Sand dryer is a rotary drying equipment for dehydrating granular materials, especially suitable for artificial sand, river sand, quartz/silica sand, etc. The sand dryer machine has the advantages of high production capacity, wide range of application, small flow resistance, large operation fluctuation range, and convenient operation.
Capacity: 5-100 t/h
Dried Moisture(%): 12-15% (Adjustable)
Heat Source: biomass, natural gas, diesel, coal, etc.
Application: Suitable for drying the sand, silica sand, fly ash, mineral slag and other material.
Sand dryer is a rotary drying equipment for dehydrating granular materials, especially suitable for artificial sand, river sand, quartz/silica sand, etc. The sand dryer machine has the advantages of high production capacity, wide range of application, small flow resistance, large operation fluctuation range, and convenient operation. Sand dryers are also commonly used to dry mineral powder, cinder, slag, etc. The rotary sand dryer is suitable for a variety of fuels, such as coal, oil, and gas.
Wet sand causes big problems. It clumps, jams equipment, and lowers product quality. A dedicated sand dryer is often the only effective solution.
Why is Drying Sand Necessary? Which Industries Depend on Sand Dryers?
Key Reasons for Drying Sand
Process Consistency: Many processes require sand with a specific, low moisture content for predictable results. Concrete strength, asphalt binding, glass clarity, and foundry mold integrity all depend on dry sand.
Flowability: Dry sand flows freely from silos, feeders, and conveyors. Wet sand tends to clump, bridge, and stick, causing handling nightmares and process interruptions.
Accurate Batching: When mixing materials by weight (like in concrete or glass), unknown water content in the sand throws off the proportions, leading to quality problems.
Preventing Freezing: In colder climates, moisture in sand stockpiles can freeze, creating large, unmanageable lumps.
Downstream Processing: Dry sand screens more efficiently. Wet sand can blind screen meshes (Insight #6). Some coating processes also require perfectly dry sand.
Reduced Transport Costs: Removing water weight makes long-distance transport more economical.
Major Industries Using Sand Dryers
Construction: Producing aggregates for concrete and asphalt requires sand with low and consistent moisture.
Glass Manufacturing: Requires very pure silica sand with extremely low moisture content (<0.1% often) for proper melting and clarity.
Foundries: Making molds and cores for metal casting needs specific types of sand (e.g., silica, zircon) dried to precise moisture levels for strength and gas permeability.
Oil & Gas (Frac Sand): Hydraulic fracturing demands high-purity quartz sand dried to very low moisture levels to ensure it flows well and props open rock fractures effectively.
Sports Turf & Landscaping: Specialized sands for golf courses or artificial turf infill often need drying.
Manufacturing: Used as filler, abrasive material, or in producing chemicals like sodium silicate.
sand
Yellow Sand
Quartz sand
emery
molding sand
Silica sand
How Does a Sand Dryer Work?
A rotary sand dryer works by tumbling the sand inside a gently sloped, rotating drum. Hot gas flows through the drum, transferring heat to the sand and evaporating the water. Internal lifters shower the sand through the hot gas stream for better contact.
The heart of the most common sand drying system is the rotary drum dryer. Its operation relies on maximizing the contact between the wet sand and a stream of hot gas (usually air heated by a burner).
The Drying Process Step-by-Step
Feeding: Wet sand is fed continuously into the higher end of the slightly inclined rotating drum.
Rotation & Tumbling: As the drum rotates, internal plates called lifters (or flights) pick up the sand.
Showering (Creating a Curtain): When the lifters rotate upwards, the sand cascades down through the inside of the drum. This creates a “curtain” of sand particles.
Hot Gas Flow: Hot gas from a burner or furnace is passed through the drum. This gas flows through the curtain of falling sand.
Heat Transfer: Heat transfers from the hot gas to the sand primarily through direct contact (convection). Some heat also transfers via contact with the hot drum shell (conduction) and radiation. Air velocity control is crucial here to avoid blowing away fine sand (Insight #1).
Evaporation: The heat absorbed by the sand increases the water’s vapor pressure, causing it to evaporate.
Material Transport: The drum’s slight slope and the flow of gas help move the sand gradually towards the discharge end.
Discharge: Dried sand exits the lower end of the drum.
Exhaust: The moisture-laden gas exits the drum and typically goes to a dust collection system to capture fine sand particles before being vented.
The efficiency depends on factors like drum speed, gas temperature, gas velocity, lifter design, and the time the sand spends inside the drum (residence time).
What are the Pros and Cons of Different Sand Dryer Types like Single-Pass and Triple-Pass?
Single-pass dryers are simpler and cheaper but less thermally efficient and have a larger footprint. Triple-pass dryers recycle heat internally, offering higher efficiency and a more compact size, but are more complex and costly upfront.
While both are rotary drum dryers, their internal structure and gas flow path differ, leading to distinct advantages and disadvantages, especially for sand drying.
Single-Pass Rotary Dryer
Design: A simple, long rotating drum. Hot gas and sand typically flow through it once, either in the same direction (co-current) or opposite directions (counter-current).
Pros:
Simpler design, generally lower initial purchase cost.
Easier maintenance due to simpler structure.
Well-suited for materials that are not very fine or heat-sensitive.
Cons:
Lower thermal efficiency as exhaust gases leave relatively hot.
Requires a longer drum (larger footprint) for sufficient drying time.
Can have higher heat loss from the larger shell surface area.
Triple-Pass Rotary Dryer
Potentially higher risk of blockages if handling very sticky or inconsistent feed.
Design: Consists of three concentric drums. Material is fed into the innermost drum, travels its length, flows back through the middle drum, and finally forward through the outer drum before discharging. Hot gas usually flows co-currently with the material in the inner drum and then passes through all three drums.
Pros:
Higher thermal efficiency (often 20-30% better than single-pass) because heat from the inner drum transfers to the middle and outer passes, and exhaust gas temperature is lower.
More compact design for the same capacity due to the longer effective path length in a shorter overall unit. Lower footprint.
Lower heat loss from the outer shell as it’s insulated by the inner passes.
Cons:
More complex design, leading to a higher initial purchase cost.
Maintenance can be more involved due to the concentric structure.
Comparison Table
Feature
Single-Pass Dryer
Triple-Pass Dryer
Efficiency
Lower
Higher
Footprint
Larger
Smaller
Initial Cost
Lower
Higher
Complexity
Simpler
More Complex
Maintenance
Easier
Potentially More Involved
Best For
Lower budgets, space ok
High efficiency, limited space
For sand drying, the choice often depends on balancing fuel costs (favoring triple-pass) against capital investment and maintenance considerations. As manufacturers (ZONEDING), we offer both types and help clients choose based on their specific economic and operational context.
Natural Gas, Coal, Biomass: Which Heat Source is Best for My Sand Drying Operation?
Fuel is a major operating cost for dryers. Choosing the right heat source involves balancing fuel price, availability, handling costs, environmental impact, and compatibility with your sand product. There’s no single ‘best’ answer.
Natural gas is clean and easy to control but can be expensive. Coal is cheap but requires handling/ash disposal and causes more emissions. Biomass is renewable but has variable properties and handling challenges. Choice depends on local availability, cost, and regulations.
Natural Gas
Pros: Burns cleanly with minimal ash or particulate emissions. Easy to control temperature precisely. Requires minimal on-site storage infrastructure (if pipeline available). Lower maintenance on burner systems. Often preferred for high-purity sands (silica) in direct dryers to minimize contamination.
Cons: Price can be volatile and high in some regions. Requires pipeline access or expensive liquefied natural gas (LNG) delivery/storage.
Coal (Various Types)
Pros: Often the cheapest fuel per unit of energy (BTU). Widely available in many regions.
Cons: Requires significant on-site storage and handling infrastructure (conveyors, bunkers). Produces ash that needs disposal. Higher emissions of particulate matter, sulfur oxides (SOx), and potentially heavy metals, often requiring more sophisticated pollution control equipment (scrubbers, baghouses). Burner control can be less precise than gas. Potential for product contamination in direct-heat dryers.
Pros: Often considered carbon-neutral or renewable. Can be locally sourced and potentially inexpensive depending on availability.
Cons: Fuel properties (moisture content, energy value, ash content) can be highly variable, making consistent combustion and temperature control challenging. Requires significant storage and handling systems, often more complex than coal. Can produce significant ash and particulate emissions. May require specialized combustion systems (e.g., gasifiers).
Other Options (Less Common for Sand)
Fuel Oil: Easier to handle than coal but generally more expensive and has associated emissions.
Waste Heat: Utilizing waste heat from other industrial processes can be extremely cost-effective if available nearby.
Decision Factors Table
Feature
Natural Gas
Coal
Biomass
Fuel Cost
Variable, often High
Often Low
Variable, potentially Low
Handling/Storage
Minimal (pipeline)
High
High, Complex
Emissions
Low
High (PM, SOx)
Variable (PM, Ash)
Control Precision
High
Moderate
Lower, Variable
Product Purity
Good (Direct Heat)
Risk (Direct Heat)
Risk (Direct Heat)
Availability
Network Dependent
Widely Available
Locally Dependent
The best choice involves a detailed economic analysis considering fuel price, transportation, handling costs, equipment costs (including pollution control), maintenance, and local environmental regulations. We can help design dryers compatible with various fuel types.
What Equipment is Typically Included in a Complete Sand Drying Production Line?
A typical line includes: Wet sand feeding system (hopper, feeder), conveyor belt, the rotary dryer unit with heat source, dust collection system (cyclone/baghouse), discharge conveyor, and a control system panel.
Setting up an efficient sand drying operation involves several interconnected pieces of equipment working together. Here are the usual components of a complete production line:
Core Components
Feeding System:
Hopper/Bin: Holds a buffer of wet sand to ensure a relatively consistent feed to the dryer.
Feeder: Controls the rate at which wet sand is fed into the system (e.g., belt feeder, vibrating feeder). Consistent feed rate is important (Insight #2).
Infeed Conveyor: Transports the metered wet sand from the feeder to the dryer inlet. Often an inclined belt conveyor.
Rotary Dryer Unit: The main machine itself, including:
Rotating Drum: With internal lifters.
Drive System: Motor, gearbox, tires, trunnions to rotate the drum.
Support Frame: Structure holding the drum assembly.
Seals: At feed and discharge ends.
Heat Source System:
Burner (Gas/Oil) or Furnace (Coal/Biomass): Generates the hot gas.
Combustion Air Fan: Supplies air for burning the fuel.
Fuel Delivery System: Pipes, pumps, storage, conveyors depending on the fuel type.
Dust Collection System: Essential for environmental compliance and product recovery.
Ducting: Connects the dryer exhaust outlet to the collector.
Baghouse or Wet Scrubber: Removes fine dust particles.
Exhaust Fan (Induced Draft Fan): Pulls the gas through the dryer and dust collector, maintaining system airflow and slight negative pressure.
Stack: Vents the cleaned exhaust gas.
Dust Discharge: Rotary valve or screw conveyor to remove collected dust.
Discharge System:
Discharge Breeching/Chute: Collects dry sand from the dryer outlet. Often lined with AR materials.
Discharge Conveyor: Transports the hot, dry sand away from the dryer, often to a cooling area, storage silo, or screening plant. Might be heat-resistant.
Control System:
Control Panel: Houses motor starters, temperature controllers, VFDs (if used), safety interlocks, and operator interface. Allows monitoring and adjustment of parameters like temperature and fan speeds.
Optional equipment might include a cooling drum or conveyor after the dryer, screening equipment, or systems to recycle collected dust back into the product if desired. As ZONEDING, we can design and supply the complete, integrated production line tailored to your needs.
General specifications
Project/Unit/Model
Φ2.5×7m
Diameter 2.7×7 meters
Φ3.0×7.0m
Diameter 3.2×7.0 meters
Diameter 3.6×8 meters
Outer cylinder diameter(m)
2.5
2.7
3.0
3.2
3.6
Length of outer cylinder(m)
7
7
7.0
7.0
8
Cylinder volume( m³ )
16.63
16.63
52.678
52.678
81.38
Cylinder speed (rpm)
4-10
4-10
4 -10
4 -10
4 -10
Initial moisture content of slag (%)
10-12
10-12
10-12
10-12
10-12
Final moisture content of slag (%)
1
1
1
1
1
Initial water content of yellow ground (%)
8-10
8-10
8-10
8-10
8-10
Final moisture content of yellow ground (%)
0.5-1
0.5-1
0.5-1
0.5-1
0.5-1
Maximum inlet air temperature (°C)
700-750° Celsius
700-750° Celsius
700-750° Celsius
700-750° Celsius
700-750° Celsius
Production capacity (T/h)
Yellow Sand:25-30 Slag:20-25
Yellow Sand:30-35 Slag:25-30
Yellow Sand:35-40 Furnace Slag:30-35
Yellow Sand:45-50 Furnace Slag:35-40
Yellow Sand:65-70 Mine Slag:60-65
Motor type
Y2-132M-4E
Y2-132M-4E
Model Y2-160M-4
Model Y2-160M-4
Model Y2-160M-4
Motor power(kw)
7,5×2
11×2
7,5×4
7,5×4
15×4
Type of reducer
XWD7-23-11W
XWD7-23-11W
XWD6-23-7.5KW
XWD6-23-7.5KW
XWD8-23-15KW
Reducer speed ratio
29
29
29
29
29
Note: Data is subject to change due to technical improvements; We reserve the right to make changes without notice; Machine performance may vary depending on the application; For more details, please chat live with Zoneding engineers.