1997
DOI: 10.1016/s1359-4311(97)00042-2
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Feasibility of energy efficient steam drying of paper and textile including process integration

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Cited by 33 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Different industries have different mechanisms for drying wet textiles. Most of them have heated cylinders from which a textile web is passed [14]. The cylinder is heated from inside by any heat source such as steam from boiler or hot air heated from heat pump.…”
Section: System Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Different industries have different mechanisms for drying wet textiles. Most of them have heated cylinders from which a textile web is passed [14]. The cylinder is heated from inside by any heat source such as steam from boiler or hot air heated from heat pump.…”
Section: System Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A second system used mechanical vapor recompression in a pilot facility to reuse superheated steam into the drying process (Van Deventer 1997). Steam savings for this approach were up to 4.7 MMBtu/ton (50%) with additional electricity consumption of 160 kWh/ton (Van Deventer 1997). A third system noted in the literature was the use of heat pump systems to recover waste heat in the drying section (Abrahamson et al 1997).…”
Section: D4 Energy Efficiency Measures For Papermakingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Electricity requirements in the exhaust fan are also reduced optimizing drying efficiency ([CADDET], 1994;Elaahi & Lowitt, 1988). Another promising system further upgrades this waste heat by means of heat pumps and mechanical vapor recompression (MVR) (Abrahamsson et al, 1997;van Deventer, 1997). A different technology approach, which involves the heating provided to the cylinders, is to use stationary siphons to better extract the exhausted steam from the cylinders (Morris, 1998).…”
Section: Condensing Belt Drying (Paper-2)mentioning
confidence: 99%