Product/Service

New Wheel Dryer

Source: Novatec, Inc.
A new rotating wheel dryer that continuously puts dry desiccant into service while regenerating saturated desiccant in the same rotational cycle provides resin processors with a simpler, more compact, lower-cost alternative to conventional twin-tower dryers, it was announced recently by NOVATEC

A new rotating wheel dryer that continuously puts dry desiccant into service while regenerating saturated desiccant in the same rotational cycle provides resin processors with a simpler, more compact, lower-cost alternative to conventional twin-tower dryers, it was announced recently by NOVATEC.

The NovaWheel™ dryer also exhibits less variation in dew point than other wheel dryers because models of all sizes use a steel link drive chain instead of a belt to drive the desiccant wheel, according to dryer product sales manager Mark Haynie. "Because belt drives invariably undergo distortion, slippage occurs, causing rotation speed and thus dew-point performance to vary from target settings," he said.

According to the company sources:

  • In conventional twin-bed dryers, the desiccant adsorbs the moisture from a stream of hot air that has passed through a hopper full of resin. The desiccant must be regenerated after each resin batch has dried, first by heating to around 400 deg. F (204 deg. C) to drive off moisture, then cooling to recover full adsorption capacity. Conventional twin-tower dryers employ two desiccant beds to limit the batch drying process to the roughly four hours required to extract moisture, one bed being regenerated while the other is used for dehumidification.
  • Although NOVATEC's NovaWheel dryer also carries out adsorption and regeneration simultaneously, it does so in single, continuous operation. The cylindrical wheel in the dryer contains desiccant-impregnated honeycomb that is divided into three sections (visible in the cross section of the wheel shown in the picture). Air from the resin hopper that has been cooled and filtered goes through a blower and then is split into two streams, one passing through the moisture-removal section of the desiccant wheel, the other through the purge section, where desiccant that has already been regenerated is now cooled down. At the same time, a stream of hot air passing through the third section regenerates the desiccant in that section. The rotor turns slowly in a counter-clockwise direction, moving each segment of the honeycomb through the three stages. "The NovaWheel dryer provides more consistent dew point performance by eliminating the spikes and deviations that typically occur with twin-tower dryers during the changeover from one bed to another," Haynie said. "The new dryer is particularly effective with heat-sensitive resins like PET and PETG because of its more efficient cooling after regeneration. And with ‘difficult' materials like nylon, rotor speed is easily adjusted to prevent over-drying."
  • NOVATEC is introducing the smaller units during the next two business quarters, with throughputs ranging from 100 to 400 lb./hr (45 to 180 kg/hr.). Larger units will appear in 2007, with the largest size expected to have a throughput of 4,500 lb./hr. (2,045 kg/hr.). "Investment costs for the smaller NovaWheel units will be 10–15% less than for twin-tower dryers of similar throughput ratings," Haynie said. "Larger units will cost up to 50% less and take up only a quarter to a third of plant floor space."

SOURCE: NOVATEC, INC.