New NOCOLOK® plant
launched in China

Lansol Fluorchemicals’ NOCOLOK® production has been launched in China. Less than a year after the cornerstone ceremony the plant in Quzhou (Zhejiang province) was officially opened on 18 June. Operations will start as planned in the beginning of July. Lansol is a joint venture between Solvay and the Chinese chemical company Sinochem Lantian. Besides Germany and Korea, Quzhou is Solvay’s third production site for NOCOLOK® brazing flux.

New NOCOLOK plant launched in China

The new plant will help Solvay to serve the rapidly growing automotive market and the segment around stationary air-conditioning systems in China. “It is an important building block in our global growth strategy,” Dr. Bernd Wilkes, President of the Global Business Unit (GBU) Special Chemicals at Solvay, said at the official opening ceremony. Around 100 representatives from politics, business and administration came to the ceremony at the Sinochem Lansol plant, as well as customers and employees of Solvay, Lansol and Sinochem Lantian.

Expanding capacities close to markets and customers

With NOCOLOK®, a fluorine Specialty, Solvay is a world market leader in flux agents for aluminum brazing. “Our focus here is to expand our production and development capacities in this specific area, and in the markets that promise sustainable high growth rates, and in which our customers are,“ Horst Kröger, Strategy Director of the GBU, emphasized.

The market for stationary air conditioning systems is growing rapidly in China. “This results in enormous opportunities for our NOCOLOK®,“ Kröger said. “We are starting with around 3,000 tons per year. But our capacities can also be expanded at short notice.”

New NOCOLOK plant launched in China

The cooperation with Sinochem Lantian, which has existed for years, led to the foundation of the Lansol Fluorchemicals joint venture in 2006. Since April 2013 Solvay has held a majority share in the company. At the Quzhou site near Hangzhou, in Zhejiang province in eastern China, Lansol operates a facility for the production of hydrogen fluoride and high-purity hydrofluoric acid (HF) with around 100 employees. Now, with the addition of the NOCOLOK® production, around 25 jobs have been added.

The brazing flux is the standard for the production of aluminium heat exchangers for engine cooling and air conditioning systems in the automotive industry. But also the manufacturers of stationary heat exchangers in air conditioning systems and refrigerators are increasingly converting their production from copper to aluminum, using the NOCOLOK® brazing process. Besides Onsan (Korea) and Bad Wimpfen (Germany), Quzhou is Solvay’s third NOCOLOK® plant.

Invitation to Chillventa 2014

Exhibition Home of Refrigeration, Air Conditioning, Ventilation and Heat Pumps.

Energy efficiency and sustainability remain the driving forces behind the development of new products and systems for refrigeration, air conditioning, ventilation and heat pumps.

What future developments in heat pump efficiency are in the pipeline? What’s happening in the market for environment-friendly refrigerants? What do modern integrated C&I concepts look like? How will the individual trades be connected in the future? With their spectrum of products and services for refrigeration, air conditioning, heat pumps, industrial refrigeration and commercial refrigeration, the industry’s top players provide answers to tomorrow’s questions today.

Exhibition Centre Nuremberg,
Tuesday, 14 - Thursday, 16 October 2014,
Daily 09:00 - 18:00

Solvay Fluor is exhibiting and you can find the NOCOLOK® team in hall 4 at stand 4-224.

Invitation –
2014 Solvay Invitational Aluminium Brazing Seminar

The Solvay Invitational Aluminium Brazing Seminar is a first of its kind in recent years to bring together both suppliers and manufacturers in NAFTA’s growing industrial centre in Monterrey, Mexico.

The purpose

To further promote aluminium brazing technology by means of presentations, comments and technical discussions.

To provide numerous opportunities to establish or strengthen business relationships, establish personal contacts, expand networks and grow confidence in the art of aluminium brazing.

Specialized in unique subject matter that can influence how well we braze, participating companies will share their knowledge and experiences with us. We invite you to take part in this significant event.

Programme and Registration

November 12-13, 2014
Holiday Inn, Monterrey-Parque Fundidora
100 Monterrey, Mexico 64010

Seminar
for last-minute participants – only three places left

For the EABS Seminar 2014 three seats have become vacant with short notice.

This technical training seminar about the theory and practice of aluminium flame and furnace brazing will be presented in English at the Conference Centre and laboratories of Solvay GmbH, in Hannover, Germany, on the 9th and 10th September 2014.

EABS

You can find the detailed seminar programme and registration here.

Register now quickly and secure the last places.

Video Coverage about
the 8th International Congress Aluminium Brazing

DVS-TV was underway at the Congress Aluminium Brazing in Düsseldorf, Germany, which took place in June 2014.

The interesting video report is online since July. Among other things, coverage included Solvay’s presence and an interview with Dr. Hans-Walter Swidersky.


Watch the video.

New NOCOLOK® product information in Chinese and Korean

For the opening of the third NOCOLOK® factory in Quzhou in China, Solvay Special Chemicals updated the NOCOLOK® product information in Chinese and Korean.

The datasheet NOCOLOK® Flux (Quzhou) has just recently been released. All product information contain data on physical characteristics, specifications, packaging and classification according to GHS. The new datasheets are available for download.

Chinese:

Korean:

Still waiting for your VOTE

The NOCOLOK® Team would like to thank all the participants who took part in the NOCOLOK® Online Survey in the first and second quarter 2014.

Please take five minutes, choose your language and fill out the questionnaire.

Thank you in advance for your feedback.

Information to Electrostatic Fluxing

In dry flux application, the flux powder is electrostatically charged (typical voltage is ~ 100 kV) and applied to a grounded work piece.

An electrical field results in flux deposition of the work piece. practice, anisotropic distribution of the electric field can influence the homogeneity of powder coverage. At edges powder may accumulate, while penetration of powder into deep/thick fin packages (e.g., in case of double row tubes) can be limited by the Faraday cage effect.

Flux powder is electrically charged in the gun. However, it loses charge relatively fast when it hits the grounded heat exchanger. Therefore adhesion of the flux on the work piece is established rather by relatively weak Van der Waals forces than by electrostatic forces. Fine flux particles adhere better on the surface – but they are more difficult to operate with in the dry powder feeding system.

The relatively fine flux particles are more difficult to handle in dry powder feed systems compared to coarser paint powders – therefore the equipment used for electrostatic flux application is adapted to meet the specific requirements. Venturi pump, hose diameter, air flow and spray nozzle suitable for flux application are designed to minimize the possibility for powder buildup and clogging in the system. Powder transport within the hose system and the spray nozzle is further enhanced by introduction of additional air streams. The direction of the powder flow should always be from top to bottom. Sharp changes in flow direction must be avoided. In critical areas additional vibration units are installed to avoid powder buildup.

There are two types of powder feed systems established on the market

The first type starts with the flux powder being fluidized in a fluidization vessel by compressed air that is fed through a porous membrane at the bottom of the fluidization vessel. The air going through the flux makes it behave like a fluid, since the powder is essentially diluted with air. A pick up tube attached to a Venturi pump is extended into the fluidized flux. Powder dosage is controlled by the volume of air flow through the pump. To optimize fluidization the vessel may additionally be equipped with a stirrer.

This type of feed system works perfectly well for classic electrostatic paints powders that are easy to fluidize, however, it may be difficult to establish a stable fluidization with ‘standard’ flux powder (i.e. the flux powder quality offered for wet/slurry-based flux application).

Fluctuations in density of the fluidized bed can result in inhomogeneous spray pattern (splashing) and might be a source for flux buildup within the system.

NOCOLOK® Flux Drystatic is optimized to minimize the challenges of powder feeding, while providing sufficient fine particle fraction for good adhesion properties.

The second type of powder feed system works on the principle of feeding the powder by a rotating helix screw (see the illustrations in the article above). Because of the mechanical displacement of the flux powder from the hopper, such devices minimize fluctuations of flux powder flow.

Most mechanical type of dry flux feed systems work with standard quality NOCOLOK® Flux as well as with special ‘Drystatic’ grade NOCOLOK® powder.

To achieve flux distribution patterns for specific process needs (e.g., higher flux loads in tube to header areas, coating from both sides of thick cores), multiple spray nozzles are arranged for deposition of the necessary flux load at different locations of the heat exchanger.

Dry fluxing booths must be equipped with a filter system to collect the overspray. The overspray material is recycled within the booth. To avoid accumulation of impurities within the recovered flux, it is necessary to take care of the booth environment (i.e. avoid dust, fumes, and high humidity level) as well as for the quality of the compressed air used. Contamination introduced by the heat exchangers or the transport belt must be prevented as well.

Due to the relatively weak flux adhesion (compared with wet- or paint- application methods), handling of dry fluxed parts should be done with special care to avoid flux fall off, especially at higher flux loads. To reduce flux fall off, some users perform electrostatic fluxing on heat exchangers with evaporative oils still present on the surfaces. Thermal degreasing in this case takes place after fluxing – just before the parts enter the brazing furnace.

NOCOLOK® NEWS

Presents information for NOCOLOK® users.

Publisher:
Solvay Fluor GmbH
Hans-Böckler-Allee 20 • 30173 Hannover, Germany

Place: Hannover
Register: Hannover HRB 58647

Managing Directors: Horst Kröger, Dr. Johannes Eicher

E-Mail: nocolok@solvay.com

Editorial:
Solvay Fluor GmbH
Department SFLU-RBUSI
E-Mail: hans.swidersky@solvay.com

Production:
Ahlers Heinel Werbeagentur GmbH, Hannover
www.ahlersheinel.de
nocolok@ahlersheinel.de

NOCOLOK® is a registered Trademark of Solvay Fluor GmbH

All statements, information, and data given herein are believed to be accurate and reliable but are presented without guarantee, warranty or responsibility of any kind, express or implied. Statements or suggestions concerning possible use of our products are made without representation or warranty that any such use is free of patent infringement, and are not recommandations to infringe any patent. The user should not assume that all safety measures are indicated, or that other measures may not be required. In any case, the user is not exempt from observing all legal, administrative and regulatory procedures relating to the product, personal hygiene, and protection of human welfare and the environment.