Core Process for Coir Pith Desalination and Dewatering: Spray Washing + Mechanical Pressing
Coir pith desalination and dewatering is typically an integrated, continuous process rather than a task performed by a single piece of equipment. The core logic follows a "wash-then-press" sequence:
Desalination (Washing) Stage: Fresh water is sprayed onto the coir pith to dissolve and wash away salts. To enhance efficiency and conserve water, multi-stage spraying or counter-current washing methods are commonly employed.
Dewatering (Pressing) Stage: High-moisture coir pith undergoes powerful mechanical pressing to expel water, bringing the moisture content to a level suitable for drying or direct use.
Key Indicators and Processes for Advanced Desalination and Dewatering
Achieving "advanced" processing requires attention to the following aspects:
1. Desalination Standards: For high-quality coir pith used in soilless cultivation, the salt content (EC value) must be reduced to a safe level. Research indicates that a target EC value of less than 0.5 mS/cm after washing is a critical quality benchmark.
2. Dewatering Performance: Mechanical roller pressing can typically reduce the coir pith's moisture content from its raw state to 50%–60%, significantly lowering energy consumption for subsequent drying stages. Final drying to approximately 15% moisture makes the material suitable for compression and storage.
3. Integrated Solutions: Leading equipment suppliers (such as Jiuyi Environmental Protection) have introduced fully intelligent coir pith desalination and dewatering production lines. These systems integrate hydration, desalination, and dewatering into a single workflow, effectively transforming high-salt material into low-salt product and resolving industry challenges associated with high residual salt and inconsistent quality.