News

  • Aeration mixer - Method for oxygenating and purifying fish ponds

    For anyone running a fish or shrimp pond, the most common hidden problem is not the amount of air you push into the water, but how evenly that oxygen reaches every single layer where your stock actually lives. Many traditional surface aerators only add oxygen to the top 30 centimeters of the pond, leaving the bottom 2 to 3 meters full of uneaten feed, fish waste, and trapped toxic gases that never
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  • Aeration mixer for improving lake water quality usage

    If you are managing a lake or small reservoir, you have likely noticed how summer heat can turn once clear water into a system struggling with uneven temperatures, low oxygen at the bottom, and unexpected algae blooms. These issues do not happen by accident. When warm surface water sits on top of cooler, denser bottom water for weeks on end, it creates a thermal barrier that stops natural mixing f
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  • Application of Aeration Mixer in River Ecological Restoration

    Rivers used to be alive. Fish swam, birds nested, and kids played along the banks. Then decades of industrial discharge, agricultural runoff, and untreated sewage turned many urban waterways into biological dead zones. Restoring these rivers is no longer optional — it is a priority for cities worldwide. And at the center of most successful ecological restoration projects sits one piece of equipmen
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  • The application of aeration mixer in treating black and odorous water bodies

    Nobody wants to walk past a river that reeks of rotten eggs. Black-odorous water bodies — those urban waterways choked with organic waste, depleted oxygen, and foul-smelling hydrogen sulfide — are among the most visible scars of rapid urbanization. The good news? Aeration mixers have become the backbone of modern black-odorous water remediation, and their role keeps growing.
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  • Aeration mixer for rural sewage treatment application

    Rural wastewater treatment is not a smaller version of a municipal plant. It is a completely different animal. The flows are lower, the loads spike unpredictably, the operators are not full-time engineers, and the equipment has to run for months without anyone looking at it. An aeration mixer in a rural setting faces conditions that would make a city plant operator wince. Get the selection wrong a
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