Difference between revisions of "Crystallisation and precipitation"

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===Company name===
===TECHNOFORCE<sup>TM</sup>===
{{Infobox provider-crystallisation and precipitation}}
{{Infobox provider-crystallisation and precipitation|Company=TECHNOFORCE|Image=TECHNOFORCE logo.png|Contact=sales@technoforce.net|Country=The Netherlands, India, Germany|Webpage=https://www.technoforce.net|TRL=9|Technology name=Plug Flow Crystallisation, Continuous Crystallisation}}
The description of the company goes here.
 
'''Technoforce''' was started in 1990 to manufacture distillation and drying equipment based on Thin Film Technology. Other technologies like Extraction, Crystallization and Zero Liquid Discharge plants for industrial wastewater were added in later years. About 140 people are working in India and Europe in R&D, pilot plant testing, design and manufacturing.
 
Through in-house investments and cooperation with universities, Technoforce has developed synergistically relevant technologies. Thus, the customers can avail several process steps from a single source.
 
Having modern manufacturing facilities with robots and CNC machines in India and pilot plant facilities in India and The Netherlands, Technoforce has uniquely positioned itself to provide competitive solutions. We work very closely with the customers to assist in feasibility studies and tests in the pilot plants for process optimization.


== Open access pilot and demo facility providers ==
== Open access pilot and demo facility providers ==

Revision as of 15:55, 29 November 2022

Technology
21-04-27 Tech4Biowaste rect-p.png
Technology details
Name: Crystallisation and precipitation
Category: Pre-processing (Separation technologies), Post-processing (Separation technologies)
Feedstock: Solution with crystallisable ingredients
Product:
Picture showing a mound of salt crystals at the Great Salt Lake in Utah, USA
Salt crystals at Great Salt Lake, Utah, USA

Crystallisation is the formation of crystals from a solution. In a crystal, the atoms or molecules are highly organised into a solid repetitive structure. "A solution is a mixture of two or more species that form a homogenous single phase. Solutions are normally thought of in terms of liquids, however, solutions may include solids suspension. Typically, the term solution has come to mean a liquid solution consisting a solvent, which is a liquid, and a solute, which is a solid, at the conditions of interest. The solution to be ready for crystallization must be supersaturated."[1]

A simple example for crystallisation is the evaporation of the solvent. For example, the salinity of the Great Salt Lake in Utah, USA, is so high that through the evaporation of water salt crystals cover its shores. Some other ways in which crystals form are precipitating from a solution, freezing, or more rarely deposition directly from a gas. Attributes of the resulting crystal depend largely on factors such as temperature, air pressure, and in the case of liquid crystals, time of fluid evaporation.

Feedstock

Graphic showing NaCl (table salt) crystal consisting of sodium and chlorine atoms
NaCl (table salt) crystal consisting of sodium and chlorine atoms

Origin and composition

The feedstock for crystallisation is a solution with crystallisable ingredients, e.g. minerals or organic molecules. The majority of minerals and organic molecules crystallise easily, and the resulting crystals are generally of good quality, i.e. without visible defects. However, larger biochemical particles, like proteins, are often difficult to crystallise. The ease with which molecules will crystallise strongly depends on the intensity of either atomic forces (in the case of mineral substances), intermolecular forces (organic and biochemical substances) or intramolecular forces (biochemical substances).

Pre-treatment

Process and technologies

Crystallisation occurs in three major steps. The first is nucleation, the appearance of a crystalline phase from either a supercooled liquid or a supersaturated solvent. The second step is known as crystal growth, which is the increase in the size of particles and leads to a crystal state. An important feature of this step is that loose particles form layers at the crystal's surface and lodge themselves into open inconsistencies such as pores, cracks, etc.

Crystallisation is also a chemical solid–liquid separation technique, in which mass transfer of a solute from the liquid solution to a pure solid crystalline phase occurs. In chemical engineering, crystallisation occurs in a crystalliser. Crystallisation is therefore related to precipitation, although the result is not amorphous or disordered, but a crystal.

Products

Post-treatment

Technology providers

Technology comparison
Company name Country Technology category Technology name TRL Capacity [kg/h] Processable volume [L] Feedstock: Food waste Feedstock: Garden & park waste
Company 1 [Country HQ location] [Technology category (if different sub-categories are defined this has to be specified here, the available categories can be found on each technology page under the chapter Process and technologies)] [Technology name (the "branded name" or the usual naming from company side)] [4-9] [numeric value]
Company 2 [Country HQ location] [(if different sub-categories are defined this has to be specified here, the available categories can be found on each technology page under the chapter Process and technologies)] [Technology name (the "branded name" or the usual naming from company side)] [4-9] [numeric value]

TECHNOFORCETM

Crystallisation and precipitation provider
General information
Company: TECHNOFORCE TECHNOFORCE logo.png
Country: The Netherlands, India, Germany
Contact: sales@technoforce.net
Webpage: https://www.technoforce.net
Technology and process details
Technology name: Plug Flow Crystallisation, Continuous Crystallisation Technology category: Pre-processing (Separation technologies), Post-processing (Separation technologies)
TRL: 9 Capacity: kg·h-1
Agitator: Processable volume: L
Reactor: Reactor material:
Separation type: Other:
Feedstock and product details
Feedstock: Product:

Technoforce was started in 1990 to manufacture distillation and drying equipment based on Thin Film Technology. Other technologies like Extraction, Crystallization and Zero Liquid Discharge plants for industrial wastewater were added in later years. About 140 people are working in India and Europe in R&D, pilot plant testing, design and manufacturing.

Through in-house investments and cooperation with universities, Technoforce has developed synergistically relevant technologies. Thus, the customers can avail several process steps from a single source.

Having modern manufacturing facilities with robots and CNC machines in India and pilot plant facilities in India and The Netherlands, Technoforce has uniquely positioned itself to provide competitive solutions. We work very closely with the customers to assist in feasibility studies and tests in the pilot plants for process optimization.

Open access pilot and demo facility providers

Pilots4U Database

Patents

Currently no patents have been identified.

References

  1. Sattar Al-Jibbouri "Effects of Additives in Solution Crystallization", 2002, https://sundoc.bibliothek.uni-halle.de/diss-online/02/03H046/prom.pdf