energy-conscious world.
The textile industry is one of the most energy-intensive manufacturing sectors globally, with dyeing and finishing processes accounting for a significant portion of total energy consumption. Setting machines, also known as stenter frames or heat-setting machines, operate at high temperatures ranging from 150°C to 220°C to stabilize fabric dimensions and achieve desired properties. This process generates substantial amounts of waste heat that, without proper recovery systems, represents both economic loss and environmental impact.
This case study examines the implementation of heat exchanger systems in textile dyeing and setting operations, demonstrating how manufacturers can achieve significant energy savings while reducing their carbon footprint.
Stenter frames exhaust hot air at temperatures between 120°C and 180°C during the heat-setting process. Plate heat exchangers can capture this thermal energy and transfer it to:
Dyeing processes generate large volumes of hot wastewater at temperatures of 60-90°C. Shell-and-tube or plate heat exchangers installed in drainage systems can recover this heat for:
Modern continuous washing machines operate with counter-flow designs. Integrating heat exchangers between washing stages enables thermal energy transfer from hotter downstream stages to cooler upstream stages, reducing overall steam consumption by 25-35%.
Textile manufacturers face increasing regulatory pressure to reduce emissions and improve energy efficiency. Heat recovery systems help facilities meet:
A textile finishing plant processing 50,000 meters of fabric daily implemented a comprehensive heat recovery system including:
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Total Investment | ,000 |
| Annual Energy Savings | ,000 |
| Maintenance Costs | ,500/year |
| Net Annual Savings | ,500 |
| Simple Payback Period | 2.7 years |
| NPV (10-year, 8% discount) | ,000 |
Successful heat recovery implementation in textile operations requires attention to several factors:
Heat recovery in textile dyeing and setting machines represents a proven, economically viable pathway to improved sustainability and reduced operating costs. With typical payback periods of 2-4 years and substantial environmental benefits, these systems are becoming essential components of modern textile manufacturing facilities.
As energy costs continue to rise and environmental regulations tighten, early adopters of comprehensive heat recovery solutions position themselves advantageously in an increasingly competitive global market. The combination of plate heat exchangers for air-to-air recovery and robust shell-and-tube systems for liquid applications provides textile manufacturers with flexible, efficient options tailored to their specific operational requirements.
For textile companies seeking to improve their energy performance, a thorough energy audit identifying major heat sources and sinks represents the essential first step toward realizing these significant benefits.