Slow rotating cleaners use targeted flat or round jets to project the cleaning solution onto the vessel walls. These units operate at higher liquid pressures than traditional free rotating units but, because of their design, maintain controlled rotation speeds. This enables these devices to impact greater cleaning forces onto the vessel walls than the free rotating units. As the rotation is kept under control, the spray jets have an increased dwell time, providing even more cleaning power. The slow rotating units from GEA are an efficient and cost-effective solution for stubborn and difficult to clean vessels in numerous industries.
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The rotating jet cleaner Type 2E is built for hanging in tanks in numerous industries. Whereas the Type 2B is suitable for mobile cleaning because it is placed on a trestle. Both cleaners ensure a professional cleaning result by being built robust and deliver various possible spray patterns.
The Slow Rotating Cleaner Sanitor is ideally suited for applications where a compact, low flow and high sanitary unit is required. The omission of bearings greatly increases the unit life and prohibits any contamination issues associated with bearing degradation.
The Slow Rotating Cleaner Troll Ball with their effective drive mechanism and the slow constant rotation speed ensure a consistent cleaning result with a very low maintenance.
The Slow Rotating Cleaner Turbo SSB is the new generation of rotating and mobile jet cleaners with the slotted spray ball format where the ball bearings are removed, and the rotation speed is slowed down.
The impact of global warming is increasingly apparent all over the world. Towns and cities everywhere face the same challenge: providing their communities with reliable, affordable, sustainably sourced heat. GEA spoke with an expert in the field, Kenneth Hoffmann, Manager, Heat Pumps at GEA Heating & Refrigeration Technologies, about tackling global warming faster.
Something caught Farmer Tom's eye. Instead of another product demo, GEA showcased innovations via AR. That's only the start of GEA's interactive digital farm.
GEA scientists are working with researchers at the Graz University of Technology to configure a homogenization process and technology that turns eucalyptus pulp into 3D-printed, organic structures mimicking human veins, arteries and other tissues.