Hygienic valves from GEA are the key component as the core of fixed-pipe process plants. With a flexible valve concept and advanced control and automation functions, our valves offer the manufacturer maximum product safety and process reliability. All GEA hygienic valves are efficiently and economically designed for the respective application and enable sustainable operation with considerable savings potential. Complementary components in our program optimize the process plant - from pigging systems for recovering valuable products, process connections and compact expansion compensators for compensating thermal stresses to tank safety systems for securing and cleaning tanks and vessels. We regularly launch sophisticated product innovations on the market, supported by our research and development department. The market makes high demands, we meet them consistently and continuously.
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Equipped with a high-precision path measuring system, the T.VIS® A-15 offers automatic open/close position recognition on any valve, which can be equipped with a T.VIS® control top.
The T.VIS E-20 is the perfect control top to be used in explosive gas and dust atmospheres.
The control top GEA T.VIS® M-20 offers the entire range of modern control functions required in the majority of application points, plus additional advantages in terms of automated valve commissioning and efficient equipment management.
The T.VIS® P-15 is a compact position controller for pneumatic process valves. The position is detected by a position sensor and adjusted by two integrated solenoid valves.
GEA Valve process matrix
GEA VARIVENT® Divert valves - Product merging and distribution
GEA VARIVENT® Mixproof valve type D
Resource-efficient fashion has been a long-sought ambition amid the fashion industry’s considerable contributions to global carbon emissions. The need to close the loop by recycling textile fibers into virgin-like materials is higher than ever but seemed like a distant dream until now: Circ, GEA’s American customer and pioneer in the field of textile recycling, might be rewriting the future of the fashion industry.
Alternative proteins are promising – yet still expensive to produce. The usual response is that scaling up will solve this issue. But what if the solution was really about getting better, not just bigger? From more efficient, high-yield processes to upcycling waste heat, engineers are reshaping how we grow food.
As anti-cancer drugs become more powerful and complex, GEA is redefining how to safely freeze-dry these life-saving treatments.