1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to the bleaching of chemical pulp. More particularly, the invention relates to initial bleaching of sulphate pulp, bleaching sequences and filtrate cycles related thereto. The initial bleaching sequence according to the invention comprises treating the pulp in order to reduce the content of transition metals present in the pulp, a first chlorine dioxide treatment (D0) of the bleaching, addition of alkali in the D0 stage after addition of chlorine dioxide to adjust the pH value to be neutral or basic, followed by washing, and an alkaline oxygen and peroxide stage (EOP) as a stage carried out subsequent to the washing.
2. Description of the Related Art
The bleaching of sulphate pulp is divided into initial and final bleaching. During the initial bleaching, most of the lignin present in the pulp is removed. In the final bleaching, the residual lignin still present in the pulp is removed, and pulp darkening coloured groups, chromophores, are converted into the non-light-absorbing form.
The initial bleaching of sulphate pulp using chlorine dioxide conventionally consists of an acid delignification stage, generally a chlorine dioxide stage D0, and an alkaline extraction stage E, which is often reinforced with oxygen and peroxide (EOP) or with one of these (EO or EP). In addition to delignification, the acid stage releases metals present in the pulp. Furthermore, hexenuronic acid groups consuming bleaching chemicals may be removed by a hot acid treatment of the pulp.
The D0 stage and E stage of the initial bleaching are separated from each other by intermediate washing. In the washing, dissolved organic matter, spent chemicals and metals being free in ionic form in acid conditions, are removed from the pulp.
A dosage of active chlorine in the D0 stage is often relatively high, usually more than half of the chlorine dosage of the whole bleaching stage. The reactions of chlorine dioxide in the D0 stage are rapid, consuming thus a main part of the charged chemicals in a few seconds. However, the retention time in the D0 stage is usually about 30 minutes to ensure the reaction of all chemicals and to achieve a kappa number after the D0 EOP stages being as low as possible.
The reactions of chlorine dioxide degrade the structures of lignin. The filtrates resulting from the D0 stage contain a part of the reacted lignin and the main part of the spent chlorides. A substantial part of the lignin reacted during the D0 stage will be converted into a dissolving form only in a following alkaline stage so that the filtrate resulting from the EOP stage contains a remarkable amount of dissolved organic matter as well as chlorine bound to the lignin during the D0 stage.
The transition metals, such as Fe, Cu and Mn, degrade peroxide, and should thus substantially be removed from the pulp, or their content should be reduced prior to a stage using peroxide, i.e. prior to the EOP stage. Most of the metals can be removed in the washing stage, when the pH is sufficiently low, approximately pH 3. Hence, in the washing stage following a first acid stage of the bleaching, metals being precipitated in alkaline conditions are removed from the pulp. At a higher pH, an effective removal of the metals requires the use of a chelating agent. Said first acid stage of the bleaching may also be a separate acid treatment (A) of the pulp prior to a first acid oxidative stage (D0). If the acid stage is carried out at a higher temperature than normal, at about 90° C., also hexenuronic acids may simultaneously be degraded and thus removed. The degradation of the hexenuronic acids also releases other metals which can be removed by washing.
The effluents resulting from the bleaching form a significant part of the effluents from a the whole pulp mill. The washing filtrates are circulated within a bleaching plant from stage to stage, if possible. There has been efforts to reduce the amount of effluents also by using the resulting filtrates for other processes of the mill, i.a. for washing of brown stock. Thereby the filtrates and the dissolved wood material and chemicals present in the filtrate are fed to a recovery process of chemicals. The filtrates resulting from the D0 stage contain a large amount of chlorides which are detrimental to a recovery process.
Therefore, there has been efforts to recover filtrates resulting from the alkaline stage carried out subsequent to the D0 stage. However, also these filtrates contain chlorine compounds, because a substantial part of the lignin reacted during the D0 stage dissolves only during the alkaline treatment. Hence, in an effort to reduce the consumption of alkali, the filtrate resulting from the E stage has been used as a washing and dilution fluid in a D0 stage washer. However, bleaching chemicals are consumed by the great amount of dissolved matter present in the filtrate resulting from the EOP stage. Hence, the filtrates resulting from the alkaline and acid stages of the initial bleaching are usually removed to effluent treatment.
In existing facilities, the EOP stage of the initial bleaching is carried out as a separate step, whereby there is an intermediate washing step between the D0 and EOP stages. Alkalizing subsequent to a chlorine stage has been searched in a case wherein the next stage is a first acid D stage of the final bleaching, but the chemical consumption has been remarkably high compared to an alkali stage separated by intermediate washing /1/. Cook /2/, has suggested a combination of the D stage and the oxidative alkaline stage of the initial bleaching without an intermediate washing step. Ljungren /3/ has found that alkalizing combined to a chlorine dioxide stage reduces AOX discharges. In these three researches, the combination of the chlorine dioxide and the alkali stages is used to substitute an initial bleaching comprising separate chlorine or chlorine dioxide and alkali stages, whereby the next stage is a first acid D stage of the final bleaching, as is the case also in displacement bleaching.
In general, chlorine dioxide and peroxide are used for the final bleaching. In the final bleaching based on chlorine dioxide, the sequences D, DD and DnD are employed, either with or without intermediate washing steps between the stages. In the DnD sequence, the intermediate washing is carried out after the Dn treatment, but the neutralization after the D stage may be accomplished also without washing /4/. Suess et al. /5/ has researched the performance of the D and P stages of the final bleaching without intermediate washing between the stages. In a process of U.S. Pat. No. 3,884,752, neutralization carried out subsequent to the D1 stage is substituted for a previously generally used separate alkaline E2 stage. According to U.S. Pat. No. 4,238,281, the whole final bleaching is carried out without intermediate washing steps, DED.
In the displacement bleaching (pulse, dynamic bleaching) /6, 7, 8, 9/, the filtrate present in the pulp is displaced at the end of the stage by a filtrate resulting from next stage. The displacement bleaching is carried out using diffuser washers /10/. Therein the acid filtrate present in the pulp is displaced by the chemicals of next stage, and the reacted, but in acid conditions undissolved matter remains in the pulp, and the main part of dissolving matter remains in the pulp and is passed to next bleaching stage.
An object of the present invention is to reduce the demand for bleaching chemicals, to which alkali is herein not considered to belong, in the bleaching of chemical pulp and to reinforce the effectiveness of an alkali stage subsequent to the D0 stage carried out using oxygen and peroxide (EOP). Further, the purpose of the invention is to improve the use of washing filtrates, especially the washing filtrates resulting from the EOP stage of the initial bleaching in a bleaching mill and/or for washing of brown stock.
In a process according to the invention, the initial bleaching of pulp comprises a first chlorine dioxide treatment (D0) and a following alkaline treatment with oxygen and hydrogen peroxide (EOP) which stages are separated from each other with a washing stage. Prior to the peroxide treatment, the pulp is treated in order to reduce the content of transition metals present in the pulp. The process according to the invention is characterized in that alkali is added to the pulp after addition of chlorine dioxide in the D0 stage in order to adjust the pH of the pulp to be neutral or basic (N stage) prior to the washing stage subsequent to the chlorine dioxide stage whereby the initial bleaching comprises the sequence D0N EOP.
In proceeding according to the invention, the dissolution of organic matter increases during the first chlorine dioxide treatment of the bleaching, whereby also a higher amount of chlorides is removed from the pulp during the washing step subsequent to said stage (D0N). Hence, the amount of chlorides decreases especially in the following EOP stage, enlarging thus the possibilities of the use of the filtrates resulting from the EOP stage, also for washing of brown stock. Likewise, the use of oxidizing chemicals becomes more effective because the peroxide of the EOP stage is consumed by the lignin still present in the pulp and not for further treatment of lignin degraded already during the first chlorine dioxide treatment which lignin in the process according to the invention is removed by neutralizing or alkalizing already prior to the washing step. The dosage of chlorine dioxide can be reduced, if desired, because the EOP stage operates more effectively.
In a process according to the invention, the treatment for removing transition metals may be e.g. an acid treatment (A) of the pulp followed by washing prior to the D0N stage.
The filtrate resulting from the pulp after the first chlorine dioxide treatment (D0) of the initial bleaching according to the prior art is acid. In the process according to the present invention, the filtrate resulting after the chlorine dioxide treatment is neutral or basic, enabling thus the rearrangement of the filtrate cycles in the bleaching. A smaller amount of dissolved matter and chlorides facilitate the control of the filtrates resulting especially from the EOP stage into a recovery, for example, via brown stock washing in order to reduce effluents resulting from the bleaching.
The accompanying
The treatment for removing transition metals belonging to the initial bleaching according to the invention, may be, for instance, a separate acid treatment (A) and washing of the pulp prior to the D0N stage. Said treatment to reduce the content of transition metals may also be e.g. a separate chelating step prior to the D0N stage. Said treatment could also be a separate treatment subsequent to the D0N stage, whereby the initial bleaching sequence would be D0N Q EOP. Acidification (A) of pulp entering the bleaching as a step carried out just before the D0N stage is especially advantageous, since adjustment of the pH value up and down will then be avoided. When the temperature is sufficiently high, e.g. from 80 to 95° C., during the acid treatment stage (A), also hexenouronic acids consuming bleaching chemicals can simultaneously be removed, which is advantageous particularly when hard wood pulp is used.
The first chlorine dioxide treatment of the initial bleaching according to the invention may be carried out under the conditions of a conventional DO stage. In the process according to the invention, the retention time in the chlorine dioxide treatment is from 10 sec to 120 min, preferably from 1 to 30 min, most preferably from 1 to 15 min, the active chlorine dosage (kg/adtp) is about 2 to 2.5 times the kappa number or from 10 to 60 kg as active chlorine per ton of air dry pulp (hereafter expressed as kg act. Cl/adtp), preferably from 20 to 50 kg act. Cl/adtp, most preferably from 15 to 40 kg act. Cl/Iadtp, the final pH is from 1 to 5, preferably from 2 to 3.5, and the thickness is from 1 to 40%, preferably from 3 to 15%. The temperature is preferably between 50 and 95° C., usually between 50 and 65° C. The addition of alkali after the addition of chlorine dioxide in order to adjust the pH value to be neutral or basic lowers the kappa number of the pulp and improves the effectiveness of the following bleaching stages, reducing thus the consumption of the chemicals in the bleaching. In the first chlorine dioxide stage of the bleaching, the dosage of the chemicals may be reduced, if desired. When the required chemical dosage is smaller, the charged chlorine dioxide is consumed very rapidly and the required retention time in the chlorine dioxide treatment is decreased. The decreased need of chlorine dioxide results in a decrease in the consumption of alkali in the alkalizing step following the D0 treatment. In the D treatment of the D0N stage, the pulp may, in addition to chlorine dioxide, be treated also with ozone, peracetic acid or Caro's acid or a combination thereof.
The alkali treatment to be carried out at the end of the chlorine dioxide stage lowers the kappa number after the initial bleaching, enabling thus the use of a smaller dosage of chlorine dioxide to obtain a particular kappa number. Due to this, the retention time in the chlorine dioxide treatment may be shorter than usually. The retention time in the chlorine dioxide treatment may further be shortened, if a hot acid treatment (Ahot) carried out prior to the the chlorine dioxide treatment is used as a treatment to remove transition metals, because in that case chlorine dioxide is not consumed by hexenuronic acids, thus enabling a reduction of the chlorine dioxide dosage. In said hot acid treatment, the temperature is about 80 to 95° C.
The D0N treatment can be accomplished in a conventional thickness of the process, and the alkali treatment of the D0N stage may be carried out e.g. in the inlet of a washer, in a connection pipe or in a separate reactor. As alkali, sodium hydroxide and oxidized or unoxidized white liquor may be used. The retention time in the alkali treatment may be from a few seconds to several hours, preferably from 5 sec to 60 min, preferably from 40 sec to 15 min. A suitable alkali dosage is preferably from 1 to 20 kg alkali as NaOH/ton of air dry pulp (kg as NaOH/adtp), preferably from 1 to 15 kg as NaOH/adtp. The effective time is from 5 sec to 60 min, preferably from 40 sec to 15 min, the temperature is from 50° C. to 100° C., preferably from 60 to 95° C. and the thickness is in conformity to the preceding treatment. The treatment is intensified with the increase of the retention time and the temperature, whereby also the consumption of alkali will increase.
Alkali for the N treatment belonging to the initial bleaching according to the invention is added after the reactive stage of chlorine dioxide. A suitable pH in the chlorine dioxide treatment after the addition of alkali is from 6 to 12, preferably from 7 to 12, more preferably from 8 to 11. In one embodiment, said pH is preferably above 10, but at most 12. In another embodiment, pH is between 7 and below 10. In the DON stage, the decrease of the kappa number increases with the increase of the pH, but hereby also the alkali consumption increases correspondingly. On the other hand, alkali, especially white liquor, is more economic compared e.g. to peroxide and chlorine dioxide.
In the EOP stage following the D0N stage after washing, the temperature is preferably from about 75 to 90° C., but the alkali dosage may be smaller than usually, e.g. from 5 to 15 kg/adtp, more preferably from 3 to 12 kg/adtp, compared to the EOP stage of a traditional initial bleaching. In the EOP stage of the initial bleaching, also the dosage of peroxide may be reduced, if desired, because peroxide is consumed only in the reactions of the lignin still present in the pulp. In the process according to the invention, the dosage of hydrogen peroxide may be e.g. from 2 to 10 kg/adtp, preferably from 2 to 5 kg/adtp.
With the process according to the invention, a filtrate is obtained from the DON stage containing a greater part of the chlorides than earlier and a substantial part of dissolved organic matter. The pH of the filtrate is from 6 to 12, preferably from 7 to 12, more preferably from 8 to 11. The filtrate to be discharged from the washer of the following alkaline stage (EOP) contains smaller amounts of chlorides and dissolved organic matter than the filtrate resulting from the E0P stage subsequent to a conventional D0 stage.
When using white liquor or oxidized white liquor for alkalizing in the D0N stage, the Na/S balance of the chemical cycle may be adjusted in a new way, and foreign matters present in the white liquor, such as Al, Cl, K and Si, may be removed. A decrease in the consumption of sodium hydroxide in the EOP stage reduces the influence on the Na-balance of a mill, if the filtrates are conducted to the recovery via brown stock washing.
Compounds causing precipitation, such as CaC2O4, CaCO3, BaSO4 as well as magnesium compounds will precipitate onto the fibres when the pH rises. In a D0N washer, the risk of precipitation remains unchanged or decreases, and the demand for magnesium addition in the EOP stage decreases. The precipitation of calcium carbonate may be controlled by limiting the rise of the pH in the N stage to a pH value of below 10.
The hot acid treatment (the A stage) to degrade hexenuronic acids can also be carried out in connection with the chlorine dioxide treatment of the D0N stage either as a hot pretreatment or so that the whole D0 stage is carried at a temperature sufficiently high to degrade hexenuronic acids, e.g at about from 90 to 95° C. However, in that case a separate step, e.g. a chelating step, is required to remove transition metals prior to the addition of peroxide in the EOP stage.
When using the initial bleaching according to the invention, the fiber pulp entering the initial bleaching is chemically produced, especially by a sulphate cook. The pulp enters the initial bleaching from a brown stock washer arranged after the cook or an oxygen stage. After the initial bleaching according to the invention and the subsequent washing of pulp, any bleaching sequence may be used to obtain a target value of the final brightness for the pulp.
Compared to the initial bleaching of the prior art, the initial bleaching sequence according to the invention enables to reduce the consumption of chlorine dioxide and peroxide as well as the use of shorter bleaching sequences. In one embodiment, the whole sequence of the bleaching consists of the initial bleaching sequence A D0N EOP according to the invention. In using the initial bleaching according to the invention, further preferred bleaching sequences are e.g. A D0N EOP D1, A D0N EOP P and A D0N EOP DP.
The filtrate resulting from a D0 stage of the prior art is acid. In the process according to the invention, the filtrate resulting from the D0N stage is neutral or basic, allowing thus the filtrate cycles in the bleaching to be arranged in a new way. A smaller amount of dissolved matter and chlorides facilitates conducting the filtrates resulting from the EOP stage to recovery, for instance, via brown stock washing, enabling thus the reduction of the effluents resulting from the bleaching.
Secondly, the circulation of the filtrates resulting from the bleaching, particularly from the initial bleaching, can be rearranged when pH changes in the D0 stage washer from acid (D0) to alkaline (D0N). Generally, mixing of an acid and an alkaline filtrate causes precipitation problems.
An unpressurized EOP stage can be carried out also without oxygen, so that in the present application the expression EOP refers also to an unpressurized EP stage.
In
In all shown figures, the filtrate to be discharged from the washer may be divided into different fractions with respect to its properties (e.g. with respect to the amount of dissolved matter) which are led to a filtrate container to be stored and used separately. In this case, the concentration of the filtrate (e.g. the amount of dissolved matter) discharged from the left side of the filtrate container, shown in the figures below the washer, is higher than that of the filtrate withdrawn from the right side of the filtrate container, or the arrow coming out from the left side indicates the liquid displaced from the pulp by the first washing liquid, and the arrow coming out from the right side indicates the liquid displaced by the second washing liquid. The washing filtrates may also be stored in the filtrate container mixed with each other, in which case the filtrate outflows have similar properties. In the shown preferred embodiments, the pulp is washed using two washing liquids. In the shown preferred embodiments, the filtrate discharged from the filtrate container is used as a washing liquid in one or two washers or it is removed from the process. It is also possible to divide the amount of the washing waters and the use of the filtrate waters in another manner suitable for the purpose.
In the shown figures, the arrows showing a washing liquid and entering a washer, but not coming out of a filtrate container, indicate a liquid outside the bleaching. This may be e.g. a condensate, raw water or 0 water of a dryer. The embodiments shown in
Figures IA to EI show a few preferred ways of arranging the washing water connection of the A D0N EOP bleaching sequence. According to the invention, the final pH of the D0N stage is neutral or alkaline. The washing waters entering the EOP washer may be a liquid outside the bleaching or a filtrate from the washers of the final bleaching. In
In
Because, in the case there are differences in the filtrate fractions, the more impure fraction, i.e. the first filtrate fraction resulting from the DON stage, is used as the last washing water in the washer prior to the bleaching or for dilution (preferably not more than about 4 m3/adtp), i.e. it remains in the pulp, neither the organic matter dissolved in this cycle (
The arrangement of
Also in the arrangement of
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Number | Date | Country | |
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