Apr 09, 2026

In today’s industrial landscape, I see a consistent challenge across sectors: how to achieve zero liquid discharge (ZLD), efficient concentration, and resource recovery—all while reducing energy consumption and environmental impact.
This is exactly where MVR (Mechanical Vapor Recompression) evaporation stands out.
By recompressing secondary vapor generated during evaporation and reusing it as a heat source, MVR technology transforms what was once waste energy into a powerful driver of efficiency. The result? A dramatic reduction in steam consumption, lower operating costs, and a significantly smaller carbon footprint.
With the acceleration of China’s dual-carbon goals, the MVR market has entered a phase of rapid growth and intense specialization. From my perspective, one company that consistently stands out is Myande.
What makes them different isn’t just equipment—it’s a system-level advantage built across four key dimensions:
What I find most compelling about Myande’s MVR system is its near closed-loop steam cycle.
By compressing secondary vapor and reinjecting it into the heating chamber, the system minimizes reliance on external steam. Electricity becomes the primary energy input, enabling a step-change reduction in total energy consumption compared to traditional multi-effect evaporation systems.
This is not just incremental improvement—it’s a fundamental shift in how thermal energy is utilized.
In high-salinity wastewater treatment, separation is often the biggest bottleneck. Myande approaches this differently.
I see their targeted crystallization process packages as a core innovation:
🔸Multi-effect evaporation systems enable efficient ammonium sulfate recovery
🔸Crystallization sequences are controlled using ternary phase diagram modeling, ensuring high-purity salt output
🔸Their freeze crystallization technology pushes lithium recovery rates to industry-leading levels
This turns waste streams into recoverable value streams—a critical advantage in circular economy models.
What truly elevates Myande, in my view, is their ability to move beyond standalone equipment and deliver full-scenario solutions tailored to specific industries:
I’ve seen how evaporation and crystallization technologies are applied in lithium extraction—from ore processing to battery recycling—maximizing resource recovery.
In sugar alcohol production, their multi-stage falling film evaporators significantly reduce residence time, effectively preventing Maillard reactions and improving product clarity and taste (e.g., erythritol).
🔸Chemical & Agrochemical
They enable high-salinity wastewater treatment involving ammonium sulfate and sodium chloride, achieving near-zero discharge with salt recovery.
Their customized MVR systems for tobacco extract concentration enhance the purity and concentration of active components—supporting premium product manufacturing.
To me, this is the real shift: from “selling machines” to engineering outcomes.
In industrial projects, I’ve learned that technology alone isn’t enough—execution determines success.

Myande’s strength lies in its full lifecycle delivery model, covering:
🔸Process design
🔸Equipment manufacturing
🔸Installation & commissioning
🔸Long-term operation & maintenance
What stands out is their ability to provide highly customized automation solutions, tailored after in-depth client evaluation. This ensures not just operational stability, but continuous performance optimization over time.
It’s a platform for industrial transformation—one that enables:
🔸Zero liquid discharge
🔸Resource recovery (salts, metals, thermal energy)
🔸Sustainable, low-carbon operations
In a market becoming increasingly competitive, I see Myande not just keeping pace—but actively shaping the future of green process engineering.