AT NXT ROASTERS INC. WE USE
THE WORD “INNOVATIVE” AS DISTINCT
FROM “IMITATIVE” TO DESCRIBE OUR APPROACH TO DESIGN.
The NXT Roaster Design
We selected the fluidized bed technology for our roasting process because it provides even heat distribution, which results in product uniformity. The bean chaff is continually removed from the roasting chamber, eliminating the fire potential.
To increase roaster efficiency we re-circulate
hot air, reducing power consumption by about 75 percent. To prevent tar deposits on roasted
beans (from circulated air), we incorporate a primary afterburner, which
burns away the smoke every time the air is reheated. This
arrangement increases the temperature of circulating air, which further reduces
overall power consumption.
By circulating hot air in the roaster, we are
open to the atmosphere only thirty seconds at the end of the roasting cycle when
hot coffee beans are quenched by a blast of cool air, which is vented through
our “SmokEater”. (As an option, we
deliver a roasting system that can vent to a room/space.) Loading green beans and unloading of roasted
beans is done pneumatically.
The Roasting Process
Roasting
requires considerable control of the process to continually achieve a given degree of roast. In any chemical engineering, operation
controls address heat requirements, actual heat balances in roasting, and
various heat transfer factors to determine the time required for roasting. Many of the variables are beyond the control, of the Roast Master but it is possible to tame the process and reliably produce consistent roasts.
The
NXT Roaster and its Roasting Process Controls include features that optimize
process parameters such that the quality of roasted coffee delivered remains on
target and is unaffected by factors beyond one’s control.
Roaster Description
The NXT Fluidized Bed 3 kg Roaster, is now in it's third
generation.
The complete system comprises of: process controls, a primary after-burner,
a SmokEater, Heating and Roasting Chambers, a chaff removal Cyclone and a pneumatic
control system to operate the valves, which automatically load green beans, and
transport roasted beans to the Packaging Silo at the end of the roasting
process.
Sequence of Operation
The Roasting Chamber is a cylindrical vessel that
has at the chamber’s bottom a Butterfly Valve with Perforated Gate. Air enters
the roasting chamber and simultaneously fluidizes and heats, or cools the
coffee beans. When roasting is
finished, a blast of ambient air stops the pyrolysis by cooling the beans to
below 150º C (320º F). When this temperature is reached, the Butterfly Valve
opens and discharges roasted beans through the Poppet Valve and beans are then
pneumatically transported to a Packaging Silo.
After-Burner
System
The roaster is equipped with a primary after-burner and a secondary “SmokEater”.
The primary after-burner scrubs the hot air of volatiles and tar before these enter the
Roasting Chamber.
The “SmokEater” is used at the end of the roasting process to
scrub the smoke-laden cooling air from the roasted beans before it is vented to
the atmosphere.
Comparing NXT Roaster roasteries with and Drum Roasters
NXT Roaster
|
Drum Roaster
|
|||
Batch
capacity
|
kg
|
3
|
5
|
|
Hourly
output
|
kg
|
18
|
14.7
|
|
Average
time per batch
|
min
|
10
|
20
|
|
Power
consumption with afterburners
|
kW/hour
|
6
|
64.5
|
|
Air required for roasting process
|
CFM
|
80
|
300
|
|
Exhaust gas vented per batch
|
Cubic Feet
|
40
|
6000
|
|
Exhaust gas vented per hour
|
Cubic Feet
|
240
|
18000
|
|
Annual
output
|
||||
Roasting
days per year
|
300
|
16200
|
13230
|
|
Roasting
hours per day
|
3
|
|||
Power
consumption
|
kWh
|
5400
|
58050
|
|
Exhaust gas vented to atmosphere Annually
|
Cubic Feet |
216,000
|
16,200,000
|
|
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