The processing capacity of a decanter centrifuge refers to the amount of slurry or material it can process continuously per unit time.
Separation efficiency describes how well the decanter separates solids from liquid, usually measured by solids recovery, centrate clarity, and cake dryness.
Both processing capacity and separation efficiency depend on feed properties, centrifugal G-force, pond depth, differential speed and temperature.
Processing capacity and efficiency balance each other. Operators must match machine settings to feed properties to balance throughput and separation quality.
![]()
A decanter centrifuge is a continuous solid-liquid separation unit. It utilizes high‑speed rotation to separate dense solid particles from the low-density liquid phase.
The operating principle is based on density difference and centrifugal sedimentation. Under high-speed rotation, denser solid particles move outward to the bowl wall, while the lighter liquid phase flows toward the liquid discharge zone.
Unlike conventional gravity sedimentation, decanter centrifuges deliver centrifugal force up to 4000 G. This greatly accelerates solid settling and completes rapid separation within seconds.
For industrial production, processing capacity and separation efficiency are core performance indicators. Separation efficiency covers solid recovery rate, centrate clarity and filter cake dryness. These key factors directly affect operating costs and final product quality.
Processing capacity is not fixed. It varies with machine size, design features and actual feed properties.
Unstable solid content, uneven particle size and changing viscosity will reduce the real processing capacity.
Key Capacity Drivers:
Feed rate and solids loading: Solids concentration and density affect fluid viscosity and particle interaction, impacting settling speeds and conveyor load
Bowl diameter and L/D ratio: Larger diameter increases effective settling area and hydraulic ceiling
G-force (bowl speed): Higher operational speed improves separation but increases power consumption
Scroll differential speed: Controls residence time on the beach and discharged solids quality
Feed preparation: Screening, temperature control, and chemical treatment using flocculants or coagulants enhances particle settling by increasing particle size and weight
Based on internal commissioning data from a brine clarification project, decanter throughput increased from 25 to 30 m³/h after pond depth was reduced and polymer dosage was increased by around 10%.
Under the tested feed conditions, the centrate remained below 500 mg/L TSS. This shows that capacity improvement usually comes from coordinated parameter adjustment rather than a single setting change.
Some key parameters are set during design and procurement. They include bowl size, L/D ratio, beach angle, scroll shape and structural materials. These set the theoretical performance envelope for the equipment’s entire lifecycle, making proper selection critical before purchase.
We select these parameters based on laboratory and pilot tests, simulation of upstream evaporators and crystallizers, and required product purity and cake dryness from client specifications.
For selected brine clarification applications, a representative configuration may include a 450 mm bowl diameter, a 3.5 L/D ratio, an 8–10° beach angle, and a 2500–3200g operating range. Final selection should still be confirmed by feed testing and separation targets.
The bowl diameter affects centrifugal force and effective settling area, impacting separation efficiency. Larger diameter and higher rotating speed create stronger g force. It boosts separation performance under high throughput. Meanwhile, it raises energy consumption and mechanical stress.
Industrial ranges: 200–650 mm bowl diameter, 1500–4000 g force
Salt and brine applications: Typically 3000–3500 g for optimal balance
Municipal sludge: Often 2500–3000 g sufficient
Running near maximum RPM increases capacity but can shorten bearing and seal life. Bowl speed greatly affects decanter centrifuge efficiency. Higher speeds produce stronger centrifugal force.This improves sedimentation and solid separation.
In one internal brine clarification test, a 400 mm bowl decanter was adjusted from approximately 2200g to 3000g. Under the tested feed conditions, clarified brine capacity increased from 18 to 24 m³/h while meeting the required turbidity target.
Longer bowls have a higher L/D ratio. They offer longer residence time and larger clarification area. They work more efficiently at fixed throughput. Yet they need more space and cost more to invest.
Typical L/D ratios: 2.5–4.5
High-clarity applications: L/D ≥3.5 (lithium carbonate precursor, pharma intermediates)
High-throughput thickening: L/D 2.5–3.0
The bowl (beach) cone angle affects solid dryness. Steeper angles fit coarse solid materials. Shallower angles work better for fine solids. Generally speaking, steeper beach (15–20°) improves solids transport at high solids load but may compromise dewatering for compressible sludge types.
Configuration Comparison:
|
Feature |
L/D 2.8 / 15° Beach |
L/D 4.0 / 8° Beach |
|---|---|---|
|
Best Application |
High-capacity thickened sludge |
Brine/crystalline solids |
|
Typical Throughput |
30 m³/h |
25 m³/h |
|
Cake Dryness |
~20% DS |
~70% DS |
|
Fines Capture |
Moderate |
Superior |
The above comparison is for illustrative purposes only. Actual throughput, cake dryness, and fines capture depend on feed solids content, particle size distribution, liquid viscosity, chemical conditioning, and machine configuration.
Scroll design covers pitch, blade height and solid discharge ports. It determines solid throughput, torque and cake layer residence time. Conveyor pitch impacts solid transport. A finer pitch improves material handling. It also raises gear torque and mechanical wear.
Coarse pitch: Increases solids volume per revolution, beneficial for high solids load (15–40% salt crystallizer discharge)
Fine pitch: Better for fines-rich feeds requiring controlled residence time
Wear protection: Tungsten carbide tiles and hardfacing layers can greatly extend the service life of wear parts. Service life can be increased several times in abrasive salt and high‑silica slurry conditions. The actual effect depends on slurry abrasion level, running hours and solid content.
We specify wear resistance designs. They suit salt, soda ash and lithium projects. Major refurbishment is needed every 3 to 5 years. Scroll torque monitoring auto-reduces feed to prevent blockage or machine trips during stable operation.
Material selection ensures stable capacity and efficiency over the equipment lifecycle in demanding industrial applications.
Chloride brines (80–110°C): 2205/2507 duplex stainless steel prevents pitting and stress corrosion cracking
Standard chemical service: 316L for moderate corrosion resistance
Abrasive slurries (gypsum, mineral tailings): Protected scroll flights and solids discharge nozzles prevent geometry erosion
We select materials in line with client standards (GB or ASME codes) and cleanliness requirements for battery-grade lithium production.
Equipment design stays fixed after purchase. Operators can adjust running parameters regularly. It keeps overall performance at target standards. These factors cover flow rate, pond depth, bowl speed, differential speed and process temperature. All of them interact with the properties of feed materials.
Feed rate affects how long materials stay under G-force. Higher feed rates may overload the system. This will lower separation efficiency. Feed flow (m³/h) and solids concentration (% w/w) together determine solids load (kg/h), controlling residence time and overload risk.
Increasing feed from 15 to 22 m³/h at 5% solids raises solids load by ~47%
This may require higher g force and lower differential speed to maintain centrate clarity
Throughput affects the solids capture rate. Higher throughput can lower capture efficiency.
We design upstream equalization tanks and feed pumps with controllable capacity so flow to the decanter modulates based on torque and vibration feedback.
Automatic flow control loops tied to torque and cake dryness targets prevent frequent trips in high-variability feeds.
Operators can adjust the overflow weir plate to change the pond depth. A deeper pond increases internal liquid volume. It improves liquid clarification but shortens the solid dewatering zone. A shallower pond extends the dewatering travel path. This produces solid cake with lower moisture content.
Adjustment increments: Typically 3–5 mm weir radius changes during commissioning
Deeper pond: Better for high-clarity applications
Shallower pond: Preferred where maximum dryness reduces downstream dryer energy or transport cost
![]()
Increasing bowl speed raises the centrifugal force acting on solid particles. It optimizes sedimentation performance. It also delivers cleaner liquid discharge. However, it brings higher energy consumption.
Typical operating speed: Many plants run 80–90% of maximum rated RPM
Speed adjustment: When centrate turbidity increases with fine particles, moderate RPM increase (5–10%) can restore clarity
Energy consideration: Optimized feed conditioning works well in ZLD and wastewater treatment. It lets the decanter keep good separation quality at lower bowl speed. This effectively cuts down specific energy consumption.
Differential speed is the speed difference between the bowl and the scroll conveyor, influencing solids handling capacity and throughput.
The differential speed between the decanter bowl and the auger is crucial for optimizing separation efficiency. It governs solid residence time inside the decanter. It also dictates the final quality of discharged materials.
Lower differential (e.g., 10 RPM): Longer beach residence → drier cake but higher torque
Higher differential (e.g., 20+ RPM): Faster solids transport → wetter cake but higher throughput
Operators can adjust decanter auger speed to optimize solid handling. A higher auger speed speeds up solid discharge. Yet it tends to produce wetter solid cake. Lower auger speed extends material settling time. This helps deliver drier discharged solids.
![]()
The higher the material temperature, the lower the viscosity of the liquid phase, and the more favorable the separation.
Many feeds become significantly easier to separate when temperature increases within safe limits (e.g., from 30°C to 60–70°C).
Chemical conditioning: Flocculants or coagulants can dramatically improve solids recovery rates during separation processes, expanding the operating window and enabling higher throughput at same clarity
Caution: Process temperature must not exceed material and seal limits; prolonged exposure above design temperature degrades elastomers
Flocculants increase particle size and weight to improve sedimentation. They cut required gravitational force and energy consumption by 20% to 30%. However, excessive flocculants can raise separated liquid viscosity. Proper selection and dosing prevent unnecessary operating costs.
Different application scenarios have different requirements for production capacity and efficiency.
Decanter centrifuges are utilized in the chemical industry for continuous solid-liquid separation, which is essential for processes such as crystallization and filtration, ensuring high purity and efficiency.
In refining and clarification applications, adjusting pond depth and stabilizing feed particles helps boost output. Improvements can reach up to 20%. Actual gains depend on feed stability, solids loading, particle size distribution, and downstream requirements.
Lithium brine and battery-materials projects demand very high clarity in the liquid phase and controlled solids removal across multiple process steps including impurity removal and carbonate precipitation.
Operating conditions: Moderate temperatures (40–80°C), medium solids load
Critical factor: Fine solids capture requires high g force and adequate residence time
Variability challenge: Seasonal brine composition changes require flexible operating windows
In wastewater treatment, decanter centrifuges are employed to separate solids from liquids, enhancing the efficiency of the treatment process and allowing for the recovery of valuable resources.
Typical capacities: 5–30 m³/h for mixed industrial wastewater sludge lines
Dryness targets: 18–30% DS for biological sludge, higher for inorganic sludges
Compliance focus: Local discharge standards (turbidity, TSS) define minimum required separation efficiency
Decanter centrifuges are also widely used in the food industry for applications such as oil extraction, where they can process large volumes of organic waste and separate oil from water and solids.
Decanter centrifuge capacity and separation efficiency are determined by both machine design and operating conditions. Feed characteristics, particle size, viscosity, temperature, chemical conditioning, pond depth, bowl speed and differential speed all have a significant impact. For stable continuous operation, adjust these parameters according to material properties and separation targets.
Solid-liquid separation conditions vary greatly across industries and materials. Standard equipment parameters cannot fit customized production requirements. If you aim to boost line efficiency, improve product quality and output, you can also reduce equipment failure and extra production costs. Feel free to contact Peony at any time. We provide tailor-made solutions based on your actual working conditions.
A1: Core factors include bowl speed, G-force, differential speed, feed rate, pond depth and scroll design. Material properties also play a vital role in separation results.
A2: A larger feed volume shortens material residence time under centrifugal force. Insufficient settling time leads to lower solid capture and weaker separation performance.
A3: Yes. Basic structural designs are fixed, but operators can tune running parameters to balance processing capacity and separation effect for stable output.
A4: Adjust the bowl beach angle and scroll structure. Steeper angles suit coarse solids, while proper parameter matching helps dewater fine materials effectively.
A5: We adopt professional wear-resistant designs. The optimized structure extends maintenance cycles, with major overhaul intervals reaching 3 to 5 years.
The processing capacity of a decanter centrifuge refers to the amount of slurry or material it can process continuously per unit time.
Separation efficiency describes how well the decanter separates solids from liquid, usually measured by solids recovery, centrate clarity, and cake dryness.
Both processing capacity and separation efficiency depend on feed properties, centrifugal G-force, pond depth, differential speed and temperature.
Processing capacity and efficiency balance each other. Operators must match machine settings to feed properties to balance throughput and separation quality.
![]()
A decanter centrifuge is a continuous solid-liquid separation unit. It utilizes high‑speed rotation to separate dense solid particles from the low-density liquid phase.
The operating principle is based on density difference and centrifugal sedimentation. Under high-speed rotation, denser solid particles move outward to the bowl wall, while the lighter liquid phase flows toward the liquid discharge zone.
Unlike conventional gravity sedimentation, decanter centrifuges deliver centrifugal force up to 4000 G. This greatly accelerates solid settling and completes rapid separation within seconds.
For industrial production, processing capacity and separation efficiency are core performance indicators. Separation efficiency covers solid recovery rate, centrate clarity and filter cake dryness. These key factors directly affect operating costs and final product quality.
Processing capacity is not fixed. It varies with machine size, design features and actual feed properties.
Unstable solid content, uneven particle size and changing viscosity will reduce the real processing capacity.
Key Capacity Drivers:
Feed rate and solids loading: Solids concentration and density affect fluid viscosity and particle interaction, impacting settling speeds and conveyor load
Bowl diameter and L/D ratio: Larger diameter increases effective settling area and hydraulic ceiling
G-force (bowl speed): Higher operational speed improves separation but increases power consumption
Scroll differential speed: Controls residence time on the beach and discharged solids quality
Feed preparation: Screening, temperature control, and chemical treatment using flocculants or coagulants enhances particle settling by increasing particle size and weight
Based on internal commissioning data from a brine clarification project, decanter throughput increased from 25 to 30 m³/h after pond depth was reduced and polymer dosage was increased by around 10%.
Under the tested feed conditions, the centrate remained below 500 mg/L TSS. This shows that capacity improvement usually comes from coordinated parameter adjustment rather than a single setting change.
Some key parameters are set during design and procurement. They include bowl size, L/D ratio, beach angle, scroll shape and structural materials. These set the theoretical performance envelope for the equipment’s entire lifecycle, making proper selection critical before purchase.
We select these parameters based on laboratory and pilot tests, simulation of upstream evaporators and crystallizers, and required product purity and cake dryness from client specifications.
For selected brine clarification applications, a representative configuration may include a 450 mm bowl diameter, a 3.5 L/D ratio, an 8–10° beach angle, and a 2500–3200g operating range. Final selection should still be confirmed by feed testing and separation targets.
The bowl diameter affects centrifugal force and effective settling area, impacting separation efficiency. Larger diameter and higher rotating speed create stronger g force. It boosts separation performance under high throughput. Meanwhile, it raises energy consumption and mechanical stress.
Industrial ranges: 200–650 mm bowl diameter, 1500–4000 g force
Salt and brine applications: Typically 3000–3500 g for optimal balance
Municipal sludge: Often 2500–3000 g sufficient
Running near maximum RPM increases capacity but can shorten bearing and seal life. Bowl speed greatly affects decanter centrifuge efficiency. Higher speeds produce stronger centrifugal force.This improves sedimentation and solid separation.
In one internal brine clarification test, a 400 mm bowl decanter was adjusted from approximately 2200g to 3000g. Under the tested feed conditions, clarified brine capacity increased from 18 to 24 m³/h while meeting the required turbidity target.
Longer bowls have a higher L/D ratio. They offer longer residence time and larger clarification area. They work more efficiently at fixed throughput. Yet they need more space and cost more to invest.
Typical L/D ratios: 2.5–4.5
High-clarity applications: L/D ≥3.5 (lithium carbonate precursor, pharma intermediates)
High-throughput thickening: L/D 2.5–3.0
The bowl (beach) cone angle affects solid dryness. Steeper angles fit coarse solid materials. Shallower angles work better for fine solids. Generally speaking, steeper beach (15–20°) improves solids transport at high solids load but may compromise dewatering for compressible sludge types.
Configuration Comparison:
|
Feature |
L/D 2.8 / 15° Beach |
L/D 4.0 / 8° Beach |
|---|---|---|
|
Best Application |
High-capacity thickened sludge |
Brine/crystalline solids |
|
Typical Throughput |
30 m³/h |
25 m³/h |
|
Cake Dryness |
~20% DS |
~70% DS |
|
Fines Capture |
Moderate |
Superior |
The above comparison is for illustrative purposes only. Actual throughput, cake dryness, and fines capture depend on feed solids content, particle size distribution, liquid viscosity, chemical conditioning, and machine configuration.
Scroll design covers pitch, blade height and solid discharge ports. It determines solid throughput, torque and cake layer residence time. Conveyor pitch impacts solid transport. A finer pitch improves material handling. It also raises gear torque and mechanical wear.
Coarse pitch: Increases solids volume per revolution, beneficial for high solids load (15–40% salt crystallizer discharge)
Fine pitch: Better for fines-rich feeds requiring controlled residence time
Wear protection: Tungsten carbide tiles and hardfacing layers can greatly extend the service life of wear parts. Service life can be increased several times in abrasive salt and high‑silica slurry conditions. The actual effect depends on slurry abrasion level, running hours and solid content.
We specify wear resistance designs. They suit salt, soda ash and lithium projects. Major refurbishment is needed every 3 to 5 years. Scroll torque monitoring auto-reduces feed to prevent blockage or machine trips during stable operation.
Material selection ensures stable capacity and efficiency over the equipment lifecycle in demanding industrial applications.
Chloride brines (80–110°C): 2205/2507 duplex stainless steel prevents pitting and stress corrosion cracking
Standard chemical service: 316L for moderate corrosion resistance
Abrasive slurries (gypsum, mineral tailings): Protected scroll flights and solids discharge nozzles prevent geometry erosion
We select materials in line with client standards (GB or ASME codes) and cleanliness requirements for battery-grade lithium production.
Equipment design stays fixed after purchase. Operators can adjust running parameters regularly. It keeps overall performance at target standards. These factors cover flow rate, pond depth, bowl speed, differential speed and process temperature. All of them interact with the properties of feed materials.
Feed rate affects how long materials stay under G-force. Higher feed rates may overload the system. This will lower separation efficiency. Feed flow (m³/h) and solids concentration (% w/w) together determine solids load (kg/h), controlling residence time and overload risk.
Increasing feed from 15 to 22 m³/h at 5% solids raises solids load by ~47%
This may require higher g force and lower differential speed to maintain centrate clarity
Throughput affects the solids capture rate. Higher throughput can lower capture efficiency.
We design upstream equalization tanks and feed pumps with controllable capacity so flow to the decanter modulates based on torque and vibration feedback.
Automatic flow control loops tied to torque and cake dryness targets prevent frequent trips in high-variability feeds.
Operators can adjust the overflow weir plate to change the pond depth. A deeper pond increases internal liquid volume. It improves liquid clarification but shortens the solid dewatering zone. A shallower pond extends the dewatering travel path. This produces solid cake with lower moisture content.
Adjustment increments: Typically 3–5 mm weir radius changes during commissioning
Deeper pond: Better for high-clarity applications
Shallower pond: Preferred where maximum dryness reduces downstream dryer energy or transport cost
![]()
Increasing bowl speed raises the centrifugal force acting on solid particles. It optimizes sedimentation performance. It also delivers cleaner liquid discharge. However, it brings higher energy consumption.
Typical operating speed: Many plants run 80–90% of maximum rated RPM
Speed adjustment: When centrate turbidity increases with fine particles, moderate RPM increase (5–10%) can restore clarity
Energy consideration: Optimized feed conditioning works well in ZLD and wastewater treatment. It lets the decanter keep good separation quality at lower bowl speed. This effectively cuts down specific energy consumption.
Differential speed is the speed difference between the bowl and the scroll conveyor, influencing solids handling capacity and throughput.
The differential speed between the decanter bowl and the auger is crucial for optimizing separation efficiency. It governs solid residence time inside the decanter. It also dictates the final quality of discharged materials.
Lower differential (e.g., 10 RPM): Longer beach residence → drier cake but higher torque
Higher differential (e.g., 20+ RPM): Faster solids transport → wetter cake but higher throughput
Operators can adjust decanter auger speed to optimize solid handling. A higher auger speed speeds up solid discharge. Yet it tends to produce wetter solid cake. Lower auger speed extends material settling time. This helps deliver drier discharged solids.
![]()
The higher the material temperature, the lower the viscosity of the liquid phase, and the more favorable the separation.
Many feeds become significantly easier to separate when temperature increases within safe limits (e.g., from 30°C to 60–70°C).
Chemical conditioning: Flocculants or coagulants can dramatically improve solids recovery rates during separation processes, expanding the operating window and enabling higher throughput at same clarity
Caution: Process temperature must not exceed material and seal limits; prolonged exposure above design temperature degrades elastomers
Flocculants increase particle size and weight to improve sedimentation. They cut required gravitational force and energy consumption by 20% to 30%. However, excessive flocculants can raise separated liquid viscosity. Proper selection and dosing prevent unnecessary operating costs.
Different application scenarios have different requirements for production capacity and efficiency.
Decanter centrifuges are utilized in the chemical industry for continuous solid-liquid separation, which is essential for processes such as crystallization and filtration, ensuring high purity and efficiency.
In refining and clarification applications, adjusting pond depth and stabilizing feed particles helps boost output. Improvements can reach up to 20%. Actual gains depend on feed stability, solids loading, particle size distribution, and downstream requirements.
Lithium brine and battery-materials projects demand very high clarity in the liquid phase and controlled solids removal across multiple process steps including impurity removal and carbonate precipitation.
Operating conditions: Moderate temperatures (40–80°C), medium solids load
Critical factor: Fine solids capture requires high g force and adequate residence time
Variability challenge: Seasonal brine composition changes require flexible operating windows
In wastewater treatment, decanter centrifuges are employed to separate solids from liquids, enhancing the efficiency of the treatment process and allowing for the recovery of valuable resources.
Typical capacities: 5–30 m³/h for mixed industrial wastewater sludge lines
Dryness targets: 18–30% DS for biological sludge, higher for inorganic sludges
Compliance focus: Local discharge standards (turbidity, TSS) define minimum required separation efficiency
Decanter centrifuges are also widely used in the food industry for applications such as oil extraction, where they can process large volumes of organic waste and separate oil from water and solids.
Decanter centrifuge capacity and separation efficiency are determined by both machine design and operating conditions. Feed characteristics, particle size, viscosity, temperature, chemical conditioning, pond depth, bowl speed and differential speed all have a significant impact. For stable continuous operation, adjust these parameters according to material properties and separation targets.
Solid-liquid separation conditions vary greatly across industries and materials. Standard equipment parameters cannot fit customized production requirements. If you aim to boost line efficiency, improve product quality and output, you can also reduce equipment failure and extra production costs. Feel free to contact Peony at any time. We provide tailor-made solutions based on your actual working conditions.
A1: Core factors include bowl speed, G-force, differential speed, feed rate, pond depth and scroll design. Material properties also play a vital role in separation results.
A2: A larger feed volume shortens material residence time under centrifugal force. Insufficient settling time leads to lower solid capture and weaker separation performance.
A3: Yes. Basic structural designs are fixed, but operators can tune running parameters to balance processing capacity and separation effect for stable output.
A4: Adjust the bowl beach angle and scroll structure. Steeper angles suit coarse solids, while proper parameter matching helps dewater fine materials effectively.
A5: We adopt professional wear-resistant designs. The optimized structure extends maintenance cycles, with major overhaul intervals reaching 3 to 5 years.