Industrial croissant production is one of the most mechanically demanding applications in commercial bakery automation. The croissant's iconic flaky texture is the product of a precisely laminated dough structure — hundreds of alternating layers of pastry dough and fat — created through a controlled sequence of sheeting, folding, thinning, cutting, and rolling operations. Replicating that process reliably at scale, across thousands of cycles per hour, requires engineering precision that purpose-built production line equipment alone can deliver.
Hengjiang Intelligent Technology Co., Ltd (Hexeon)↗ has developed a high-efficiency, stable Croissant Forming Production Line↗ specifically designed to meet large-scale, premium-quality croissant manufacturing demands. The line handles both straight-shaped and classic crescent-shaped croissants and is configurable for maximum outputs up to 2,000 kg/h — making it one of the highest-throughput commercial croissant systems available on the market today.
Key Specification: The Hexeon Croissant Formation Line operates at up to 150 forming cycles per minute, with dough sheet widths of 600 / 800 / 1000 / 1200 mm, a thickness range of 1.5–10 mm, and total installed power consumption of 50–140 kW. The C-configuration layout measures 38,491 × 8,564 × 3,326 mm and is engineered for food-grade production environments requiring floor load capacity ≥ 500 kg/m².
Understanding what a croissant forming production line must do requires understanding the dough science it serves. A croissant is a laminated yeast dough — in French culinary terminology, a pâte levée feuilletée. It differs from puff pastry (which uses only physical expansion from steam between fat layers) in that it also incorporates yeast leavening, producing both the characteristic open crumb structure from fermentation and the distinct flaky separation between layers from fat lamination.
The lamination process — known as tourage — involves encasing a block of fat (traditionally butter, though industrial lines typically use purpose-formulated pastry margarine for temperature stability) within the dough, then repeatedly folding and rolling the combined mass to create a defined number of alternating dough-fat layers. Each fold multiplies the layer count: a three-fold sequence produces 27 layers, a four-fold sequence 81 layers. Industrial programs producing 10 to 100+ layers must manage the cumulative thermal and mechanical stress on the gluten network across every lamination cycle — a core engineering challenge that the machinery must address with precision.
The fat layer must remain solid (not liquid) throughout lamination to prevent it from absorbing into the dough matrix and collapsing the layer structure. This requires careful dough temperature management, controlled sheeting pressures, and precise working speeds — all parameters governed by the production line's mechanical design and control system. Hexeon's line supports this through its Low-Stress Continuous Dough Sheeting System, which uniformly extends dough through controlled lamination pressure without generating excessive frictional heat.
The Hexeon Croissant Formation Line integrates 13 purpose-designed process stations in a sequential C-configuration layout. Each station addresses a specific mechanical or physical requirement of the lamination and forming process. Understanding what each station does — and why — provides the foundation for evaluating any industrial croissant line.
Below is a technical explanation of each station's function and engineering rationale:
The following technical parameters are drawn directly from Hexeon's published specification data for the Croissant Formation Line (source: hexeon.net/croissant-forming-production-line.html↗):
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Equipment Overall Dimensions | 38,491 × 8,564 × 3,326 mm |
| Effective Dough Sheet Width | 600 / 800 / 1,000 / 1,200 mm (selectable) |
| Maximum Dough Output Capacity | 2,000 kg/h |
| Dough Sheet Thickness Range | 1.5 – 10 mm |
| Total Power Consumption | 50 – 140 kW |
| Air Pressure Requirement | 0.6 MPa (6 kg/cm²) |
| Air Consumption Rate | 2 m³/min |
| Conveyor Belt Speed | 2 – 12 m/min |
| Forming Speed | Up to 150 cycles/min |
| Lamination Layer Range | 10 – 100+ layers |
| Floor Load Capacity Required | Average ≥ 500 kg/m² |
| Ambient Temperature Range | 1 – 40°C |
| Ambient Humidity (max) | ≤ 75% (no frost/condensation) |
| Vibration Tolerance | ≤ 0.5 G |
| Electromagnetic Interference | Free from strong radio/EM interference |
One of the distinguishing capabilities of the Hexeon Croissant Formation Line is its compatibility with multiple dough categories — a feature enabled by the adjustable sheeting gap, variable conveyor speed, and modular folding system. The following dough types are supported:
Yeast-Free Laminated Dough: Used for puff pastry and similar products where leavening comes entirely from steam expansion between fat layers. Requires the highest lamination precision, as there is no yeast activity to mask minor layer irregularities.
Yeast-Leavened Laminated Dough: The primary croissant dough type, combining gluten development, yeast fermentation gas production, and fat lamination. The line's low-stress sheeting system is particularly important for this dough type, as active yeast cells are sensitive to excessive mechanical stress.
Yeast-Free Shortcrust Laminated Dough: A crumblier matrix used in certain tart and pastry applications, requiring gentler compression parameters to avoid fat smearing.
Yeast Dough (Hydration 50–70%): Higher-hydration enriched doughs for brioche-style products and Danish pastries, where dough extensibility and lamination consistency must be balanced across a wider hydration range.
This broad dough compatibility, combined with the line's rapid changeover capability, is what enables the "one system for broader product range" functionality that Hexeon describes — making the line relevant not just for croissant production but for the wider bakery production line↗ portfolio.
The Hexeon line incorporates an advanced control operating system that manages conveyor belt speed, roller gap, folding cycle timing, and cutter synchronization from a unified interface. This integrated control architecture eliminates the need to independently adjust multiple mechanical subsystems during format changes, significantly reducing changeover time and the risk of parameter mismatch between stations.
The line supports user-friendly operation via smartphone, tablet, PC, and the built-in HMI (Human-Machine Interface) touchscreen. Multi-platform accessibility means production supervisors can monitor line status, adjust process parameters, and respond to alarms remotely — a critical capability in large-scale bakery facilities where operators manage multiple lines simultaneously. This IoT-ready control architecture positions the Hexeon line for integration with broader industrial baking robot systems↗ and factory automation frameworks.
Food-grade production equipment must comply with strict hygiene regulations, particularly in markets requiring HACCP (Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points) compliance. The Hexeon Croissant Formation Line includes a dedicated quick cleaning mode that systematically runs conveyor and roller subsystems through a defined cleaning sequence, reducing manual cleaning time and ensuring consistent hygiene standards between production runs. The machine design minimizes hollow spaces and undercuts where dough residue can accumulate.
With a total power consumption range of 50–140 kW (varying by line configuration and dough sheet width), the line incorporates intelligent energy management that modulates motor loads during low-production periods and standby states. This energy-adaptive operation helps operators reduce utility costs per kilogram of output — increasingly important as energy costs represent a growing proportion of industrial bakery operating expenses.
Custom lamination capability from 10 to 100+ layers — achieved through the combination of fat-encasing, swing-folding, and draw-folding mechanisms — gives operators the flexibility to produce both standard commercial croissants and premium artisan-style multi-layer products on the same platform. Seamless integration with upstream and downstream production systems, combined with rapid product changeover capability, ensures that output capacity is not sacrificed during format transitions.
The line is designed in a C-configuration layout — a U-shaped or C-shaped floor plan that routes the production flow through two parallel conveyor runs connected at one end. This layout choice has significant practical implications for large-scale bakery operations:
Space Efficiency: A C-configuration occupies less linear floor length than an equivalent straight-line layout. For the Hexeon line's overall dimensions of approximately 38.5 meters in length and 8.6 meters in width, the C-configuration makes the production footprint manageable within standard industrial bakery bay widths.
Operator Accessibility: The C-shape places the input (hopper) and output (forming station) ends of the line adjacent to each other, giving a single operator visual access to both the dough input and the finished product output without traversing the full line length. This reduces the required operating crew per line.
Integration with Downstream Equipment: Having input and output at the same end of the line simplifies integration with upstream proofing trolleys, ingredient dispensers, and downstream conveyors feeding blast freezers, transfer belts, or delta robot sorting workstations↗ for automated handling.
The Hexeon Croissant Formation Line is designed as a component within a larger intelligent bakery production system. Downstream of the forming station, finished raw croissants must be transferred to proofing racks or freezer conveyors with precise, gentle handling to preserve their rolled shape before baking. This is where industrial robot integration adds significant value.
Hexeon's delta robot↗ and SCARA robot↗ platforms are engineered to interface directly with forming line outputs, providing high-speed pick-and-place handling for baked and unbaked goods. The Delta Robot Workstation↗ and SCARA Robot Workstation↗ solutions provide flexible grasping and sorting for croissants of varying sizes and orientations exiting the forming line.
For full-line automation, the combined SCARA and Delta robot integrated workstation↗ enables a seamlessly automated process from forming through sorting and tray-loading, reducing manual handling labor and improving placement consistency for uniform proofing and baking results.