Screw Heat Exchanger

Using advanced hollow-flight technology, screw heat exchangers provide effective cooling, heating, crystallizing, drying, or tempering of bulk materials with minimal energy consumption and superior thermal performance.

A Complete Guide to Screw Heat Exchangers Using Hollow-Flight Technology

Efficient temperature control is essential in many industrial processes, especially in handling bulk solids such as powders, granules, crystals, flakes, and pastes. Traditional heat exchangers often struggle with materials that are abrasive, sticky, fragile, or thermally sensitive.
This is where screw heat exchangers – also known as cooling screws or heating screws – offer a highly efficient and continuous solution.

Using advanced hollow-flight technology, screw heat exchangers provide effective cooling, heating, crystallizing, drying, or tempering of bulk materials with minimal energy consumption and superior thermal performance.

 

What Is a Screw Heat Exchanger?

A screw heat exchanger is a continuous thermal processor that uses a rotating screw conveyor with hollow flights and/or a jacketed trough to transfer heat directly to bulk solids.
Instead of relying on air or direct contact heating, the system circulates a heat transfer medium – such as water, thermal oil, or steam – through the hollow flights and hollow shaft, ensuring a very large heat exchange surface in a compact footprint.

These systems operate gently, avoiding product degradation while maintaining a stable and controlled temperature profile throughout the process.

 

Hollow-Flight Technology: How It Works

Hollow-flight (hollow-screw) technology is the core innovation in screw heat exchangers:

  • The screw flights are fabricated as hollow chambers.
  • A heat-transfer medium flows through the center shaft and into the hollow flights.
  • Heat is transferred efficiently from the internal surface of the screw to the moving product.
  • The product is conveyed gradually, allowing uniform exposure to the thermal surface.

Key Benefits of Hollow-Flight Technology

  • Extremely high heat-transfer efficiency
  • Low energy consumption
  • Compact design with large thermal surface area
  • No direct contact between heat source and product
  • Gentle material handling with minimal dust or breakage
  • Ability to process abrasive, sticky, or thermally sensitive materials

 

Cooling Screw Conveyor

Purpose

Cooling screws are designed to reduce the temperature of bulk solids as they move through the screw conveyor. They are commonly used downstream of reactors, dryers, calciners, kilns, or other high-temperature processes.

Cooling Media

  • Water
  • Glycol
  • Cooling tower water
  • Chilled water

Typical Applications

  • Chemical powders after reaction
  • Plastic pellets and resins
  • Minerals, sand, cement, ash, lime
  • Food ingredients (sugar, starch, cereals)
  • Metal powders
  • Fertilizers and urea

Advantages

  • Rapid, controlled cooling with no air emissions
  • Dust-free operation
  • High cooling capacity in limited space
  • Ideal for heat-sensitive materials

 

Heating Screw Conveyor

Purpose

Heating screws elevate the temperature of bulk solids for processes such as drying, melting, conditioning, or thermal decomposition.

Heating Media

  • Steam
  • Thermal oil
  • Hot water

Typical Applications

  • Pre-heating powders before reaction
  • Melting fats, waxes, or organic materials
  • Conditioning minerals or chemicals
  • Drying or evaporating moisture from solids

Advantages

  • Even heat distribution without hot spots
  • Gentle handling prevents product degradation
  • High energy efficiency
  • Precise temperature control

 

Where Screw Heat Exchangers Are Used

Screw heat exchangers serve a wide range of industries:

  • Chemical: pigments, catalysts, resins, polymers
  • Petrochemical: polymers, plastics, refinery residues
  • Mining & Minerals: sand, limestone, cement, fly ash
  • Food: sugar, starch, grains, cocoa
  • Metals: metal powders, slag, foundry sand
  • Waste Management: sludge drying, waste heat recovery