Hot water boilers have a wide range of uses, mainly in the following aspects:
Providing Building Heating
This is the most common and primary use of hot water boilers. In cold climates, hot water boilers serve as the heat source for centralized or independent heating systems. The heated water is piped to radiators, underfloor heating coils, or fan coil units within buildings, releasing heat into the indoor space through convection and radiation to maintain a suitable indoor temperature. This heating method is stable and comfortable, suitable for various building types such as residences, office buildings, schools, and hospitals.
Supplying Domestic Hot Water
Hot water boilers can be used to prepare hot water for daily life, such as for washing, bathing, and kitchen cleaning. In hotels, guesthouses, public bathhouses, swimming pools, and residential buildings, hot water boilers can continuously provide domestic hot water at a stable temperature and pressure to meet the needs of a large number of people. Some systems combine heating and domestic hot water supply, providing them separately through heat exchange equipment, improving the overall utilization efficiency of the equipment.
Meeting Industrial Production Process Requirements
In many industrial production fields, hot water is an important process medium or auxiliary heat source. For example, in the food processing industry, hot water is needed for cleaning, boiling, and sterilization; in the textile printing and dyeing industry, hot water is used for raw material processing, dyeing, rinsing, and other processes; in the chemical industry, certain reaction processes or material insulation require hot water at specific temperatures. Industrial hot water boilers typically provide hot water with larger flow rates, higher temperatures, or more stable parameters, depending on process requirements.