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
Data centers are the backbone of the modern digital economy, housing thousands of servers that process, store, and distribute information around the globe. However, this relentless computing power comes at a significant energy cost — data centers consume approximately 1–2% of the world's total electricity, and up to 40% of that energy is dedicated solely to cooling. As demand for cloud services, AI workloads, and edge computing surges, the need for efficient thermal management has never been more urgent. This case study explores how advanced heat exchangers and ventilation heat recovery systems are transforming data center cooling, delivering measurable energy savings and operational benefits.
Modern data centers face a dual thermal challenge: removing the enormous heat generated by densely packed server racks and maintaining precise temperature and humidity conditions to ensure equipment reliability. Traditional approaches — such as raised-floor air distribution and direct expansion (DX) cooling — are increasingly inadequate for high-density deployments exceeding 10 kW per rack.
A 20,000 m² Tier III colocation facility in Northern Europe was experiencing PUE values of 1.58, with annual cooling costs exceeding €2.4 million. The facility deployed a comprehensive heat recovery strategy using plate heat exchangers (PHEs) integrated with free-cooling and waste-heat recapture subsystems.
| Parameter | Before Retrofit | After Retrofit |
|---|---|---|
| Annual cooling energy cost | €2.4M | €1.52M |
| Annual average PUE | 1.58 | 1.28 |
| Heat recovery revenue | €0 | €96K |
| Maintenance cost (cooling) | €180K/year | €95K/year |
| Capital investment | — | €1.8M |
The total annual savings reached €805,000 (energy + maintenance + heat recovery revenue), yielding a simple payback period of approximately 2.2 years. Over a 15-year lifecycle, the net present value (NPV) at a 6% discount rate exceeded €6.5 million, making this one of the highest-return infrastructure investments available to data center operators.
As data center densities continue to climb and energy regulations tighten, heat exchanger and ventilation heat recovery systems offer a proven, high-ROI pathway to sustainable thermal management. The case study demonstrated that integrating plate heat exchangers with free-cooling, hot aisle containment, and electrical cabinet spot cooling can reduce PUE by 19%, cut annual cooling costs by 37%, and generate new revenue streams from waste-heat utilization. For operators seeking to future-proof their facilities against rising energy costs and environmental mandates, these systems represent not just a technical upgrade — but a strategic business advantage.
The rapid expansion of the electric vehicle and energy storage markets has placed unprecedented demands on lithium-ion battery manufacturing efficiency and sustainability. N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP), a vital solvent used in electrode production, represents both a significant operational cost and an environmental challenge for battery manufacturers worldwide.
In typical cathode production processes, NMP is used to dissolve binder materials and create homogeneous electrode slurries. During the drying phase, this solvent evaporates at temperatures between 80-150 degrees Celsius, creating a substantial opportunity for heat and solvent recovery. Our heat exchanger solutions have helped numerous battery manufacturers transform this waste stream into a valuable resource.
A leading European battery manufacturer operating a 40 GWh production facility faced escalating energy costs and strict environmental regulations regarding NMP emissions. The facility's coating lines generated approximately 2,500 kg/h of NMP vapor at 120 degrees Celsius, representing significant thermal energy loss.
An Asian battery cell producer specializing in consumer electronics sought to improve both production efficiency and workplace safety. Their existing ventilation system discharged NMP-laden air without thermal recovery, resulting in high heating costs during winter months.
Our heat exchangers achieve temperature efficiency ratings exceeding 85 percent, ensuring maximum heat transfer from NMP-laden exhaust streams to fresh intake air. This performance translates directly into reduced primary energy consumption and lower operating costs.
Specifically engineered for NMP environments, our heat exchange units feature:
Modern battery facilities must meet increasingly stringent emission regulations. Our integrated heat recovery systems support compliance with:
A comprehensive analysis of a 20 GWh lithium battery manufacturing facility revealed compelling economic benefits:
Performance Metrics:
Based on documented implementations:
Beyond direct cost savings, manufacturers report:
As the global battery manufacturing industry continues its explosive growth trajectory, operational efficiency and environmental responsibility have become inseparable strategic priorities. NMP solvent heat recovery systems represent a proven, high-ROI investment that addresses both imperatives simultaneously.
Our engineering team has supported over 150 battery manufacturing projects worldwide, from pilot lines to full-scale gigafactories. The combination of deep process knowledge, purpose-built equipment, and comprehensive support services ensures that every installation delivers maximum value throughout its operational lifetime.
For battery manufacturers seeking to optimize NMP handling operations, heat recovery systems offer a clear path to reduced costs, improved compliance, and enhanced competitiveness in an increasingly demanding market.
As digital infrastructure expands at an unprecedented pace, data centers and electrical cabinet systems face a dual challenge: managing ever-increasing heat loads while controlling energy costs. Modern data centers can consume up to 40% of their total energy budget on cooling alone. Ventilation heat recovery systems and specialized heat exchangers offer a proven pathway to reclaim wasted thermal energy, reduce operating expenses, and improve overall sustainability metrics. This case study examines real-world applications of heat recovery technology in data center environments and electrical cabinet cooling scenarios.
Server racks, storage arrays, and network switches generate enormous amounts of waste heat continuously. Traditional cooling approaches鈥攃omputer room air conditioning (CRAC) units, chillers, and raised-floor air distribution鈥攁ddress the symptom but not the opportunity. Every kilowatt of heat rejected to the atmosphere represents a missed chance to recover useful thermal energy.
A 5 MW colocation data center in Northern Europe deployed plate heat exchangers to capture exhaust heat from its hot-aisle containment system. The recovered thermal energy, at temperatures of 35鈥?5掳C, was routed to an adjacent commercial office complex for space heating during winter months. The system achieved a heat recovery efficiency of 78%, displacing approximately 1,200 MWh of natural gas consumption annually.
High-density GPU clusters used for AI training generate rack-level heat densities exceeding 80 kW per rack. A technology company implemented a closed-loop liquid cooling circuit with shell-and-tube heat exchangers isolating the facility chilled water loop from the rack-level coolant loop. This approach eliminated condensation risks, reduced chiller load by 35%, and enabled waste heat upgrading through heat pumps for domestic hot water supply.
In manufacturing plants and renewable energy installations, electrical cabinets housing variable frequency drives, PLCs, and switchgear are often exposed to harsh ambient conditions. Heat exchangers designed for cabinet cooling maintain internal temperatures within safe operating ranges without introducing contaminated outside air. A wind farm operator reported a 92% reduction in cabinet-related failures after installing air-to-air heat exchangers across 120 turbine nacelle cabinets, extending mean time between failures from 14 months to over 36 months.
Consider a mid-sized 2 MW data center retrofitting a ventilation heat recovery system:
Data centers and electrical cabinet installations no longer need to treat waste heat as a disposal problem. With modern heat exchanger and ventilation heat recovery technology, thermal energy becomes a recoverable asset that reduces operating costs, lowers carbon footprints, and creates new revenue streams. As AI workloads drive rack densities higher and energy regulations tighten globally, investing in heat recovery is not merely an optimization鈥攊t is becoming a strategic imperative for competitive and sustainable digital infrastructure. Organizations that act now will secure lasting advantages in efficiency, resilience, and environmental responsibility.