Our fully customizable and highly reliable spray dryers deliver quality powders that enable you to meet your customers’ needs today and tomorrow.
GEA spray drying solutions range from basic units to very sophisticated plants for complex processes, which are all designed to conform to the highest industry standards for hygiene, energy efficiency, safety and plant performance.
Our solutions exploit plant-wide control and automation software to monitor process parameter, and make any necessary adjustment. This level of control helps to ensure process repeatability and product consistency.
Showing 4 of 9
Cost effective single-stage dryer that can be upgraded to let you create a wide range of powders for industries as diverse chemicals and food ingredients
For decades, spray drying has been applied for powder production by the pharmaceutical industry – also under aseptic conditions. The ASEPTIC-SD® Spray Dryer is perfect for the production of sterile pharmaceutical products such as vaccines, antibiotics and other products requiring aseptic conditions.
The COMPACT DRYER is the perfect choice whether it is a matter of whey powder or dense milk-powder production.
The FILTERMAT® spray dryer efficiently and gently transforms heat-sensitive and difficult-to-dry products into free-flowing, agglomerated powders.
Inadequate maintenance can lead to safety risks, lower product quality, costly repairs, and reduced equipment life. GEA Health Check Spray Dryer offers a thorough inspection and tailored service report to help you proactively maintain uptime, quality, and longevity.
The innovative process diagnostic and consultant service.
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.