Skip to main content

Cleaner asphalt plant from Lintec & Linnhoff Holdings

The latest asphalt plant from Lintec is said to benefit customers with its ease of installation as well as its low emissions.
November 29, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
The latest Lintec asphalt plant design is said to offer very low emissions

The latest asphalt plant from 1177 Lintec is said to benefit customers with its ease of installation as well as its low emissions. Each section of the plant is fitted inside a standard shipping container and erection of the plant is said to be both speedy and straightforward. Because the plant is also spread out, the foundations for the equipment can be comparatively basic and do not require extensive preparation or thick concrete base.


A key feature of the plant according to the firm is the air suction system installed at several key points to help with pollution control. The separate baghouse filter for the cold feeder section is equipped with automatic sensors that are activated when aggregates are being loaded into the system using a wheeled loader. This baghouse filter also picks up dust from the collecting belt as well as the throw belt, further improving the environmental performance of the whole system.

The revised baghouse filter system has been modified to ensure that the bitumen fumes and odour emissions are minimised. In addition, bitumen fumes emitted from the bitumen tanks and mixer discharge are absorbed through a ducting system. This utilises injections from fine fillers to absorb any oil droplets in the air, before being processed in a baghouse filter. The fumes are then filtered using a special low temperature plasma process that is said to be highly efficient. The special plasma system breaks down the molecules to remove the odour.


Lintec has already supplied its first CSM4000 plant to a Chinese customer, a large system capable of producing up to 320tonnes/hour. With its low emissions technology, this plant also meets the increasingly tough requirements from the Chinese authorities on reducing smoke, fumes and dust emissions from asphalt plants.

Related Content

  • Odour control with Blue Smoke’s X-VOCS
    April 22, 2021
    The X-VOCS System from Blue Smoke can remove up to 99 percent of odours and VOCs from asphalt holding tanks, including hydrogen sulphide H₂S.
  • Innovating sustainability: The amo/Debus Gruppe and the high-tech asphalt plant in Hof, Germany
    July 29, 2025
    Founded in 1946 and headquartered in Untersiemau near Coburg, Germany, the amo/Debus Gruppe has grown into a leading force in the building materials and construction logistics industry. With more than 20 locations strategically spread across Northern Bavaria, Thuringia, and Saxony, the company has firmly established itself as a reliable partner in infrastructure development and sustainable construction.
  • Easy operating
    July 31, 2012
    Modern asphalt plants are a far cry from the early models, and are capable of producing a wide variety of mixes at the touch of a button. Patrick Smith reports Cutting-edge software-based control technology makes today's asphalt mixing plants simple and efficient to operate. The tightening of clean air regulations is reducing the emissions from the plants, and the current focus is on the goal of raising the processed portion of reclaimed asphalt (RA) towards 100%, says Ammann Group, which has been involved
  • New releases from Lintec continues emphasis on energy-saving and recycling
    January 6, 2017
    Lintec has launched new asphalt and concrete mixing plants at bauma 2013. This rounds up the company’s product range and continues to put special emphasis on the subjects of energy saving and the recycling of asphalt pavement (RAP).