Typical use scenarios in the operation
Depending on kitchen workflows, grease load, and infrastructure, hotspots vary. The following examples show typical use cases – the specific dosing logic is tailored to the operation.
KKitchen & Dishwashing Area
Hotspots at inlets, siphons, and transitions
In heavily frequented areas, fat peaks can lead to deposits at typical bottlenecks. Here, a dosing point is often chosen so that the application acts preventively.
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Application where fat typically accumulates (hotspot approach).
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Effectiveness can be better during times of low water flow.
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Integration into existing processes without additional chemical additives.
Note: Implementation and effectiveness depend on the system, load, and temperature.
Grease Separator
Relief and more stable operating conditions
In operations with grease separators, stabilizing conditions is often the focus. Dosing point and interval are chosen so that operation becomes more predictable.
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Dosing logic is oriented towards peak loads and operating times.
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Odor (e.g., H₂S) may decrease depending on the system.
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Documentable pilot phase to coordinate intervals.
Note: Implementation and effectiveness depend on the system, load, and temperature.
Multiple Locations / Chains
Standardization with location-specific fine-tuning
For multiple kitchens, a repeatable approach is helpful. At the same time, infrastructure and temperature are considered for each location to configure the application appropriately.
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Same mode of action, adjusted dosing points per location.
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Pilot phase as a "template" for rollout decisions.
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Maintenance and service visits can become more predictable.
Note: Implementation and effectiveness depend on the system, load, and temperature.
This is how we derive the appropriate dosing logic
We jointly consider hotspots, grease load, operating times, and temperature. From this, a dosing recommendation (pilot phase) is derived – tailored to infrastructure and objectives.