Innovative system recovers heat, water and material from industrial waste streams

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The first innovative Heat Pipe Condensing Economiser (HPCE) has been commissioned and is running at our project partner Alufluor AB in Sweden. The aluminium fluoride producer is now heating all their washing water with recycled energy!

“Until now, viable indirect condensing economisers from exhaust streams were not available”, explains inventor and iWAYS technical director Prof. Hussam Jouhara from Brunel University London. “What we have demonstrated now is that it is doable to recover heat, water and material using existing materials and knowledge.”

The launch of the iWAYS system at Alufluor is a major milestone for all participants. “In the chemical process industry, everyone works hard to achieve energy savings”, says Hanna Sjöberg, CEO of Alufluor. “And while the small, incremental improvements in energy efficiency we normally see are valuable, there are rare moments when disruptive innovation leads to a substantial breakthrough. This is one of those moments for us.”

The journey to this achievement has been marked by extensive engineering efforts and significant investments. “We have been working with this for more than three years now, and during that time, we have done a lot of engineering,” says Dan Turesson, Technical Director at Alufluor. “We have invested a lot in rearranging our facilities to handle the energy recovery, reinforcing our rooftop to support the HPCE, and installing hundreds of meters of new pipelines throughout our plant.”

Prof. Hussam Jouhara from Brunel University London together with Dan Turesson and Klas Bengtsson from Alulfuor AB in front of the Heat Pipe Condensing Economise

These efforts will pay off now. “The unit has been in operation since the 1st of August, with an average capacity of 650kW from the company’s exhaust stream,” says Prof. Jouhara. “With the HPCE we will be able to recover a significant portion of the energy from the stack and reuse it in the process.”

But is this technology also applicable to other industries? “The heat pipes allow safer operation, multiple contingency, modular design, and flexible geometry. You can apply the same thing to any other industry”, explains Prof. Jouhara. “But the heavily regulated chemical industry in particular will benefit the most, I believe.”