Coil for temperature control in wine tank

COIL FOR TEMPERATURE CONTROL IN WINE TANK OPTIMIZATION OF TEMPERATURE CONTROL IN CULTIVATION TANKS One of the largest sparkling wine producers has implemented a temperature control system for 23 cultivation tanks with a total capacity of 142,000 liters, aiming to ensure optimal fermentation and maintain the quality of the final product. This project has focused on processes taking place in the so-called yeast farms, two rooms where fermentation occurs over five days at a strict temperature range of 18 to 20 ºC. Composition and process conditions The fluid present in the tanks consists of wine solution, tirage liqueur (a sugar-rich syrup), and yeast. This combination is essential for fermentation, as the yeast converts the sugars in the liqueur into alcohol and carbon dioxide, producing the characteristic foam of sparkling wine. Maintaining the fluid temperature within the specified range is crucial for ensuring controlled, high-quality fermentation. Heat exchanger system with internal coils To achieve this thermal control, heat exchanger coils have been introduced inside the tanks. These coils, made of AISI 316 stainless steel with electropolishing, provide excellent corrosion resistance and ensure maximum hygiene, two essential factors in sparkling wine production. The coils are certified under the MOCA (Materials in Contact with Food) standard, ensuring the materials used meet food safety requirements. CLAMP no need All system components have been custom-designed to perfectly fit the tanks’ characteristics and the client’s needs. A design eliminating the need for CLAMP connections was chosen, reducing the risk of leaks and simplifying system cleaning and maintenance. This tailored approach has also maximized heat exchange efficiency and optimized temperature control throughout the fermentation process. Wine tank heat exchanger coil benefits Implementing this system has provided numerous operational advantages: Thermal Stability: Maintaining a constant temperature within the specified range has been key to ensuring homogeneous, high-quality fermentation. Energy Efficiency: Electropolished stainless steel coils offer optimal thermal conductivity, reducing the energy consumption needed to maintain the proper temperature. Food Safety: Compliance with MOCA standards ensures the quality and safety of the final product. Reduced Maintenance: The absence of CLAMP connections simplifies maintenance and minimizes potential technical issues. BOIXAC, HEAT EXCHANGE SOLUTIONS This project is an excellent example of innovation applied to the wine industry, where precise control of fermentation conditions makes a significant difference in the quality of the sparkling wine produced. Implementing custom systems and high-quality materials ensures not only process improvement but also greater efficiency and sustainability throughout the production chain. Contact us Heat exchange solutions for the food and beverage industry Water coil Water coil that is often used to condition the environment of greenhouses and breeding farms, improving animal welfare. Energy economizer Energy economizer or heat recovery system that allows the reuse of excess energy, for example, from biomass boilers. Finned heat exchanger Finned tube heat exchanger, a temperature control system that optimizes durability even in environments with certain contamination factors.

Economizer for greenhouses

ECONOMIZER FOR GREENHOUSES GREENHOUSES AND FARMS An economizer for greenhouses or farms refers to the heat recovery system designed to improve efficiency in an environment where, among other things, crop performance is optimized by controlling temperature, ambient humidity, and CO₂. Within the wide range of implementations, we highlight three main areas: 1. The first block refers to water treatment for the hydroponic growth of tomatoes, lettuces, peppers, strawberries, etc. Hydroponic cultivation allows plants to grow faster and more vigorously thanks to direct access to nutrients. These nutrients are dissolved in a water flow that is distributed to the plants through channels. For proper nutrient absorption, it is important to maintain the water within certain temperature ranges, which is achieved thanks to our finned tubes. This heat exchange system can use spiral fins or continuous fins following the same direction as the tubes, maintaining a homogeneous temperature and optimizing both plant growth and quality. 2. The second block is air treatment through overhead ducts, where BOIXAC provides the finned heat exchangers that condition the air in the greenhouse or breeding farm. These exchangers can include various accessories such as fans, humidity controls, and temperature controls. 3. The third block refers to the technology that enriches the environment, thus increasing photosynthetic activity. We achieve this by reusing the excess energy from exhaust gases through the ECO, AIRY, or GASY heat recovery systems. These thermal exchange units are selected based on primary and secondary fluids; in addition, the materials are also chosen according to the specific needs of each installation. Custom solutions for energy optimization in greenhouses and farms. Heat recovery systems for greenhouses and farms Water coil Water coil that is often used to condition the environment of greenhouses and breeding farms, improving animal welfare. Energy economizer Energy economizer or heat recovery system that allows the reuse of excess energy, for example, from biomass boilers. Finned heat exchanger Finned tube heat exchanger, a temperature control system that optimizes durability even in environments with certain contamination factors.

Industrial economizer

Industrial economiser: operation, applications and selection criteria | BOIXAC Technical guide › Energy recovery Industrial economiser: operating principle, applications and selection criteria The economiser is the component that converts the residual heat from boiler exhaust gases into a measurable reduction in fuel consumption. This guide analyses its operation, constructive types, main industrial applications and the technical parameters that determine its selection. BOIXAC Tech SLGuia tècnica industrialLectura: ~9 min Table of contents 1. Definition and function of the industrial economiser 2. Operating principle in an industrial boiler 2.1 Energy flow and positioning 2.2 Heated fluids: water, steam and thermal oil 3. Constructive types of economisers 4. Quantified energy and economic benefits 5. Main industrial applications 6. Selection and design parameters In an industrial boiler, between 10% and 20% of the fuel energy burned is lost as sensible heat in the exhaust gases discharged to atmosphere. The economiser is the device that recovers this energy and transfers it to the boiler feedwater, reducing fuel consumption without modifying the main process. 1. Definition and function of the industrial economiser An industrial economiser is a gas-liquid heat exchanger installed at the outlet of combustion gases from an industrial boiler or furnace. Its function is to transfer the residual enthalpy of these gases to the boiler feedwater, preheating it before it enters the boiler body. The term economiser derives directly from its function: to save fuel. By preheating the feedwater, the energy the boiler must supply to reach the vaporisation or working temperature is reduced, translating directly into lower natural gas, diesel or biomass consumption. 10–20%Energy lost in flue gases without economiser3–8%Typical fuel consumption reduction~1%Saving per 6 °C feedwater temperature rise1–3 yearsTypical payback period 2. Operating principle in an industrial boiler 2.1 Energy flow and positioning In a conventional industrial boiler, gases leave the boiler at temperatures typically between 200 °C and 450 °C. The economiser is installed precisely at this point — at the boiler gas outlet and before the stack — to extract residual enthalpy from these gases and transfer it to the feedwater. Gas inlet200–450 °C→EconomiserGas → liquid heat transfer→Gas outlet120–200 °C↕Water inlet40–80 °C→Preheated water130–220 °C to boiler Lower limit: acid dew point temperature The gas temperature at economiser outlet cannot be reduced indefinitely. In sulphur-containing fuels (diesel, heavy fuel oil, some industrial gases), the minimum temperature is set by the acid dew point temperature (typically 120–150 °C), below which condensed sulphurous acid attacks the metal surfaces of the economiser. For clean natural gas, this limit falls to approximately 55–65 °C. 2.2 Heated fluids: water, steam and thermal oil Although the classic function of the economiser is feedwater preheating, in industrial environments the recovered heat can be transferred to other process fluids: Boiler feedwaterClassic application. Water is preheated from the 40–80 °C typical at deaerator outlet to 130–220 °C, reducing the energy the boiler must supply to generate steam.High-pressure superheated waterIn high-temperature circuits for industrial heating processes, the economiser preheats the high-pressure circuit return water.Thermal oilIn thermal fluid boilers (Therminol, Dowtherm, Marlotherm), the economiser preheats the circuit return oil, reducing consumption by 5–12%.Combustion air (APH)In air pre-heater configuration, exhaust gases heat the combustion air before the burner, improving combustion efficiency and reducing NOₓ emissions. Industrial boiler economiser. Gas-liquid heat exchanger with helical finned tubes, designed to operate in combustion flue gases with inlet temperatures of 250–420 °C. 3. Constructive types of economisers The internal construction of the economiser determines its behaviour against combustion gases and its suitability for each application. Main typeHelical finned tubes Each tube carries a sheet metal fin wound helically. The helical geometry provides greater mechanical robustness and resistance to vibrations induced by combustion gas pulsations. The pitch between turns can be adjusted to accommodate particle-laden gases (fly ash, soot). Preferred application: natural gas, diesel, heavy fuel oil, biomass and industrial waste boilers. Environments with suspended particles in the gases. Compact alternativeContinuous finned tubes Flat perforated sheets through which tubes pass perpendicularly. Allow a higher surface density per unit volume, resulting in more compact equipment for the same recovery duty. Require gases without significant particle content to prevent inter-fin blockage. Preferred application: natural gas boilers in clean environments or with prior gas filtration. Installations where dimensional constraints are critical. BOIXAC gas-liquid heat exchangersCustom-designed and manufactured heat recuperators and economisers for industrial boilers, furnaces and combustion processes. View heat recuperators → 4. Quantified energy and economic benefits Installing a correctly sized economiser in an industrial boiler produces measurable and verifiable improvements in the overall performance of the installation. ⚡Reduction in fuel consumption The standard industry rule of thumb states that for every 6 °C rise in feedwater temperature, boiler fuel consumption decreases by approximately 1%. An economiser that raises the temperature by 60 °C can represent savings of 8–10% of fuel costs. 🌿Reduction in CO₂ emissions Lower fuel consumption translates directly into fewer CO₂ and NOₓ emissions per unit of useful energy produced. In facilities subject to emissions trading (EU ETS), the economiser is one of the interventions with the best investment ratio per tonne of CO₂ saved. 🔩Reduced thermal stress on the boiler Preheated feedwater reduces thermal shock at the boiler inlet, decreasing temperature gradients across the shell and tubes. Contributes to extending boiler service life and reducing preventive maintenance frequency. 💶Typical payback of 1 to 3 years In continuously operated industrial boiler installations (>4,000 h/year), return on investment is typically achieved within 12 to 36 months, depending on fuel price, boiler output and the recoverable temperature differential. 5. Main industrial applications The industrial economiser finds application in any process where a boiler or furnace generates residual combustion gases at a temperature sufficient to make heat recovery economically viable. Food and beverage industrySteam boilers for cooking, sterilisation, pasteurisation and drying processes. The economiser preheats the boiler feedwater, reducing energy consumption in the production process.Chemical and pharmaceutical industryThermal fluid boilers for reactors, distillers and dryers. The economiser preheats the circuit return oil, improving cycle efficiency and reducing natural gas consumption.Paper and textile industryLarge steam boilers for continuous drying processes. … Read more

Industrial heat recovery

INDUSTRIAL HEAT RECOVERY THE GREENEST, OPTIMAL AND SUSTAINABLE ENERGY BOIXAC had the honor of being invited and participate in the podcast Con G de Geo, which aims to bring engineering closer analyzing concepts such as industrial heat recovery, sustainability, through renewable energies, energy optimization and the efficient use of our resources. You can read the trasncription of our contribution below and we encourage you to listen to us through the following link. “In December 2019, the European Green Deal was approved, which aims to achieve climate neutrality by 2050. To do this, a scale was made with the different actions to be carried out and, one of the steps on which we will stop and we will analyze if we have done our job is in 2030. In addition to aspects such as recovering biodiversity, improving animal welfare or promoting sustainable forest management, there are three aspects that directly influence the field of energy: – Establish a minimum share of renewable energies of 40%. – Improve energy efficiency by 36-39%. – Reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 55%. All these aspects are important to find a solution to the climate emergency but, at BOIXAC, we understand that if the world population continues to increase, for example, only in Spain an increase of 2% in the next 15 years is prevented, beyond the use of renewable energies, sustainability goes through the change in consumption habits and the optimization of our resources. In this sense, considering that the Spanish industry consumes about 31% of total energy, its modernization and optimization is one of the keys to our future. When we go along the highway, as far as the eye can see, we see factories that need energy for their processes, for instance to heat wastewater and facilitate the biological digestion of sludge, dry cement for its correct conservation, increase CO2 in greenhouses to increase the rate of photosynthesis, cool foods such as chocolate for modeling, etc. All processes that need to heat or cool require energy, and energy maintains a balance. In fact, heat is the transfer of energy from an area of high temperature to another area of lower temperature. If, for example, we look at what happens in our homes when we turn on the air conditioning, we will see this balance. While the indoor unit blows out cool air, the outdoor unit blows out excess heat. Starting from this energy balance, we see that a certain renewal of the indoor air is needed to maintain its quality. For this renewal we take the outside air and cool or heat it depending on each need. At the same time that we introduce the new air, we must expel the excess air from the interior so that the new one can fit and this is where we come in with heat recovery. If we make a leap from our homes to the industry and imagine, for example, that the outside air is at 20ºC and we want to heat it so that it reaches 80ºC inside, for example, in a dryer where we need to extract moisture . Here we apparently need equipment that is capable of increasing the air temperature by 60ºC, from 20 to 80ºC. However, there is another option that is smarter, cheaper and more sustainable. When we take this air from the outside at 20ºC and we want to heat it to introduce it into a room, the same flow of air that was inside at 80ºC will be expelled. By means of a heat recovery system we make these two air flows cross each other without mixing through a system known as cross flows. We do not mix these flows in order to maintain the quality of the previously filtered air, but we do extract the heat from the outgoing air flow and transfer it to the incoming air flow. With this system we achieve two objectives; 1. The cold air that we are introducing will rise in temperature, so that the equipment we use to heat it, often boilers, will be able to work more relaxed, consuming less energy and, therefore, saving and being more sustainable. 2. The hot air that we are expelling will significantly lower its temperature, resembling the ambient temperature and, therefore, we will be even more sustainable. The technology of heat recovery units may change depending on the application and the manufacturer, but, as we have seen, it is based on perfecting the filters to offer correct air quality, and the fans to obtain air circulation. the lower electricity consumption and the energy recuperators that are the heart that allow the magic of heat exchange. Here you can add other added values such as control or isolation. In our particular case, from BOIXAC, we specialize in industrial heat exchangers and, just as it is important to work to improve ventilation and filtering techniques, exchangers also progress to offer solutions resistant to corrosive environments, high pressures and temperatures. up to 950ºC, with flattened tubes to reduce pressure losses and compact constructions that currently reach efficiency levels of over 80%. In the industrial field, applications have many singularities such as fluids, viscosities, pressures, temperatures, materials, fouling coefficients, etc. That is why each project is studied in detail to optimize its construction and thus achieve the objectives of energy efficiency, sustainability and savings necessary for industrial progress.”