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Ipsen International Holding GmbH of Kleve, Germany develops, constructs and manufactures industrial furnaces. Its managing directors are Geoffrey Somary and Houman Khorram. Factory in Kleve. The Ipsen Group has 1,000 employees worldwide and has manufacturing sites in Germany, United States, and India, with support centers in China und Japan.
This category is primarily for metallurgical furnaces by generic type. Articles on particular furnaces should be in categories for particular countries subcategories of Category:Iron and steel mills or the equivalents for other metals.
A vacuum furnace is a type of furnace in which the product in the furnace is surrounded by a vacuum during processing. The absence of air or other gases prevents oxidation, heat loss from the product through convection, and removes a source of contamination. This enables the furnace to heat materials (typically metals and ceramics) to ...
An industrial furnace, also known as a direct heater or a direct fired heater, is a device used to provide heat for an industrial process, typically higher than 400 degrees Celsius. [1] They are used to provide heat for a process or can serve as reactor which provides heats of reaction.
A characteristic operation for a vacuum oven is the activation or regeneration of molecular sieves. [1] [2] Vacuum furnaces are related devices that operate at much higher temperatures and much lower pressures. The acetylacetonate complex Mn(acac) 2 is obtained by vacuum drying the yellow dihydrate Mn(acac) 2 (H 2 O) 2. [3]
Vacuum systems usually consist of gauges, vapor jet and pumps, vapor traps and valves along with other extensional piping. A vessel that is operating under vacuum system may be any of these types such as processing tank, steam simulator, particle accelerator, or any other type of space that has an enclosed chamber to maintain the system in less than atmospheric gas pressure.
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Electron-beam furnaces are used for production and refining of high-purity metals (especially titanium, vanadium, tantalum, niobium, hafnium, etc.) and some exotic alloys. [1] The EB furnaces use a hot cathode for production of electrons and high voltage for accelerating them towards the target to be melted.