Cassava starch residue dryers are industrial drying equipment specifically designed for drying waste residue generated during cassava starch processing. After starch extraction from cassava, a large amount of wet residue is produced. This residue has extremely high moisture content and viscosity, making it difficult to process. Cassava starch residue dryers use thermal drying to transform this wet residue into usable dry materials, widely used in feed processing, environmental protection, biomass energy, building materials, and chemical industries.
Drying cassava starch residue brings multiple benefits. First, it facilitates resource utilization; the dried residue can be used directly as livestock feed or processed into biomass fuel or edible mushroom cultivation substrate. Second, it provides environmental benefits, solving the environmental pollution problem caused by the fermentation of accumulated wet residue. Third, it offers economic benefits, turning waste into treasure and creating additional revenue for enterprises. Fourth, it reduces storage and transportation costs, as the volume and weight of the material are significantly reduced after drying. Furthermore, the dried cassava residue can be further processed into high-value-added products such as biochar and fuel rods.
Cassava starch residue presents three significant processing challenges. First, the moisture content is extremely high, remaining at 70% to 80% even after mechanical dehydration. Second, it is highly viscous; the wet residue has strong adhesive properties, easily sticking and clogging the inner walls of the equipment. Third, it is temperature-sensitive; excessively high drying temperatures cause starch gelatinization, forming a dextrin layer on the particle surface that blocks moisture evaporation channels, resulting in a burnt exterior and soft interior; excessively low drying temperatures fail to reduce the moisture content below the target level. Therefore, the cassava starch residue dryer needs to be specially designed to address these characteristics.
The equipment mainly consists of a heat source, feeder, rotary drum, discharger, induced draft fan, unloader, and electrical control cabinet. The drum is equipped with specially designed lifting plates, dispersing devices, and guiding devices, as well as sealing devices and a dust removal system.
Working Principle: Pre-dehydrated wet cassava residue is fed into the rotary drum by the feeding system. Inside the drum, the evenly distributed inclined lifting plates continuously lift and scatter the material, forming a uniform material curtain. The drum is equipped with a powerful dispersing device that continuously breaks up any adhering materials, effectively preventing sticking and clogging. Under the action of inclined lifting plates and a hot medium, the material spirals forward from the feed end to the discharge end. During this process, the material comes into full contact with hot air, causing moisture to evaporate rapidly, and finally, the dried product is discharged from the discharge end.
Drying Process: For cassava residue with high moisture content, a two-stage drying process is typically used. The first stage in the drum dryer reduces the material's moisture content to approximately 35%. The second stage involves the material entering an airflow drying system, where it is rapidly dried to a final moisture content of less than 12% within ten to fifteen seconds. This process achieves highly efficient drying without causing the material to gelatinize.
Location:Belgian
Project Progress:Put Into Production
Location:Russia
Project Progress:Put Into Production
Location:Vietnam
Project Progress:Put Into Production
Location:Shanxi
Project Progress:Put Into Production