The natural attraction between
hygroscopic resins and water molecules causes
them to take up and retain water as soon as
they are exposed to humid ambient air. Mild
to moderately hygroscopic materials include
ABS, acetal, acrylic, polycarbonate, PBT, LCP,
and some TPOs, TPEs, and TPUs. The most strongly
hygroscopic and difficult-to-dry materials are
bottle-grade PET and nylon. ETP requires to
be in a dry state before usage, but being sensitive
to moisture, it picks up moisture easily. ETP
is required to be in bone dry state, failing
which surface blemishes appear and mechanical
properties get adversely affected. It should
not have more than few PPMS of moisture at the
time of processing, making a dryer essential
while processing ETP. Commodity polymers are
not sensitive to moisture and do not usually
call for drying.
There are essentially five different types
of dryers, few of which have sub types:
Hot-air dryers have long been the natural choice
for resins that have no affinity to moisture,
essentially consisting of a blower, a heater
and a temperature control. They are the oldest,
simplest and least costly dryers and use heated
ambient air to pull moisture away from the resin.
Non-hygroscopic resins such as polyolefins,
polystyrene and PVC pick up only surface moisture
from condensation when exposed to high humidity
and changing temperatures, which is easily removed
by a stream of heated ambient air. They remove
surface moisture from non-hygroscopic resins
and preheat resin prior to moulding and may
also be suitable for drying some mildly hygroscopic
resins. They can be used for several months
of the year for some mildly hygroscopic materials
such as certain TPEs, polyolefins whose additives
don't retain moisture and even ABS for non-critical
applications.
Desiccant dryers account for at least 80% of
those in use and are available in three basic
styles: twin-tower and carousel designs with
two or more desiccant beds, or models with rotating
"honeycomb" wheel desiccants. Desiccant
dryers can achieve -40 degree F dewpoint, considered
adequate for drying any hygroscopic resin. Drying
residence time is typically 1 to 4 hr, depending
on the type of resin.
The newer dryer choices that dry hygroscopic
resins include straight compressed air dryers,
compressed air units with a moisture removal
membrane, and vacuum dryers. A variant of desiccant
technology-the continuous desiccant rotor or
"honeycomb" design and newer dryers
using radiant heat are claimed to have greater
drying capacity than standard hot-air units.
Each is creating its own place in the market,
and may not largely displace desiccant drying
any time soon.
In recent years, desiccant dryers have made
significant advances in compactness, drying
controls and energy savings. State-of-the art
features include closed-loop cooling after regeneration,
which keeps atmospheric moisture away from the
freshly regenerated desiccant bed, avoiding
dewpoint spikes during bed changeover. Dewpoint
monitoring with regeneration on demand reportedly
cuts energy use by up to 25-30%.
Another way recent models save energy and prevent
overdrying is by adjusting airflow and heating
automatically based on sensing the temperature
differential between incoming and outgoing air.
Plant compressed air is introduced at the bottom
of the dryer and expanded to atmospheric pressure,
which immediately drops its dewpoint by 40°
to 50° F. The air is then heated to raise
its drying capacity further before it passes
up through the resin hopper. This type of dryer
has no desiccant, no moving parts, no regeneration
heater, no valves, and no cooling coils. It
requires minimal maintenance of changing air
filters every six months. Dewpoint of the drying
air depends on the temperature and humidity
of the air coming into the plant air compressor.
Many of these dryers can achieve a minimum of
about +5 F dewpoint and are recommended for
drying certain hygroscopic resins such as ABS,
acrylic, acetal, and glass-filled nylon. But
for drying materials that require a lower dewpoint-such
as PET, PBT, or PC an add-on desiccant-bed kit
or a moisture-removal membrane is available.
These units are suited to niche markets such
as medical/pharmaceutical components and CD/DVD
production. In addition to providing low dewpoint,
the membrane can help compensate for limited
compressor capacity or poor compressor performance
that might otherwise require buying a desiccant
dryer or upgrading the compressor.
Instead of blowing hot, dry air over the pellets
to draw out the moisture, the newest type of
dryer on the market uses vacuum to reduce the
boiling point of water, pulling the water vapor
from the resin pellets, using only 20% as much
energy and 17% as much drying time as other
dryers. They also permit much lower drying temperatures-e.g.,
300 F for PET vs. the usual 350 F. Vacuum dryers
can dry most hygroscopic resins.
Maguire offers semi-continuous units that carry
out heating and vacuum drying in separate stations
simultaneously. Matsui USA offers batch units
that combine heating and vacuum drying in one
station and are designed for micro-moulding.
Because of the lower temperatures used, Maguire
recommends vacuum dryers for heat-sensitive
wood-filled plastics. Until recently, vacuum
dryers were limited to a maximum of 50 -100
kg/hour. But with the recent introduction of
Maguire's 500-kg/hour model, an LPD can be used
as a central dryer for several processing machines,
as is the case with other dryers.
A list of suppliers for various types of dryers
is given below.
|
Dryers by type &
supplier
|
Supplier |
Hot Air |
Desiccant |
Compressed Air |
Compressed Air with Membrane |
Vacuum |
AEC |
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
Bry-Air |
|
X
|
|
|
|
Cactus |
X
|
|
|
|
|
Canam |
X
|
|
|
|
|
Colortronic |
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
Comet Automation |
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
|
Conair |
X
|
X
|
|
|
|
Dri-Air |
X
|
X
|
|
|
|
Fasti USA |
|
|
X
|
|
|
Foremost |
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
IMS |
X
|
X
|
|
|
|
Labotek |
|
X
|
|
|
|
L-R Systems |
X
|
X
|
|
|
|
Maguire |
|
|
|
|
X
|
Matsui |
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
Motan |
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
Novatec |
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
Process Control |
X
|
X
|
|
|
|
Sterling |
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
Thoreson-McCosh |
X
|
X
|
|
|
|
Universal Dynamics |
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
|
Walton/Stout |
X
|
X
|
|
|
|
Wittmann |
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
|
(Reference: Plastics Technology)
|