In kraft pulp mills, lime is used to convert sodium carbonate to sodium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2). The causticizing reaction precipitates lime mud which is washed, dewatered, and calcined in a lime kiln to generate lime for reuse. Clean, dry, and more stable lime mud helps reducing the energy usage of the kiln, improving burner flame stability, minimizing ring formation, and alleviating emissions of reduced sulphur gases from the kiln stack.
The dewatering efficiency of lime mud is greatly affected by the mud and liquor properties, and the equipment design and operation. The properties of the mud vary continuously due to changes in the liquor strength, lime quality and dosage, which is known as the “liming ratio”. Many studies have been carried out to relate lime mud properties to dewatering and filtration
behaviours, the mechanisms by which lime mud becomes difficult to settle and filter are not well understood.
A systematic study was therefore conducted to examine the effect of the liming ratio on the settling rate and filterability of lime mud. The results show that the mud settling rate and filterability decreased with an increase in liming ratio. The effect was more noticeable as the liming ratio exceeded a critical level leading to an overliming condition. The results also show that the particle size of the resulting lime mud did not appreciably change with liming ratio. Therefore, the decrease in settling rate and filterability cannot be attributed to the smaller particle size of Ca(OH)2 compared to that of lime mud as commonly believed. Rather, it was caused by a change in zeta potential of Ca(OH)2-containing mud particles.This study also shows that the zeta potential of the mud slurry increases proportionally to the free lime content in the lime mud. This suggests that the zeta potential can be used to indicate the extent of overliming in the causticizing plant. The correlation between zeta potential and free lime content can be used to develop an on-line overliming monitoring system to help regulate theamount of lime addition to the system to achieve optimum operating conditions for the mud settling and filtering equipment.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/44093 |
Date | 20 March 2014 |
Creators | Azgomi, Fariba |
Contributors | Tran, Honghi, Farnood, Ramin |
Source Sets | University of Toronto |
Language | en_ca |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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