• The HollowStream can be applied to solve cooling, cleaning, rinsing and dust suppression applications for industry.
    The HollowStream can be applied to solve cooling, cleaning, rinsing and dust suppression applications for industry.
Close×

EXAIR’s new 1/2 NPT HollowStream liquid atomizing spray nozzle provides a hollow cone spray pattern for pressurised liquids and can be applied to solve cooling, cleaning, rinsing and dust suppression applications for industry.

The tangential flow design is vaneless, with wide open internal features to resist clogging and work well with liquids containing particulate. These liquid nozzles produce a uniform distribution of liquid in a ring pattern with medium to large droplets. Their right-angle design is compact and can fit in small areas. Liquid operating pressure is up to 250 PSI.

With HollowStream nozzles, the liquid is supplied into the body of the nozzle creating a swirling action within a vortex chamber. This vortex produces the hollow-cone spray pattern when the precision nozzle breaks the liquid surface tension as it exits the orifice and into a controlled spray angle. With an adjustable flow rate, it’s perfect for dust mitigation, pollution scrubbers, foam breaking and more.

Available from Compressed Air Australia, the type 303 stainless steel construction of liquid atomizing nozzles adds to their durability and corrosion resistance. HollowStream nozzles are CE compliant and available in a variety of flow rates. They complement EXAIR’s large line of other 1/8, 1/4, 3/8 and 1/2 NPT liquid nozzles, which are also available in a variety of liquid patterns and flow rates.

Packaging News

The World Packaging Organisation has named 234 winners for the WorldStar Packaging Awards 2026, which were selected from 481 entries submitted across 36 countries.

ACOR is calling on the Government to urgently introduce packaging reforms or risk the collapse of Australia’s plastic recycling sector and face millions of tonnes of plastic waste polluting the environment.

As 2025 draws to a close, it is clear the packaging sector has undergone one of its most consequential years in over a decade. Consolidation at the top, restructuring in the middle, and bold innovation at the edges have reshaped the industry’s horizons. At the same time, regulators, brand owners and recyclers have inched closer to a new circular operating model, even as policy clarity remains elusive.