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  • 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

Model studies of cellulose fibers and films and their relation to paper strength

Fält, Susanna January 2003 (has links)
<p>The objectives of this work were (i) to develop a new methodfor the preparation of thin cellulose model films, (ii) to usethese model films for swelling measurements and (iii) to relatethe swelling of fibers and films to the dry strength ofpaper.</p><p>In the new film preparation method, NMMO(N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide) was used to dissolve cellulose andDMSO (dimethyl sulfoxide) was added to control the viscosity ofthe cellulose solution. A dilute solution of the cellulose wasspin-coated onto a silicon oxide wafer and the cellulose filmthus prepared was then precipitated in deionised water. Asaturated layer of glyoxalated-polyacrylamide was used toanchor the film onto the silicon oxide wafer. This proceduregave films with thicknesses in the range of 20-270 nm. Thefilms were cleaned in deionised water and were found by ESCAanalysis and contact angle measurements (θ<20°)to be free from solvents. Solid state NMR measurements onfibers spun from NMMO also indicated that the model filmconsisted of about 50% crystalline material and that thecrystalline structure was of the cellulose II type.Determination of the molecular weight distribution of thecellulose surface material showed that the NMMO treatmentcaused only a minor breakdown of the cellulose chains and thatlow molecular mass oligomers of glucose were not created.</p><p>It was further shown that atomic force microscopy (AFM)measurements could be used to determine the thicknessof thecellulose films, in both the dry and wet states. The thicknesswas determined as the height difference between the top surfaceand the underlying silica wafer measured at a position where anincision had been made in the cellulose film. The cellulosesolutions were also directly spin-coated onto the crystal usedin the Quartz crystal microbalance (QCM-D), pre-treated withthe same type of anchoring polymer. With this application,these model surfaces were shown to be suitable for swellingmeasurements with the QCM-D. The extent of swelling and theswelling kinetics in the presence of electrolytes, such asNaCl, CaCl2 and Na2SO4, and at different pH were measured inthis way. The films were found to be very stable during thesemeasurements and the results were comparable to the swellingresults obtained for the corresponding pulps. The swelling ofboth fibers and films followed the general behavior ofpolyelectrolyte gels in the presence of electrolytes and was inaccordance with the Donnan equilibrium theory. The films havebeen shown to differ from fibers with regard to the absence ofa covalent interior network. This influences the evaluation ofthe deswelling effects measured on the model films. Theswelling effect seen with different electrolytes has also beenconsidered in relation to the tensile strength of paperprepared from a kraftliner-pulp. In this study, it was foundthat there was no direct relationship between the swelling ofthe fibers, measured as WRV, and the strength of the paper inthe presence of different electrolytes at pH 5.</p><p><b>KEYWORDS:</b>absorption, carboxymethyl cellulose,cellulose, cellulose fibers, dissolving pulps, donnanequilibrium, electrolytes, film, ion exchange, ionization,kinetics, liner boards, microscopy, spinning, surfaces,swelling, tensile strength, water, water retention value.</p>
2

Cold caustic extraction of spruce sulfite dissolving pulp

Syed, Hanif Uddin January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
3

Model studies of cellulose fibers and films and their relation to paper strength

Fält, Susanna January 2003 (has links)
The objectives of this work were (i) to develop a new methodfor the preparation of thin cellulose model films, (ii) to usethese model films for swelling measurements and (iii) to relatethe swelling of fibers and films to the dry strength ofpaper. In the new film preparation method, NMMO(N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide) was used to dissolve cellulose andDMSO (dimethyl sulfoxide) was added to control the viscosity ofthe cellulose solution. A dilute solution of the cellulose wasspin-coated onto a silicon oxide wafer and the cellulose filmthus prepared was then precipitated in deionised water. Asaturated layer of glyoxalated-polyacrylamide was used toanchor the film onto the silicon oxide wafer. This proceduregave films with thicknesses in the range of 20-270 nm. Thefilms were cleaned in deionised water and were found by ESCAanalysis and contact angle measurements (θ&lt;20°)to be free from solvents. Solid state NMR measurements onfibers spun from NMMO also indicated that the model filmconsisted of about 50% crystalline material and that thecrystalline structure was of the cellulose II type.Determination of the molecular weight distribution of thecellulose surface material showed that the NMMO treatmentcaused only a minor breakdown of the cellulose chains and thatlow molecular mass oligomers of glucose were not created. It was further shown that atomic force microscopy (AFM)measurements could be used to determine the thicknessof thecellulose films, in both the dry and wet states. The thicknesswas determined as the height difference between the top surfaceand the underlying silica wafer measured at a position where anincision had been made in the cellulose film. The cellulosesolutions were also directly spin-coated onto the crystal usedin the Quartz crystal microbalance (QCM-D), pre-treated withthe same type of anchoring polymer. With this application,these model surfaces were shown to be suitable for swellingmeasurements with the QCM-D. The extent of swelling and theswelling kinetics in the presence of electrolytes, such asNaCl, CaCl2 and Na2SO4, and at different pH were measured inthis way. The films were found to be very stable during thesemeasurements and the results were comparable to the swellingresults obtained for the corresponding pulps. The swelling ofboth fibers and films followed the general behavior ofpolyelectrolyte gels in the presence of electrolytes and was inaccordance with the Donnan equilibrium theory. The films havebeen shown to differ from fibers with regard to the absence ofa covalent interior network. This influences the evaluation ofthe deswelling effects measured on the model films. Theswelling effect seen with different electrolytes has also beenconsidered in relation to the tensile strength of paperprepared from a kraftliner-pulp. In this study, it was foundthat there was no direct relationship between the swelling ofthe fibers, measured as WRV, and the strength of the paper inthe presence of different electrolytes at pH 5. KEYWORDS:absorption, carboxymethyl cellulose,cellulose, cellulose fibers, dissolving pulps, donnanequilibrium, electrolytes, film, ion exchange, ionization,kinetics, liner boards, microscopy, spinning, surfaces,swelling, tensile strength, water, water retention value. / <p>NR 20140805</p>
4

The Dissolving Form : A new central station for Linkoping, Sweden / Den upplösande formen : En ny centralstation för Linköping, Sverige

Holmgren, Marcus January 2013 (has links)
The human brain is always searching for recognizable shapes, it is natural for us to always look for connections and try to get an overall sense of things and situations. But what if the form dissolves itself and instead creates a range between the more clear and intense to the blurred and defocused.By using an entanglement of lines that further out from the inner centre reduces its intensity, it will create an effect of a weak, unsettled edge that is hard to read. My project investigates this phenomena and how a mass of single components merge into a singular whole permeable structure that absorbs the program of the transit centre.By using the technique of this complex nested hierarchy of components will I create a variation of areas and nested pochés. These areas will work as the different climate zones that a transit station requires. / Den mänskliga hjärnan söker alltid efter igenkännbara former, det är naturligt för oss att alltid leta efter anslutningar och försöka få en övergripande känsla av saker och ting. Men vad händer om formen löser upp sig och skapar istället ett intervall mellan det mer tydliga och intensiva och det suddiga och oskarpa.Genom att använda en sammanflätning av linjer som längre ut från den inre kärnan minskar sin intensitet, kommer det att skapa en effekt av en svag, otydlig kant som är svår att läsa av. Mitt projekt undersöker detta fenomen och hur en massa enstaka komponenter kan slås samman till en hel genomsläpplig struktur som absorberar programmet för transit center. Genom att använda tekniken i denna komplexa kapslade hierarki av komponenter kommer jag att skapa en variation av områden och pochéer. Dessa områden kommer att fungera som de olika klimatzoner som ett resecentrum kräver.
5

Activation of dissolving pulps prior to viscose preparation

Kvarnlöf, Niklas January 2007 (has links)
<p>The conventional viscose manufacturing process is a mature process that needs to be improved with respect to its environmental impact and its production cost structure. Therefore a research study has been done with the aim to improve the reactivity of the dissolving pulp used, in order to reduce the chemical demand in the viscose process and thus reduce the cost and indirectly the environmental impact.</p><p>The work described in this thesis has shown that it is possible to enhance the pulp reactivity and to use less carbon disulphide in the production of viscose, while maintaining a good quality viscose dope, by two entirely different pretreatment methods, one chemical and one enzymatic.</p><p>The chemical method used pressurized oxygen after the mercerisation step, which increased the reactivity of the alkali cellulose. The viscose dopes produced from the pressurized oxygen treated alkali cellulose had lower filter clogging values, Kw, compared to conventionally produced viscoses. The temperature and the oxygen treatment time of the alkali cellulose were however crucial for the viscose quality.</p><p>The best performing enzyme of several tested was a cellulase of the mono component endoglucanase preparation Carezyme®. This enzymatic treatment was optimized with respect to viscose dope preparation. The study showed that the enzyme treatment could be carried out under industrially interesting conditions with respect to temperature, enzyme dose and reaction time. A re-circulation study of the enzyme showed that it was possible to re-use the spent press water from the enzymatic treatment step several times, and thus lower the production cost. Some of the viscose process stages were modified to properly fit the enzymatically treated dissolving pulp and a comparison between viscose made from enzyme-treated pulp and viscose made from conventional pulp, showed that the enzyme-treated samples had a lower filter clogging value, Kw. This indirectly indicates that the enzyme pretreatment could reduce the carbon disulphide charge in the viscose manufacturing process. An initial study of how the Carezyme® influenced different cellulosic sources was also performed.</p>
6

Activation of dissolving pulps prior to viscose preparation

Kvarnlöf, Niklas January 2007 (has links)
The conventional viscose manufacturing process is a mature process that needs to be improved with respect to its environmental impact and its production cost structure. Therefore a research study has been done with the aim to improve the reactivity of the dissolving pulp used, in order to reduce the chemical demand in the viscose process and thus reduce the cost and indirectly the environmental impact. The work described in this thesis has shown that it is possible to enhance the pulp reactivity and to use less carbon disulphide in the production of viscose, while maintaining a good quality viscose dope, by two entirely different pretreatment methods, one chemical and one enzymatic. The chemical method used pressurized oxygen after the mercerisation step, which increased the reactivity of the alkali cellulose. The viscose dopes produced from the pressurized oxygen treated alkali cellulose had lower filter clogging values, Kw, compared to conventionally produced viscoses. The temperature and the oxygen treatment time of the alkali cellulose were however crucial for the viscose quality. The best performing enzyme of several tested was a cellulase of the mono component endoglucanase preparation Carezyme®. This enzymatic treatment was optimized with respect to viscose dope preparation. The study showed that the enzyme treatment could be carried out under industrially interesting conditions with respect to temperature, enzyme dose and reaction time. A re-circulation study of the enzyme showed that it was possible to re-use the spent press water from the enzymatic treatment step several times, and thus lower the production cost. Some of the viscose process stages were modified to properly fit the enzymatically treated dissolving pulp and a comparison between viscose made from enzyme-treated pulp and viscose made from conventional pulp, showed that the enzyme-treated samples had a lower filter clogging value, Kw. This indirectly indicates that the enzyme pretreatment could reduce the carbon disulphide charge in the viscose manufacturing process. An initial study of how the Carezyme® influenced different cellulosic sources was also performed.
7

The oxidation of pulps with lead tetraacetate

Detrick, Richard William 01 January 1960 (has links)
No description available.
8

A study of the iron-tartrate-alkali system and its complexing reaction with cellulose-related polyhydroxy compounds

Bayer, G. Frederic 01 January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
9

A Vygotskian Analysis of Preservice Teachers’ Conceptions of Dissolving and Density

Shaker elJishi, Ziad 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to examine the content knowledge of 64 elementary preservice teachers for the concepts of dissolving and density. Vygotsky’s (1987) theory of concept development was used as a framework to categorize concepts and misconceptions resulting from evidences of preservice teacher knowledge including pre/post concept maps, writing artifacts, pre/post face-to-face interviews, examination results, and drawings. Statistical significances were found for pre- and post-concept map scores for dissolving (t = -5.773, p < 0.001) and density (t = -2.948, p = 0.005). As measured using Cohen’s d values, increases in mean scores showed a medium-large effect size for (dissolving) and a small effect size for density. The triangulated results using all data types revealed that preservice teachers held several robust misconceptions about dissolving including the explanation that dissolving is a breakdown of substances, a formation of mixtures, and/or involves chemical change. Most preservice teachers relied on concrete concepts (such as rate or solubility) to explain dissolving. With regard to density, preservice teachers held two robust misconceptions including confusing density with buoyancy to explain the phenomena of floating and sinking, and confusing density with heaviness, mass, and weight. Most preservice teachers gained one concept for density, the density algorithm. Most preservice teachers who participated in this study demonstrated Vygotsky’s notion of complex thinking and were unable to transform their thinking to the scientific conceptual level. That is, they were unable to articulate an understanding of either the process of dissolving or density that included a unified system of knowledge characterized as abstract, generalizable, and hierarchical. Results suggest the need to instruct preservice elementary science teachers about the particulate nature of matter, intermolecular forces, and the Archimedes' principle.
10

Aktivering av en dissolvingmassa med enzymer före en konventionell viskosprocess / Activation of Dissolving Pulp with Enzymes prior to Viscose Manufacturing

Erhardsson, Erik January 2009 (has links)
<p>In conventional viscose manufacturing, a large amount of carbondisulfide is consumed. This amount has to be decreased to keep the production cost down and to reduce the environmental impact. The purpose with this work was to show if an enzyme treatment of a dissolving pulp could increase the degree of substitution in the viscose so that the amount of carbon disulfide consumed in the process could be decreased. Previous investigations by Kvarnlöf (2007), Engström et.al. (2006) and Henriksson et.al. (2005) has shown that the reactivity of a dissolving pulp (the cellulose raw material) increased when it was pre-treated with endoglucanase (enzyme). Kvarnlöf (2007) also showed that the amount of carbon disulfide that is needed to produce an ordinary viscose (in this work a more viscous viscose has been investigated) could be reduced with one third because of the enzyme treatment.</p><p> </p><p>In this thesis, viscose has been manufactured in a laboratory where the process has been adapted to look like the industrial as far as possible. Analyses were done on the viscose viscosity and degree of substitution. A reference curve was made with the percentage carbon disulfide load versus the viscose gamma number (degree of substitution). Then it was investigated how an enzyme treatment of the dissolving pulp affected the viscose. After the enzyme treatment, the manufacturing process for viscose was done in the exact same way as when the reference tests were done. The enzyme used in this thesis was Carezyme which contents endoglucanase. Then the results from the analyses of the viscose manufactured from enzyme treated dissolving pulp and the reference curve was compared. A positive result would have been that viscose manufactured with enzyme treatment gets a higher gamma number than viscose, with the same load of carbon disulfide, manufactured in the regular way.</p><p> </p><p>The results showed that the degree of substitution had no effect at all; the viscose that has been manufactured from enzyme treated dissolving pulp resulted in gamma numbers on or very close to the reference curve. The only effect that could be shown was a decrease in viscosity, which unfortunately was an unwanted effect. The enzyme treatment has also hampered the process, where shorter fibres among other things have given poorer dewatering properties. Analyses on the viscose manufactured in the laboratory showed that it didn't have the same characteristics as viscose manufactured in a plant.</p> / <p>I den konventionella tillverkningsprocessen för viskos förbrukas stora mängder koldisulfid. Denna mängd behöver minskas, både för att hålla nere produktionskostnaderna men också för att minska miljöpåverkan. Syftet med arbetet var att undersöka om en enzymbehandling av en dissolvingmassa kunde öka substitutionsgraden så att koldisulfid-förbrukningen skulle kunna minskas. Det har i flera tidigare undersökningar av Kvarnlöf (2007), Engström m.fl. (2006) och Henriksson m.fl. (2005) visats att reaktiviteten hos en dissolvingmassa (råvaran i viskosprocessen) ökar när den förbehandlats med endoglukanas (enzym). Kvarnlöf (2007) visade dessutom att mängden koldisulfid som behövdes för att tillverka spinnviskos (i detta examensarbete har en viskösare viskos undersökts) kunde minskas med en tredjedel tack vare enzymbehandlingen.</p><p> </p><p>I detta examensarbete har viskos tillverkats i laboratoriet där processen har anpassats så att den liknar den industriella så mycket som möjligt. Analyser gjordes på viskosens viskositet och substitutionsgrad. En referenskurva tillverkades där den procentuella koldisulfid-satsningen plottades mot viskosens gammatal (substitutionsgraden). Därefter undersöktes hur en enzymbehandling av dissolvingmassan påverkade den färdiga viskosen. Efter enzymbehandlingen av dissolvingmassan utfördes tillverkningsprocessen precis som vanligt för att man skulle kunna se effekterna av enzymet. Enzymet som användes i arbetet var enzympreparationen Carezyme som innehåller endoglukanas. Sedan jämfördes resultaten från analyserna av viskosen tillverkad från enzymbehandlad dissolvingmassa med referensvärdena. Ett positivt resultat hade varit att enzymbehandlad viskos hade ett högre gammatal än viskos tillverkad på vanligt sätt utan enzymförbehandling men med samma koldisulfidsats.</p><p> </p><p>Resultaten visar att substitutionsgraden inte har påverkats alls, dvs. den viskos som tillverkats från enzymbehandlad dissolvingmassa fick gammatal som låg på eller mycket nära referenskurvan. Den enda effekt av enzymet som kunde visas var en viskositetssänkning, vilket inte var något som eftersträvades. Processen har dessutom försvårats av enzymsteget, där kortare fibrer bl.a. gav sämre avvattningsegenskaper. Viskosanalyser har visat att viskosen som tillverkats på laboratoriet inte har samma egenskaper som viskos tillverkad på fabrik.</p>

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