Introduction The textile industry uses steam boilers to produce massive amounts of steam in order to wash, dry, and sterilize fabric and clothing. Steam production is crucial for the textile industry. Factories in the textile industry require a lot of steam. Textile factories are among the largest consumers of steam in the world. Steam is used for drying, washing and sterilizing fabric; pressing and ironing clothes; sterilizing air, water and floors; drying tobacco leaves; tempering metals to make them malleable; making soap from oil or animal fat; boiling brine (saltwater) to extract salt. The type of boiler needed in this application depends on several factors: how hot it needs to get? How much steam pressure do you need? Is it continuous duty or just an intermittent demand? Where will you install it? What size is available at your local supplier? Boiler manufacturers generally have an extensive line up of standard industrial boilers designed specifically for applications such as textile plants where they are used primarily as process heat sources. For example a steam boiler manufacturer may have sizes ranging from 100 pounds per hour (lbs/hr) up through 100 000 lbs/hr depending on the nature of their customer’s operation requirements such as room size (or floor space occupied), cooling water availability and budget constraints imposed by financial institutions providing working capital loans required by many businesses when opening new facilities like garment manufacturing plants which require start up capital before any revenue generating activities take place. Textile industry steam is used to wash, dry, and sterilize fabric and clothing. In order for clothes to be considered “clean,” they must be free of bacteria. The textile industry uses steam to wash and dry fabric and clothing. The amount of water that the fabric or clothing is exposed to determines how clean it […]