16 kg Heat-Regenerated Adsorption Dryer
Heatless regenerative adsorption compressed air dryers utilize the unique microporous structure of desiccant materials to adsorb water molecules from the air via capillary action, while simultaneously removing the adsorbed moisture through pressure-relief desorption and the utilization of residual heat from the adsorption process. Typically designed with a twin-tower configuration, the unit operates with the two towers alternating under the control of a top-mounted controller: one tower adsorbs moisture while the other undergoes desorption and regeneration, ensuring continuous, cyclical operation.
Heatless:
Heatless regenerative adsorption dryers rely on the desiccant's inherent capillary action to adsorb moisture from the air. Designed with a dual-tower configuration, one tower performs adsorption while the other undergoes regeneration using low-pressure air.
Heated (Low-Heat):
The operating principle is essentially the same. Heated adsorption dryers incorporate a heating device prior to the regeneration tower and include a "cold blow" step in the regeneration sequence. While energy costs for smaller units differ little between heatless and heated models, large-scale heated units offer lower overall energy consumption.

