Skip to main content

Massenza’s bespoke solution for desert emulsion plant

In late 2022, one of Massenza’s long-standing customers approached the bitumen equipment manufacturer with a special request: it needed a high-capacity emulsion plant which would be located in a remote area of the Middle East. Additionally, the plant needed enhanced levels of flexibility, security and safety.
July 4, 2023 Read time: 3 mins

 

“This was probably the most complex emulsion plant we have ever produced,” says Massenza commercial director Andrea Menetti. “But it helped that our customer is an expert in emulsion manufacturing and one of the leading companies. We worked very closely with their engineering department to create the design.”

Massenza has worked with the customer, which cannot be named, for over 20 years. Over that time is has supplied a variety of equipment - emulsion plants, cut-back plants, PMB plants, melting units, heaters and storage tanks – to markets around the world including South Africa, Gabon, Ivory Coast, Djibouti, Mauritius and Vietnam.

Massenza, which has an 80-year-plus history in the specialist bitumen plant sector, based the bespoke plant on its MATIC 3500 AA TS emulsion plant which is the biggest and most advanced in the company’s range, producing up to 20tonnes per hour. The plant suctions bitumen directly from local storage and has two water tanks so that the water in the second can be heated while water in the first is used for production.

To meet its client’s requirements, Massenza had to make some major technical changes to the plant. First, there were adaptations to allow frequent switching between anionic and catatonic emulsions. These comprised the addition of two extra lines and pumps for additive dosage and an automated cleaning process which kicks in between the manufacture of the different emulsion types, and which must be completed before the plant will allow the next batch of emulsion to be produced.

Massenza’s bespoke solution for desert emulsion plantAgain, with flexibility in mind, this plant allows for two different means of polymer dosing: conventionally in the bitumen or with latex. Since the plant will be used to produce polymer modified bitumen emulsion, which requires higher temperatures, Massenza also developed a new, more efficient cooler which can lower the heat of the emulsion by 40oC – double the normal requirement – in one pass so that it exits at the right temperature. Additionally, a heating system in the lower part of the tank ensures that no residues of cold, hard bitumen build-up.

An environmentally driven adaptation was a switch in the heating medium from fossil fuel to electrical power to heat the circulating oil which heats up the emulsion. “This was a system we developed from zero, starting at the end of 2022 and finishing by the end of January 2023,” says Menetti.

Another challenge for Massenza was how to place the plant inside a container. This isn’t usual practice for Massenza as all its plants are supplied on skids for ease of mobility. However, for this application, security as well as transportability was an issue. “Because it will be located in the middle of the desert, they needed protection from sandstorms – as well as from thieves,” says Menetti.

Major modifications to the container were necessary to allow for ventilation and maintenance access, while still ensuring that the container could be authorised for shipping. Another challenge was that the customer also wanted the control panel to be located in a separate room, rather than close to the plant, and for the room not to be accessed through the plant area.

Given all the bespoke elements for this new plant, Menetti is rightly proud that the process from initial conversations to the plant leaving Massenza’s factory in Fidenza took less than six months. “It was only possible because of the cooperation with our client,” he says. “Together we found the simplest and most reliable solutions.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Plants, performance and circularity
    January 1, 2023
    A decade of research has hit the roads in Scandinavia and the UK as Nynas launches Nypol RE, a lower-carbon PMB with a biogenic component
  • Globecore offers improved bitumen storage
    October 27, 2016
    Improved bitumen storage is claimed for the new SBM-15 tank from GlobeCore. The firm has upgraded its existing design of modified bitumen storage tank to increase capacity, efficiency and versatility. A key feature is the new structural design with its downwards cone-shaped bottom. This is said to solve the problem of heat loss in the lower part of the tank while a minimum 200mm of heat insulation ensures it is thermodynamically efficient. The new model is 500mm shorter, allowing a customer to transport
  • New bitumen technologies and developments around the world
    May 16, 2016
    From expanding bitumen operations in India to groundbreaking mixes in Italy, stronger roads in South Africa to high RAP content in Germany, this month we bring you stories of advancing technology from around the world - Kristina Smith reports Technology from Austrian engineering company Pörner will soon be responsible for almost two-thirds of India’s bitumen production. In December last year Pörner signed the deal with HPCL-Mittal Energy, a joint venture of Hindustan Petroleum Corporation and Mittal Energy
  • High versatility is claimed for Fayat’s new emulsion plant
    February 11, 2013
    From French firm FAYAT comes its new range of EP 10 emulsion plants equipped with the proven, low noise Bitumill emulsifier system. According to the firm, the plant is highly versatile and can be adapted to meet the needs of low or medium output installations. The equipment is mounted inside a standard 12.2m container making it easier to transport while the system has an ergonomic layout that is said to make it easy to use. An innovative closed-circuit hot water production system is said to reduce energy co