• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 3
  • Tagged with
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Correlations between fibre properties and paper properties / Inverkan av fiberegenskaper på pappersegenskaper

Johansson, Anna January 2011 (has links)
The understanding of what properties the fibre should have in order to give the right end-product paper properties, along with the type of processing, is a subject for a lot of research and development. Today the ability to measure fibre properties on-line is widely used for pulps. It is often necessary to measure many properties and variables in a process. The data collected is therefore almost always multivariate. It is very hard to analyse process data due to a lot of noises. Correlations between fibre and paper properties are hard to find, but this does not mean that correlations do not exist. Fibre properties, measured by the pulp analyser PulpEye, were investigated and correlations to paper properties were studied. The work was divided into three different studies. Study 1 was an investigation of historical process data, in study 2 pulp samples from the production was analysed and study 3 was a refiner setting trial, were different refiner segments, flows through refiners and intensities were studied. Both the group-plots and MVDA’s based on the historical process data in study 1, showed that the Scott Bond was increased with increased amount of kinks and curl for the unbleached pine pulp (softwood pulp). Coarseness measurements, made in the study of historical data, indicated that the coarseness was varying in such a large extent that it was believable that it had effects in the papermaking process. Another interesting fibre property, investigated in the refiner setting trial, was crill. The amount of crill is said to have strong correlation to paper strength. The analysis showed that the incoming pulp had different amount of crill and that the amount of crill after the refiners also was varying for the different samples. The development of crill at different kappa numbers and for pulps refined with different segments and refiner strategies should be further investigated. In this work it has been difficult to find correlations between fibre properties and paper properties in the refiner setting trial. This could have been due to small variations of the different parameters. This work showed that the normal production can be handled very well and variations are rather small. It can be seen though, that problems do appear when parameters are deviating from the normal case. An efficient way to work is to do measurements when the incoming pulp parameters are deviating. It should also be more investigated how the most common deviating pulp parameters should be handled in the refining process and at the board machine. The communication between the pulp production and the board machines is recommended to be further developed, especially when the pulp production have disturbances that can be affecting the refining and further the board production.
2

Correlations between fibre properties and paper properties / Inverkan av fiberegenskaper på pappersegenskaper

Johansson, Anna January 2011 (has links)
The understanding of what properties the fibre should have in order to give the right end-product paper properties, along with the type of processing, is a subject for a lot of research and development. Today the ability to measure fibre properties on-line is widely used for pulps. It is often necessary to measure many properties and variables in a process. The data collected is therefore almost always multivariate. It is very hard to analyse process data due to a lot of noises. Correlations between fibre and paper properties are hard to find, but this does not mean that correlations do not exist. Fibre properties, measured by the pulp analyser PulpEye, were investigated and correlations to paper properties were studied. The work was divided into three different studies. Study 1 was an investigation of historical process data, in study 2 pulp samples from the production was analysed and study 3 was a refiner setting trial, were different refiner segments, flows through refiners and intensities were studied. Both the group-plots and MVDA’s based on the historical process data in study 1, showed that the Scott Bond was increased with increased amount of kinks and curl for the unbleached pine pulp (softwood pulp). Coarseness measurements, made in the study of historical data, indicated that the coarseness was varying in such a large extent that it was believable that it had effects in the papermaking process. Another interesting fibre property, investigated in the refiner setting trial, was crill. The amount of crill is said to have strong correlation to paper strength. The analysis showed that the incoming pulp had different amount of crill and that the amount of crill after the refiners also was varying for the different samples. The development of crill at different kappa numbers and for pulps refined with different segments and refiner strategies should be further investigated. In this work it has been difficult to find correlations between fibre properties and paper properties in the refiner setting trial. This could have been due to small variations of the different parameters. This work showed that the normal production can be handled very well and variations are rather small. It can be seen though, that problems do appear when parameters are deviating from the normal case. An efficient way to work is to do measurements when the incoming pulp parameters are deviating. It should also be more investigated how the most common deviating pulp parameters should be handled in the refining process and at the board machine. The communication between the pulp production and the board machines is recommended to be further developed, especially when the pulp production have disturbances that can be affecting the refining and further the board production.
3

Optimization of washing steps prior to bleaching of a pulp produced by cooking with ionic liquid

Hashemi, Soraia January 2024 (has links)
This thesis investigates the optimization of washing techniques before bleaching a pulp produced using ionic liquids. One pulp is from softwood and the other from wheat straw. Through experiments with varied temperatures and concentrations, the effectiveness of different washing conditions was evaluated, focusing on their impact on kappa number, viscosity, yield and reject amount for the softwood pulp. The wheat straw pulp was studied using the same optimal washing conditions that gave the best results for the softwood pulp. The results showed that washing at 75°C with 1.5% NaOH was the most effective. After washing, the softwood pulp had a kappa number of 20.0 and a viscosity of 162 mL/g. For the wheat straw pulp, the best result was a wash with 1.5% NaOH at 75°C, resulting in a kappa number of 16.2 and a viscosity of 446 mL/g. The washing process proved effective on a laboratory scale and the next step will be to conduct pilot-scale trials. The trials so far show that there is potential to scale up the washing of pulp produced by ionic liquid-based cooking. After washing, bleaching was performed using sodium chlorite. This method was suitable for laboratory-scale experiments, leading to a kappa number reduction from 20.0 down to 0.39 for the softwood pulp, with a viscosity loss from 162 mg/L down to 152 mL/g and a brightness of ISO 85%. For the wheat straw pulp, the kappa number decreased from 16.2 down to 0.62, the viscosity fall to 272 mL/g from 446 mg/L and the brightness reached ISO 76%. The study demonstrates that washing parameters can be optimized to achieve high brightness of the final bleached pulp without significantly altering its physical properties. The kappa number decreases while the viscosity remains relatively stable for the soft wood pulp, indicating that the process can consistently produce the same results. The wheat straw pulp lost viscosity from a high level. Loss of viscosity must be expected in some extent. The insights from this study reveal that pulp produced with ionic liquids can be washed and bleached effectively under control. The control of loss of viscosity is crucial for industrial applications. Future process development will require efficient chemical recovery. It is not possible to have wastes out of the process. It will be essential to close the process and it will ensure the sustainability of the process.

Page generated in 0.0567 seconds