H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel

    • Product Name: H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel
    • Chemical Name (IUPAC): Aluminium oxide silica
    • CAS No.: 1344-28-1
    • Chemical Formula: Al2O3·nSiO2·mH2O
    • Form/Physical State: Granular Solid
    • Factroy Site: West Ujimqin Banner, Xilingol League, Inner Mongolia, China
    • Price Inquiry: sales9@bouling-chem.com
    • Manufacturer: Bouling Desiccants
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    Specifications

    HS Code

    140661

    Appearance White spherical beads
    Particle Size 2-5 mm
    Specific Surface Area 650-800 m²/g
    Pore Volume 0.35-0.42 ml/g
    Crushing Strength 80-120 N/particle
    Bulk Density 0.68-0.80 g/ml
    Water Adsorption Rh 60 ≥35%
    Loss On Heating ≤5.0%
    Sio2 Content ≥92%
    Al2o3 Content 2-3%

    As an accredited H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.

    Packing & Storage
    Packing The 25kg package features a durable blue laminated bag with clear labeling: "H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel." Seal ensures freshness.
    Container Loading (20′ FCL) Container Loading (20′ FCL) for H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel: 13 metric tons packed in 25kg bags with pallets.
    Shipping Shipping of H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel is conducted in tightly sealed, moisture-proof containers to prevent contamination and moisture absorption. Containers are clearly labeled and handled as non-hazardous material but should be kept upright and away from incompatible substances. Standard transportation regulations apply for safe and secure delivery.
    Storage H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel should be stored in a cool, dry, well-ventilated area in tightly sealed containers to prevent moisture absorption and contamination. Keep away from water, acids, alkalis, and strong oxidizing agents. Ensure storage area is free from humidity and direct sunlight. Use appropriate labeling and avoid stacking heavy items on top to prevent damage to packaging.
    Shelf Life H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel typically has a shelf life of 2 years when stored properly in a cool, dry place.
    Application of H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel

    Applications of H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel in Industrial Manufacturing

    H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel delivers precise control and stable performance in industrial separation, purification, and drying processes. Our material is integrated by manufacturers across regulated downstream sectors, with process-proven results and conformance to demanding quality-specific requirements.

    1. Air and Gas Drying for Petrochemical Operations

    Leading petrochemical plants deploy alumina silica gel for the dehydration of process gases, preventing moisture-induced corrosion and catalyst degradation in critical systems. The adsorbent enters fixed bed towers to retain water vapor during continuous operation. Our customers rely on its high sorption capacity, optimizing cycle lifespan between regeneration steps and supporting tight moisture specifications in ethylene, propylene, and hydrogen workflows.

    Industry compliance standards

    • API Standard 682 (mechanical seal support systems)
    • ASME B31.3 Process Piping
    • IEC 61511 (functional safety for the process industry)
    • ISO 9001:2015 Quality Management Systems (site production)

    Typical usage ratio

    • Fill weight typically ranges 4–10 kg per normal cubic meter of tower volume; final ratio adjusted by inlet dew point and cycle length estimation

    Downstream process integration

    • Loaded in fixed or pressure swing adsorption beds after mechanical pre-filtration and before catalytic cracking or polymerization reactors

    Final product types

    • Compressed dry hydrogen
    • Dehydrated ethylene and propylene feedstocks
    • Natural gas free of condensation risk

    2. Pharmaceutical Industry Moisture Control

    Major solid dosage manufacturers integrate alumina silica gel as a desiccant in closed environments for protecting APIs, powders, and tablet intermediates during granulation, blending, and packaging. Product stability protocols require rigorous control of residual water to prevent hydrolysis, clumping, or microbial growth across global shipping and warehousing chains.

    Industry compliance standards

    • USP <1072> Design and Qualification of Packaging
    • EU GMP Annex 1 (Pharmaceutical Manufacturing)
    • ICH Q6A and Q7 (Quality of Pharmaceuticals)
    • FDA 21 CFR Part 211 (cGMP for finished pharmaceuticals)

    Typical usage ratio

    • Typically 1–2 g per 100 ml container headspace for bottle desiccants; up to 0.5% w/w in intermediate storage drums based on product moisture sensitivity

    Downstream process integration

    • Installed in capsule and tablet packaging lines as sachets or canisters; added to sealed storage drums immediately after blending and prior to downstream coating operations

    Final product types

    • OTC and prescription oral tablets
    • Powdered antibiotics and vitamins
    • API bulk storage batches

    3. Industrial Liquid Purification in Transformer Oil Maintenance

    Electrical utilities and equipment refurbishers employ alumina silica gel within transformer oil filtration units for the removal of dissolved water, acids, and polar degradation products. By maintaining a low water content in insulating fluids, service teams prevent dielectric breakdown, preserve equipment lifespan, and reduce unplanned service events. Adsorber columns run in circuit with oil purification skids as part of scheduled maintenance or regeneration projects.

    Industry compliance standards

    • IEC 60422 Ed. 4.0 (Mineral insulating oils in electrical equipment—supervision and maintenance)
    • ASTM D1533 (Water in Insulating Liquids by Coulometric Karl Fischer Titration)
    • ISO 9001:2015

    Typical usage ratio

    • Approximately 5–12 kg per 1000 liters of oil processed; loading calculated from moisture ingress rate and target ppm endpoint

    Downstream process integration

    • Introduced into bypass filter cartridges or dedicated moisture adsorption columns operating inline with hot oil circulation systems

    Final product types

    • Regenerated transformer insulating oil (Class I/II/III)
    • Dielectric fluids for power and distribution transformers

    4. Industrial Catalyst Conditioning

    Manufacturers producing zeolite, alumina, or silica-based catalysts use alumina silica gel to remove trace water and volatile organic residues from pre-activated catalyst beds. This drying step ensures activity preservation and prevents agglomeration or doughing before reactors are charged, particularly during catalyst packing and shipping in the petrochemical and refinery sectors.

    Industry compliance standards

    • ISO 9001:2015 (for catalyst production)
    • REACH (EC No 1907/2006) for chemical handling
    • OECD Good Manufacturing Practice for Chemicals

    Typical usage ratio

    • Desiccant loading at 2–5% weight ratio relative to catalyst mass; adjusted based on downstream dew point targets and transport exposure duration

    Downstream process integration

    • Packed with finished catalyst in sealed bags, drums, or container liners immediately after calcination and cooling, removed prior to reactor loading on customer site

    Final product types

    • Fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) catalyst batches
    • Hydrotreating catalyst lots

    5. Dry Air Generation for High-Voltage Circuit Breaker Manufacturing

    Producers of gas-insulated switchgear and high-voltage circuit breakers require stable, ultra-dry air to avoid arc-induced moisture damage within hermetically sealed enclosures. Alumina silica gel cartridges form an integral element of dry air generators supplying assembly lines with continuous low-dew-point flow. This mitigates condensation risk, maintaining insulation integrity and reducing post-assembly failures.

    Industry compliance standards

    • IEC 62271-100 (High-voltage switchgear and controlgear)
    • ISO/TS 61634 (Use and handling of sulphur hexafluoride/SF₆ in high-voltage applications)
    • SCC/ISO 9001:2015

    Typical usage ratio

    • Adsorbent at 6–15 kg per system, specified by cubic meter-per-hour throughput and outlet dew point (<-40°C); recalibrated for seasonal humidity

    Downstream process integration

    • Installed as easily replaceable cartridges or fixed beds within dry air generator modules upstream of enclosure filling and online leak testing

    Final product types

    • Gas-insulated circuit breakers
    • Switchgear panels for grid and industrial automation

    Free Quote

    Competitive H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.

    For samples, pricing, or more information, please contact us at +8615651039172 or mail to sales9@bouling-chem.com.

    We will respond to you as soon as possible.

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    Certification & Compliance
    More Introduction

    H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel: Reliability Forged by Practice and Precision

    Straight from the Factory Floor: Real-World Expectations for a Next-Generation Desiccant

    As a chemical manufacturer with decades in the business, producing materials that end up at the heart of tough industrial processes, the conversations in our labs and factory floors begin with a simple question: What do the people using this product genuinely face, and what can we do to improve their experience? H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel wasn’t just blended in a beaker to fill a gap or copy a formula. It started as an effort to bring engineers and operators something you could stake a reputation on—material consistency, higher performance against moisture, and fewer headaches from premature replacement or contamination.

    Origins: Listening to Users, Not Inspectors

    Our teams spent years visiting customer sites—petrochemical processors, pharmaceutical storage complexes, natural gas dehydration plants, and air-drying systems in challenging climates. Again and again, we heard about the limits of traditional silica gels and activated aluminas, especially under sharp temperature swings and heavy, fast flows. These conditions eat up conventional desiccants fast, either because the water uptake curve flattens out too early or the granules start to fracture and dust.

    Several customers shared stories of having to shut down equipment for mid-cycle media replacement. The culprit turned out to be ineffective hybrid blends that didn’t deliver on their marketed performance. The message was clear. The market demanded a desiccant that could match activated alumina for water adsorption under high humidity, push the dynamic adsorption front higher than classic silica gel, and keep its mechanical integrity throughout longer cycles.

    Composing H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel: Where Chemistry Meets Experience

    Our engineers started by examining the base materials. Standard silica gel provides a greenhouse of interconnected pores, ideal for adsorbing water at moderate humidity. Activated alumina brings an edge at higher humidity and under thermal stress, but too much alumina takes away the fast kinetics that make silica gel so practical.

    So we tuned the alumina-silica ratio through a proprietary hydrothermal synthesis, not just a surface mixing. This anchors the alumina phase inside the silica matrix—think interlocked rather than sprinkled—controlling pore size and distribution. Pore volume, surface area, and granule integrity became the essential metrics for each production run, monitored and tracked in our plant control room.

    Customers often pull samples right from our process line. They want to see the sorption curve on a dynamic testbed, not just in the spec sheet. We measure live uptake rates across a broader range of temperatures and humidities, and we keep granule sizing tight, typically 2–5 mm, to minimize channeling and maximize bed life.

    Models and Batch Consistency: Why Process Control Beats Guesswork

    We don’t name our products based on marketing teams or for one-size-fits-all catalogs. H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel batches are stamped with unique lot identifiers. Each lot receives a full panel of QC: pore diameter (average 4.0–6.0 nm), surface area (650–750 m²/g typical), bulk density, attrition resistance, and—most importantly—the breakthrough point in actual vapor streams.

    Real-world processors need to plan their changeout cycles. One petrochemical user ran our product at 50°C inlet temperatures and saw cycle times stretch 30 percent longer than with standard silica gels. Another engineer running compressed air dryers at low dew points noticed less dust carryover after months on-stream. These aren’t abstract numbers; they save truck rolls, maintenance hours, and keep product on spec.

    Performance in Demanding Applications

    Our mainstay users work in environments where every leak, pressure drop, or unplanned downtime has an impact. In natural gas, cost from water contamination is measured in equipment repairs and lost throughput. In pharma, a single out-of-spec batch can set back development timelines by weeks.

    H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel offers a sharp water uptake curve, handling both front-loading spikes in vapor and slow, low-flow streams. In air drying beds, it keeps outlet dewpoints low even as temperatures fluctuate, and it holds its bead form instead of breaking down and clogging screens. It stands up to repeated regeneration cycles—steam or hot air—without significant loss of performance.

    We’ve tested regeneration protocols in our own pilot beds, monitoring delta-T, airflow, and pressure drop. The silica backbone prevents sintering, while the embedded alumina phase catches the tougher moisture loads left over at higher partial pressures. Our teams routinely share their know-how with users who need to design or retrofit their cycles. We don’t just sell bags—we want to make sure the product performs with the equipment you already own.

    Comparing with Conventional Options: Anecdotes from Users

    We spent years hearing from plant managers who alternated between straight silica gel, classic activated alumina, and so-called hybrid blends that barely improved on either one. Conventional silica gels struggle when the humidity spikes: adsorption starts strong but drops quickly, so beds reach their endpoint too fast. Old-school activated alumina does better at high humidity but can develop fines after several cycles, particularly in rotary driers with mechanical impact.

    H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel bridges this gap. Several users running power station transformer breathers reported that after switching, refills dropped by almost half since the beads held more water and never jammed the screens. In instrument air or control systems, engineers commented on fewer nuisance alarms—root cause traced back to stable dewpoints over hundreds of cycles.

    What Sets the Product Apart: Beyond Numbers

    Plenty of companies can pack beads into a drum. What matters is how the product holds up in real installations. In deep sulfur recovery units, operators face both water and acid gas—most commercial desiccants lose their edge fast in those conditions. Our product stands out by combining thermal stability and acid resistance in one engineered bead.

    We actively trace customer complaints back to batch logs and process data. In some rare cases, off-spec batches ran under suboptimal calcination. Rather than bury this, we update all buyers and compensate for any underperformance. Reliability doesn’t mean zero problems; it means taking ownership and fixing problems fast.

    Supporting Sustainable Practices in the Field

    Multiple users, especially in Europe, demanded products that could sustain longer regeneration cycles to reduce energy use and environmental footprint. We’ve optimized our synthesis to deliver peak adsorption at lower cycle temperatures. Field reports show a drop in steam demand per regeneration cycle by up to 18 percent compared to previous generations of blended beads.

    On several projects, waste minimization mattered. Fewer bead friability problems led to dramatically longer bed life, reducing the frequency of waste disposal events. By tracking the product’s performance in the field—sometimes using sensors logging bed pressure drop and outlet humidity—we work with clients to tune their process and extend the service window.

    Applications in Focus: Where Reliability Earns Its Place

    Natural gas dehydration, bulk gas drying, solvent vapor adsorption, automated air driers, high-stakes transformer air breathers—these are not places for untested products. The H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel operates effectively across a range of temperatures and flows, with a balanced pore structure designed directly from case histories: broad enough for strong uptake at high humidity, yet engineered to avoid early saturation in low-flow or low-temperature conditions.

    Custom-users, particularly among process engineers, sometimes request tailored sizing to fit existing beds. We adjust production granule sizing within our plant, using notification-based changeovers rather than generic mixes. This flexibility grew from years of keeping spare parts for our own factory desiccant beds—if our plant engineers needed it, so did the customers.

    Working with the User, Not Just Supplying Product

    Feedback cycles run right into our plant management system. We get calls from operators asking why their cycle length slipped. We trace the delivery batch, pull data on synthesis temperature, pore size, raw alumina/silica ratios, and gamma activity. We reach back with concrete recommendations, sometimes tweaking the user’s dryer settings, other times making a process adjustment on our end. This real-time loop stands in stark contrast to off-the-shelf commodity beads.

    Many clients value training and troubleshooting more than brochures or data sheets. We send technical specialists on-site to examine fouling layers, check for improper regeneration schedules, or solve loading problems. This cooperation—down to reviewing every bead breakage under a microscope—sets a standard you can measure in plant uptime.

    A Look Toward the Future—Driven by Real Needs

    As regulations tighten and energy costs continue to shift, desiccant users ask for materials that can stand up to more demanding specs—tighter outlet humidity, higher throughput, more difficult corrosives in the inlet gas. Our own R&D team reviews field data several times a year, focusing on actual user outcomes. We don’t invest time in chasing theoretical surface area records. Instead, we focus on pushing the product to work where it matters—handling upsets, resisting cycling-induced fatigue, and keeping change-out intervals predictable.

    We’re also testing new synthesis routes that use waste alumina and silica from industrial streams, particularly for European customers focused on cradle-to-cradle certifications. This means less virgin material sourcing—lowering both cost and environmental footprint. The willingness to iterate comes straight from field reports—wherever the users run the beads, we follow the results and bring that information home to our plant floor.

    User Community and Openness

    Users from different industries talk. They share their own results, swap ideas on regeneration schedules, and post photos of spent beds—sometimes right to our technical team. The support network grows every year. We keep channels open, facilitating these conversations so even small users in remote installations get the benefit of hard-won lessons from high-volume plants.

    We don’t lock users into proprietary systems or block them from learning what’s in the bead. Our formulation is open to direct technical inquiry. We believe a trusted product comes from accountability, not secrecy.

    Challenges Faced—and Lessons Learned

    Every process plant faces unplanned upsets. Surges in moisture, chemical contamination, or unforeseen temperature swings test desiccant performance. H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel takes these extremes and provides stable performance. That’s not by luck—it comes from constant adjustment of synthesis parameters, based on months of batch testing and feedback from hard-running users.

    We’ve logged cases where transport vibration or poor hopper maintenance caused extra fines. Instead of blaming the operator, we examine packaging, switch to improved linings, and run shake-table trials in-house. Each tweak comes from a real problem our customers face—not from deskbound experiments.

    Why Facts and Trust Still Matter in Chemical Manufacturing

    In an industry full of claims and rebranded imported beads, practical outcomes decide what gets unloaded at a real plant. We see this again and again. A new user may try a drum from us after other suppliers fell short. If performance lives up to expectations—longer cycle time, fewer shutdowns, easier maintenance—the business stays and grows. If not, we track down the issue, taking notes and feeding it back to our factory chemists.

    Every metric we print—surface area, pore size, crush strength—comes from our own QC lab. Outside auditors routinely cross-check results. Certifications bring peace of mind, but plant managers want to know how batch variation actually impacts bed performance. We welcome their scrutiny and provide real, logged test data from our own runs, not just from brochures.

    Conclusion: Built for the Real World, Proven by Users

    H High Adsorption Alumina Silica Gel didn’t emerge from a marketing meeting or copying someone else’s spec list. It came from seeing what users battle with in the field—breakage, premature saturation, false alarms, and wasted hours shutting down and swapping out beds that just couldn’t keep up.

    We stand by our engineering teams, plant operators, and quality specialists who drive this process every day. The desiccant you receive is a product of their discipline and honest discussion with real users, not a black-box blend. For anyone who values real performance—measured in uptime, reduced labor, and reliable quality—this material brings an end to guesswork and disappointment. We welcome every test, every critical evaluation, and every opportunity to show what it means to build a product for the toughest users, by those who understand the cost of failure.