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Welcome to the Milton Roy Mixing’s newsletter which will provide you with useful insights and expand your knowledge about mixing applications and the latest news related to Milton Roy Mixing products.

In many processes, mixers play a much bigger role than it seems.

Water treatment, Energy, Mining, Chemistry, Food industry, etc. no matter the sector, good mixing defines good results.

A well-designed mixer isn’t just equipment. It can improve your entire production process.

What does a mixer really do?

Industrial mixers accelerate transfer phenomena: Heat transfer and Mass transfer. They inject energy and motion into the fluid.

This motion is what enables every process operation: blending, dissolving, diluting, reacting, stabilizing, heating, cooling, and separating.

Here are the main physicochemical phenomena and related applications where mixers are absolutely essential.

Each is explained simply with everyday examples, supported by industrial applications.

Heat Transfer

Heat transfer describes how temperature is spread within a system. Uneven temperature distribution can limit process efficiency, even when heating or cooling capacity is sufficient.

 

Temperature Homogenization

Inside a tank, reactor, or storage vessel, heating or cooling is rarely uniform. Achieving a uniform thermal environment requires temperature homogenization.

  • Stirring hot matcha latte that has cooled to distribute heat evenly
  • In the digestion tank of biogas production, optimal biological activity requires consistent temperature

Optimized processes, improved product quality and consistency without losses, reduced energy spends.

Mass Transfer

Mass transfer describes how substances are spread within a system. It occurs through two main physicochemical phenomena: dilution and dispersion. Both rely on effective mixing.

 

Dilution

Dilution is the reduction of product concentration.

By adding a liquid, usually water or a solvent, the liquid that is too concentrated is diluted.

  • Adding water to syrup to make a drink
  • Dilution of a concentrated acid to obtain a suitable solution for chemical treatment

A mixer ensures the product is spreading evenly.

Consistent concentration, across the entire batch, batch after batch.

 

Blending & General Mixing

Blending is the most common application that relies on dilution phenomena.

Blending, or general mixing, is the combination of two or more ingredients to create a uniform product.

  • Mixing different fruit juices to create a delicious mocktail
  • Blending different crude oil types to obtain the wanted oil quality

From ingredients to final mixtures, the mixer creates uniformity.

Consistent and reproducible quality, texture, quality, and performance. 

Coagulation is a well-known process built on dilution mechanisms.

In water treatment, coagulation is a process that neutralizes the negative charges around particles. By neutralizing these charges, the particles no longer tend to repel each other.

On the other hand, coagulation generally refers to the transition of a dispersed system (liquid, suspension, colloid) toward a more solid or agglomerated state.

  • Making a flan or a bechamel sauce
  • Aggregate impurities such as hop residues and proteins in the brewing process

The mixer creates the right turbulence to aggregate small particles to form small flocs.

Faster process time, improved separation and cleaner flocculation or downstream processing.

Dispersion

While dilution is associated with concentration, dispersion drives how substances are distributed.

It is a physicochemical phenomenon that enables the uniform distribution of one phase within another: most often through the dispersion of tiny solid particles or droplets in a liquid.

  • Dispersing spices into a sauce
  • Distributing colorants in the ink industry

A mixer creates the mixture by breaking the particules and distributing them evenly.

Stabilization of the suspension over time, product quality improvement.

 Emulsification, dissolution, gas dispersion and suspension are typical dispersion applications.

1 - Emulsification

Emulsification creates a stable formula of two liquids that don’t normally mix like oil and water for instance.

  • Making vinaigrette
  • Blend UV‑filter oils with water to produce sunscreen

A mixer breaks big droplets into tiny ones, stabilizes the emulsion, ensures uniform texture, and prevents phase separation.

Stable, uniform emulsions. Without mixing, the liquids quickly separate into layers.

 

2 - Dissolution

Dissolution is melting a solid, or another liquid, in a liquid.

  • Dissolving sugar in coffee or tea
  • Dissolving powdered reagents in the pharmaceutical industry

By keeping both the liquid and the solid in motion, mixers increase liquid-solid contact. That helps solids to dissolve faster and speed up the process.

Uniform solution with shorter processing time.

3 - Maintaining Suspensions

Some particles naturally settle at the basin or tank bottom. This accumulation requires regular cleaning and has huge negative impacts.

  • Shaking the bottle of orange juice to keep the pulp suspended before drinking
  • Keeping particles suspended in mining slurry tanks

Mixers keep the particules floating, preventing particles from settling to the bottom.

Stable suspensions, no contamination risks, no damaged equipment, reduced waste, 100% usable tank volume.

Flocculation is a well-known process built on this mechanism.

Right after coagulation, flocculation enables the formation of flocs, which grow in size through the addition of a flocculant (most often a polymer).

In some processes, these flocs can be filtered and removed more easily. In others, the flocs are the final product (like cheeses!).

  • Helping the filtration system of the swimming pool when water is cloudy
  • In wastewater treatment plants, flocculants are added to facilitate their removal by sedimentation or filtration.

Low-shear mixers preserve floc structure and enhance floc growth thanks to a gentle and controlled agitation.

Less sludge and lower handling costs, preserved flocs and sensitive product integrity, optimal process efficiency, less chemical consumption.


Flocculator_Milton Roy Mixing

4 – Aeration/Gaz Dispersion

Those processes are widely used in fermenters and bioreactors.

Aeration is the process of injecting air or gas bubbles into a liquid to oxygenate it or strip unwanted gases. It is a process applied in water treatment, agrifood, cosmetics and pharmaceutical industry.

 A mixer helps to:

  • disperse bubbles throughout the tank, not only at the injection point
  • improve gas-liquid contact
  • ensure uniform oxygen (or nitrogen, CO₂…) distribution
  • accelerate mass transfer.

 

 Aquarium aerators providing oxygen to fish

Fermentation processes: Anaerobic fermentation happens when microorganisms break down organic matter without oxygen, while aerobic fermentation occurs with oxygen, allowing them to break it down more completely and produce more energy.

Mixers dramatically increase efficiency, saving energy and time with shorter batch times.

Enhance process, long-term cost savings, higher product output.

 


Industrial_Agitator_for_Fermentation_Process_Milton_Roy_Mixing