In the petrochemical and fine chemical sectors, production processes often generate large volumes of exhaust with low concentrations of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)
The zeolite rotor operates through continuous adsorption and desorption cycles. Its core substrate consists of hydrophobic zeolite molecular sieves, which selectively capture organic molecules from the exhaust stream
Adsorption Zone: Large volumes of low-concentration VOC exhaust pass through the rotating honeycomb channels of the zeolite, where pollutants are adsorbed, and purified gas is discharged directly
Desorption Zone: A small volume of high-temperature air (typically 180°C–200°C) back-flushes a section of the rotor to desorb the captured VOCs
Concentration Ratio: By adjusting the ratio of intake air to desorption air, a concentration ratio of 5–20 times is typically achieved. This converts the exhaust into a high-concentration, low-flow state, drastically reducing the energy consumption of downstream oxidation equipment
Petrochemical exhaust compositions are complex, demanding high "stability" from abatement equipment. Zeolite rotors ensure long-term reliability through several technical features:
Thermal Stability and Safety: Unlike activated carbon, zeolite molecular sieves possess excellent non-flammability and heat resistance, withstanding frequent high-temperature desorption without deactivation
Hydrophobic Performance: Using hydrophobic zeolite materials ensures the system maintains priority adsorption of VOC molecules even in the high-humidity environments common in petrochemical plants
Continuous Operational Consistency: The low-speed continuous rotation design ensures minimal fluctuation in purification efficiency, effectively handling variations in production line loads
When selecting a VOC Zeolite Rotor for procurement or engineering design, focus on these parameters to verify high performance
Concentration Efficiency: Verify that the purification efficiency remains stable at over 90% under specific flow rates.
Zeolite Material Matching: Specific zeolite pore sizes must be matched to chemical compositions (such as alkanes, aromatics, or alcohols), requiring specialized validation for processes involving Isopropanol or Alcohol catalysts
Downstream Integration: The concentrated high-concentration gas should be precisely matched with subsequent VOC Catalyst or thermal oxidation systems to achieve energy-self-sufficient operation
In the petrochemical and fine chemical sectors, production processes often generate large volumes of exhaust with low concentrations of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)
The zeolite rotor operates through continuous adsorption and desorption cycles. Its core substrate consists of hydrophobic zeolite molecular sieves, which selectively capture organic molecules from the exhaust stream
Adsorption Zone: Large volumes of low-concentration VOC exhaust pass through the rotating honeycomb channels of the zeolite, where pollutants are adsorbed, and purified gas is discharged directly
Desorption Zone: A small volume of high-temperature air (typically 180°C–200°C) back-flushes a section of the rotor to desorb the captured VOCs
Concentration Ratio: By adjusting the ratio of intake air to desorption air, a concentration ratio of 5–20 times is typically achieved. This converts the exhaust into a high-concentration, low-flow state, drastically reducing the energy consumption of downstream oxidation equipment
Petrochemical exhaust compositions are complex, demanding high "stability" from abatement equipment. Zeolite rotors ensure long-term reliability through several technical features:
Thermal Stability and Safety: Unlike activated carbon, zeolite molecular sieves possess excellent non-flammability and heat resistance, withstanding frequent high-temperature desorption without deactivation
Hydrophobic Performance: Using hydrophobic zeolite materials ensures the system maintains priority adsorption of VOC molecules even in the high-humidity environments common in petrochemical plants
Continuous Operational Consistency: The low-speed continuous rotation design ensures minimal fluctuation in purification efficiency, effectively handling variations in production line loads
When selecting a VOC Zeolite Rotor for procurement or engineering design, focus on these parameters to verify high performance
Concentration Efficiency: Verify that the purification efficiency remains stable at over 90% under specific flow rates.
Zeolite Material Matching: Specific zeolite pore sizes must be matched to chemical compositions (such as alkanes, aromatics, or alcohols), requiring specialized validation for processes involving Isopropanol or Alcohol catalysts
Downstream Integration: The concentrated high-concentration gas should be precisely matched with subsequent VOC Catalyst or thermal oxidation systems to achieve energy-self-sufficient operation