| MOQ: | 10Tons |
| Price: | Please contact customer service |
| Standard Packaging: | Bagged |
| Delivery Period: | About six weeks |
| Payment Method: | T/T,D/P,D/A,L/C,Western Union,MoneyGram |
| Supply Capacity: | 100,000 tons per year |
Industrial salt, fundamentally sodium chloride (NaCl) in its technical-grade form, is an indispensable commodity that serves as a cornerstone for a vast array of global industries. Our premium-grade product, specified at a purity of 99%, is engineered not as a food-grade additive but as a high-performance, cost-effective workhorse for critical industrial applications.
Its two primary and massive-scale uses are as a highly efficient and economical Deicing Agent for winter road safety and as the fundamental Chlor-Alkali Raw Material in chemical manufacturing. This coarse, free-flowing crystalline solid is typically sourced from solar evaporation of seawater or mining of rock salt deposits, then processed to achieve consistent chemical composition, grain size distribution, and solubility characteristics suited for heavy-duty use.
The 99% minimum purity ensures high efficacy while minimizing impurities like insoluble matter, calcium, magnesium, and sulfates, which could otherwise compromise performance in sensitive processes or cause undesirable scaling and corrosion.
The use of industrial salt as a Deicing Agent is one of its most visible and socially critical applications. When spread on roads, highways, bridges, and walkways during winter weather events, it works by lowering the freezing point of water.
The salt dissolves into the thin layer of liquid water always present on ice, forming a brine solution that has a significantly lower freezing point than pure water. This brine film undermines the bond between the ice and the pavement, allowing the ice to be broken up by traffic or mechanical removal.
Rock salt (industrial salt) remains the deicer of choice for most municipalities and transportation departments globally due to its proven effectiveness, widespread availability, and low cost per unit of ice-melting capacity.
Perhaps even more fundamental is the role of high-purity industrial salt as the essential Chlor-Alkali Raw Material. The chlor-alkali industry is a pillar of modern chemistry, using electrolysis to split brine (a saturated saltwater solution) into three primary products: chlorine gas (Cl₂), sodium hydroxide (caustic soda, NaOH), and hydrogen gas (H₂).
This process, primarily conducted in membrane, diaphragm, or (historically) mercury cells, is the starting point for an immense value chain. Chlorine is used to manufacture PVC plastics, disinfectants, solvents, pharmaceuticals, and agrochemicals.
The quality of the salt used is paramount. Our 99% pure industrial salt, dissolved into high-purity brine, minimizes impurities that can poison expensive electrolysis cell membranes, cause harmful side reactions, reduce efficiency, or lead to dangerous byproduct formation.
Beyond deicing and chlor-alkali production, industrial salt finds use in numerous other sectors including water softening, animal husbandry, dye and pigment manufacturing, leather tanning, textile processing, and oil and gas drilling.
Our comprehensive quality control process ensures that each batch of industrial salt meets the required chemical and physical specifications. Parameters such as sodium chloride content, moisture level, insolubles, and grain size distribution are rigorously tested.
Responsible use of industrial salt involves managing its environmental impact. While naturally occurring, high concentrations of chloride ions from road runoff can affect freshwater ecosystems, soil health, and corrosion of infrastructure and vehicles.
Modern best practices in deicing aim to optimize application rates, use pre-wetting to reduce scatter and bounce, and employ targeted application to minimize overall usage.
We provide Safety Data Sheets and guidance on proper storage—keeping the salt in covered, dry conditions to prevent caking and minimize runoff—and handling to ensure worker safety and environmental protection.