The present invention generally relates to controlling continuous sheetmaking and, more specifically, to dynamically calibrating water weight sensors used to measure the water weight of paper stock on the fourdriner wire of a papermaking machine.
In the art of making paper with modern high-speed machines, sheet properties must be continually monitored and controlled to assure sheet quality and to minimize the amount of finished product that is rejected when there is an upset in the manufacturing process. The sheet variables that are most often measured include basis weight, moisture content, and caliper, i.e., thickness, of the sheets at various stages in the manufacturing process. These process variables are typically controlled by, for example, adjusting the feedstock supply rate at the beginning of the process, regulating the amount of steam applied to the paper near the middle of the process, or varying the nip pressure between calendaring rollers at the end of the process. Papermaking devices are well known in the art and are described, for example, in Handbook for Pulp & Paper Technologists 2nd ed., G. A. Smook, 1992, Angus Wilde Publications, Inc., and Pulp and Paper Manufacture Vol III (Papermaking and Paperboard Making), R. MacDonald, ed. 1970, McGraw Hill. Sheetmaking systems are further described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,539,634 to He, U.S. Pat. No. 5,022,966 to Hu, U.S. Pat. No. 4,982,334 to Balakrishnan, U.S. Pat. No. 4,786,817 to Boissevain et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 4,767,935 to Anderson et al.
In the manufacture of paper on continuous papermaking machines, a web of paper is formed from an aqueous suspension of fibers (stock) on a traveling mesh papermaking fabric and water drains by gravity and vacuum suction through the fabric. The web is then transferred to the pressing section where more water is removed by dry felt and pressure. The web next enters the dryer section where steam heated dryers and hot air completes the drying process. The papermaking machine is essentially a de-watering system. In the sheetmaking art, the term machine direction (MD) refers to the direction that the sheet material travels during the manufacturing process, while the term cross direction (CD) refers to the direction across the width of the sheet which is perpendicular to the machine direction.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,891,306 to Chase et al. describes a sensor that measures water weight on the wire of a papermaking machine. The sensor detects changes in resistance of the wet stock between the electrodes in an electrode array. The resistance of the wet stock between the electrodes is dependent on the amount of water above the electrodes, i.e., the water weight, and on the conductivity of the water. Since the conductivity of the water changes from time to time, the resistance measurement does not uniquely determine the amount of water unless some correction for the conductivity is provided. Consequently, the sensor also includes a separate reference cell which is designed to cancel out all affects that change the resistance between the electrodes other than the water weight. For instance, the resistance measurement is affected by changes in conductivity due to changes in the wet stock temperature or chemical composition.
The present invention is based in part on the development of a dynamically compensated calibration equation that equates the water weight plus fiber weight plus wire weight (total weight) to the resistance measured by the above described water weight sensor. Dynamic compensation is required to account for changing papermaking machine conditions or states that affect the intrinsic conductivity of the wet stock, i.e., pulp slurry, being measured. The amount of correction to apply is determined by the conductance measured by the reference sensor.
In one aspect, the invention is directed to a method of monitoring the formation of a sheet of wet stock comprising fibers wherein the wet stock is formed on a water permeable movable wire of a de-watering machine that has a headbox with a plurality of apertures through which wet stock is introduced onto the wire at a controlled flow rate, said method includes the steps of:
In another aspect, the invention is directed to a system of controlling the formation of wet stock which comprises fibers on a moving water permeable wire of a de-watering machine that includes:
The present invention generally relates to devices for detecting properties of an aqueous mixture, e.g., wet stock, on a de-watering machine wherein the devices exhibit enhanced precision and sensitivity over a wide range of mixture concentrations. Measurements from the devices for instance can be employed for process control in papermaking machines.
The invention is based in part on the development of calibration techniques that can be employed with any water weight sensing device that measures the amount of a liquid product by detecting its conductance/resistance. Particularly preferred sensing devices have sensors or electrodes that are positioned below the liquid product to be measured with the electrodes facing the liquid product. The sensing device has an effective range whereby conductance/resistance measurements correlate to the amount of liquid product present, resting on the electrodes.
Papermaking Machine
The process of preparing the wet stock includes the step of subjecting the fibers to mechanical action in the refiner 56 which includes a variable motor load controller 54. By regulating the refiner one can, among other things, regulate strength development and stock drainability and sheet formation. Many variables affect the refining process and these generally include, for example, the characteristics of the raw materials, e.g., fiber morphology, equipment characteristics, and the pH.
The actuators 23 in the headbox 10 discharge raw material through a plurality of slices onto supporting web or wire 13 which rotates between the rollers 14 and 15 which are driven by motors 44 and 45, respectively. Controller 54 regulates the speed of the motors. Foils and vacuum boxes (not shown) drain liquid, commonly known as “white water,” from the wet stock on the wire into the wire pit 8 for recycle. Sheet material exiting the wire passes through a dryer 24. A scanning sensor 30, which is supported on the supporting frame 31, continuously traverses the sheet and measures properties of the finished sheet in the cross-direction. Multiple stationary sensors could also be used. Scanning sensors are known in the art and are described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,094,535 to Dalquist et al., U.S. Pat. No. 4,879,471 to Dalquist, U.S. Pat. No. 5,315,124 to Goss et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 5,432,353 to Goss et al., which are incorporated herein. The finished sheet product 18 is then collected on reel 22. As used herein, the “wet end” portion of the system depicted in
In operation of the papermaking machine, one or more water weight sensors can be positioned underneath the wire 13. CD and/or MD arrays of such sensors can also be employed. Signals from the sensors can be used for process control as further described herein. In the embodiment as shown in
Production mode of operation of the papermaking machine should be distinguished from calibration mode of operation. The latter requires an MD array with a minimum of three sensors as described herein; preferably four to six sensors are employed and preferably the sensors are positioned in tandem in the MD about 1 meter from the edge of the wire. Preferably, the individual sensors are about 30 to 60 cm apart. For practical purposes, the same MD arrangement with 3 or more sensors can be used for both calibration and production operations.
The term “water weight” refers to the mass or weight of water per unit area of the wet or paper stock that is on the web. Typically, the water weight sensors are calibrated to provide engineering units of grams per square meter (gsm). As an approximation, a reading of 10,000 gsm corresponds to paper stock having a thickness of 1 cm on the wire. The term “basis weight” refers to the total weight of the material per unit area. The term “dry weight” or “dry stock weight” refers to the weight of a material (excluding any weight due to water) per unit area.
It has been demonstrated that fast variations of water weight on the wire correlate well to fast variations in dry basis weight of the sheet material produced when the water weight is measured upstream from dry line 43 on the wire. The reason is that essentially all of the water on the wire is being held by the paper fibers. Since more fibers hold more water, the measured water weight correlates well to the fiber weight.
Dynamic Calibration
Embodiments of the present invention provide methods of calibrating water weight sensors that are employed in a papermaking machine. The methods yield mathematical relationships that correlate conductance measurements of the wet stock generated by the sensors positioned underneath the wire to corresponding water weights. Essentially real time data from the sensors are measured and manipulated accordingly.
For calibration, three or more and preferably four to six measurement sensors arranged in an MD array are employed. Preferably, the measurement sensors all have substantially the same configuration. The reference sensor may have substantially the same configuration as the measurment sensors.
Two related calibration techniques are presented; both techniques rely on conductance measurements from a papermaking machine operating in the calibration mode while making different grades of paper to generate data for deriving the mathematical relationship. While the techniques are applicable to any de-watering machine that employs a moving, porous conveyer on which an aqueous mixture is transported, the techniques have been demonstrated on papermaking machines similar to that shown in
The first technique is based on the discovery that, within certain operating parameters, there exists a linear relationship between the total water weight height on the wire for the paper stock and the inverse of the measured sensor signal resistance. Furthermore, it was observed that this relationship remains linear regardless of the grade of wet stock. Indeed, a series of substantially parallel calibration lines were obtained from data generated when the papermaking machine was operated in the calibration mode using different grades of paper stocks. (These different grades of paper stocks exhibit different conductances and are used to make different grades of paper in the production mode.) The second technique is an improvement of the first and in essence is an extension of the characterization of the sensor behavior over a larger range of paper stock conductances and a wider range of water weights.
The calibration equations that are derived provide absolute water weight measurements based on conductance measurements from water weight sensors. An absolute measurement of water weight is used to accurately monitor any changes in drainage on the wire which can affect the quality of paper produced.
Method 1. The first on-line calibration technique has been demonstrated to be particularly suited for measuring paper stock with water weights that range from about 2250 g/m2 to 8500 g/m2. In this realm, the dynamically compensated calibration is based on the following calibration equation (Equation 1):
water weight=Sref*(G+ΔGref)+Iref (1)
where:
ΔGref is the difference between G that is measured at any particular state and G that is measured at the reference state (Gref−G in
The values of the parameters of the calibration equation are derived by the following steps 1-4:
(1) Referring to the papermaking machine shown in
(2) While the papermaking machine is operating under each of the 7 different operating conditions in step (1), the corresponding saturated water weight conductance is measured with the reference sensor 42F that is positioned near the headbox as illustrated in
(3) Setting the first calibration group (curve A of
Any of the 7 curves in
Once all the readings have been shifted, a reference state calibration curve is created by curve fitting all 22 readings as shown in
(4) The value of the correction factor (ΔGref) is calculated from the conductance measurement of any saturated reference sensor, i.e., any water weight sensor with a saturated signal. Saturated measurement conditions are achieved when any water weight sensor reading is unaffected by any further increases in water weight. Under these saturated conditions, this water weight sensor effectively measures changes in intrinsic bulk conductivity only. The correction factor is calculated using the deviation from the reference state conductance of the reference sensor. The relationship of the correction factor is defined in the following Equation 2:
ΔGref=(GSref−GS)/B (2)
where:
The “B” factor is calculated by correlating the shift that was applied to the 6 state dependent calibration curves as each was converged onto the reference state calibration curve to the corresponding shift in the reference sensor conductance from its reference state value. For example, referring to
In practice, after the calibration curve is established, the “B” factor is calculated and the calibration equation can be employed thereafter to provide continuous corrected water weight readings from the measurement water weight sensors. The water weight can be determined from the total weight measured by subtracting the contribution of the wire that is fairly constant.
Method 2. The following improved dynamically compensated calibration can be applied for measuring paper stock(s) having a total water weight ranging from 0 to 20000 g/m2 and higher. Method 2 is based in part on the discovery that for a wide range of conductances and water weights, calibrating curves can also be consolidated into a single calibration curve using multiple adjustment parameters in a calibration equation. It has been observed that the relationship between the paper stock or solution conductance (SC) and the reference sensor resistance (or equivalently, the conductance) is linear.
The linear relationship can be expressed as Equation 3:
SC=(ΔSC/ΔGref)*Gref+SCGref0 (3)
where:
Similarly, for the measurement sensors, the relationship is linear for a particular water weight and can be expressed as Equation 4:
SC=(ΔSC/ΔG)*G+SCG0 (4)
where:
The relationship between conductance and the inverse of measurement sensor signal resistance is plotted in
The projected conductance at any given water weight, SCG0 can be expressed as Equation 6:
SCG0={(A*exp('WWH/heightR0)}+Offset (6)
where:
With these relationships, the water weight can be determined from conductance measurements from a reference sensor and a measurement sensor using the following iterative method:
Water weight sensors (or an array arranged in the MD and/or CD underneath the wire) can be employed to optimize papermaking machines. Process control techniques for papermaking machines are further described, for instance, in U.S. Pat. No. 6,149,770 to Hu et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,092,003 to Hagart-Alexander et. al, U.S. Pat. No. 6,080,278 to Heaven et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,059,931 to Hu et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,853,543 to Hu et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 5,892,679 to He, which are all incorporated herein by reference.
As is apparent, a number of parameters of the wet end and dry end of the papermaking machine as illustrated in
A wide range of chemicals is utilized in the papermaking stock furnish to impart or enhance specific sheet properties or to serve other necessary purposes. Such additives as alum, sizing agents, mineral fillers, starches and dyes are commonly used. Chemicals for control purposes such as drainage aids, defoamers, retention aids, pitch dispersants, slimicides, and corrosion inhibitors are added as required. Fabrication of quality paper required addition of the proper amount of these chemicals.
Wet end chemistry deals with all the interactions between furnish materials and the chemical/physical processes occurring at the wet end of the papermaking machine. The major interactions at the molecular and colloidal level are surface charge, flocculation, coagulation, hydrolysis, time-dependent chemical reactions and microbiological activity. These interactions are fundamental to the papermaking process. For example, to achieve effective retention, drainage, sheet formation, and sheet properties, it is necessary that the filler particles, fiber fines, size and starch be flocculated and/or adsorbed onto the large fibers with minimal flocculation between the large fibers themselves.
Control of wet-end chemistry is vital to ensure that a uniform paper product is manufactured. The wet end of a papermaking machine is also critical in determining the longterm stability of the machine and ultimately the quality of the resulting product. Wet end control is further described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,466,839 to Heaven et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 6,086,716 to Watson et al., which are both incorporated herein.
Typically, the papermaking furnish or raw material is metered, diluted, mixed with any necessary additives, and finally screened and cleaned as it is introduced into headbox from a fan pump. Any of these unit operations can be regulated. For example, paper stock is supplied to a machine chest from a refiner which includes adjustable mechanical elements, e.g., motorized disk elements or plates to grind the paper fiber surfaces. Generally, the refiner is part of the stock preparation system which prepares, conditions, and/or treats the pulp or stock in such a manner that a satisfactory sheet of paper can be produced. Adjusting the load will increase or decrease the degree of mechanical action on the pulp by the mechanical elements in the refiner. The refiner is connected to sources of thick stock and water. For high quality paper typically more than one source of pulp is used. Vigorously grinding the paper stock in the refiner reduces the rate at which water will drain through the wire mesh. Thus, it is common to refer to a rapidly draining stock as being “free”, or having high freeness, whereas more highly grinded stock is referred to as being slow, or having low freeness. In addition, wet end control also includes means for adding non-fibrous additives to the papermaking stock described above. Chemical additives are added at different steps in the process.
The water drainage profile on a fourdrinier wire is a complicated function principally dependent on the arrangement and performance of drainage elements, characteristics of the wire, tension on the wire, stock characteristics (for example freeness, pH and additives), stock thickness, stock temperature, stock consistency wire speed and refiner load or power. By controlling one or more operating parameters of the system the quality of the paper fabricated can be regulated. Although one may adjust the concentration of additives to regulate the final product, and/or regulate the flow of pulp into the refiner when more than one source is employed, generally for a particular grade of paper, it is preferred to maintain the concentration of the additives and pulp flow rates once the optimum levels are set.
In one embodiment of the control system, one or more of the other process parameters while keeping the flow of additives and pulp within certain set points. One such parameter is the refiner power. This can be accomplished by using a refiner that has a refiner plate position control system. By subjecting fibers to different levels of mechanical action, the paper stock flowing onto the wire will exhibit different properties, e.g., drainage characteristics.
Finally, the ratio of jet velocity of the paper stock through the slice of headbox to wire velocity is usually adjusted near unity to achieve best sheet formation. Typically, this ratio is maintained between 0.95 to 1.05 but usually it is not maintained at exactly 1. If the jet velocity lags the wire, the sheet is said to be “dragged”; if the jet velocity exceeds the wire speed, the sheet is said to be “rushed”. Sometimes, it is necessary to rush or drag the sheet slightly to improve drainage or change fiber orientation. The jet speed is not actually measured, but is inferred from the headbox pressure. The jet-to-wire ratio can be changed by adjusting the wire speed or the jet speed. The wire speed is typically adjusted by changing the speed of the large rolls at the beginning and end of the wire which the wire travels on. Often times the couch roll, i.e., the end roll, controls the speed of the wire. The jet speed is adjusted by the headbox pressure.
Water Weight Sensors
Suitable sensing devices for use in the present invention include water weight sensors which are available under the trade name SPECTRAFOIL from Honeywell, Inc. and which are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,954,923 to Chase et al., which is incorporated herein. These sensors have a very fast response time (1 msec) so that an essentially instantaneous water weight can be obtained. The SPECTRAFOIL brand sensors are positioned underneath the wire of a papermaking machine, e.g., fourdrinier. The invention will be described with the water weight sensors having the construction illustrated herein but it is understood that other water weight sensors having similar characteristics can be employed.
Resistances Rs1 and Rs2 are dependent on changes in the water depth and the bulk conductivity of the aqueous mixture. The bulk conductivity of the mixture in turn is influenced by a number of factors, including, for example, mixture temperature, chemical additions, the concentration of fiber. When using the measurement apparatus to measure only water weight, it is necessary to cancel out the affects of the bulk conductivity seen in the detected resistance between the electrodes. This is done with a feedback apparatus 27, as shown in
The feedback circuit 27 including reference cell 28 and feedback signal generator 29. The concept of the feedback circuit 27 is to isolate a reference cell such that it is affected by aqueous mixture physical characteristic changes other than the physical characteristic that is desired to be sensed by the system. For instance, if weight is desired to be sensed then the weight is kept constant so that any voltage changes generated by the reference cell are due to physical characteristics other than weight changes. In one embodiment, reference cell 28 is immersed in an aqueous mixture of recycled water which has the same chemical and temperature characteristics of the water in which cell array 24 is immersed in. Hence, any chemical or temperature changes affecting conductivity experienced by array 24 is also sensed by reference cell 28. Furthermore, reference cell 28 is configured such that the weight of the water is held constant. As a result voltage changes Vout (ref. cell) generated by the reference cell 28 are due to changes in the conductivity of the aqueous mixture, not the weight. Feedback signal generator 29 converts the undesirable voltage changes produced from the reference cell into a feedback signal that either increases or decreases Vin and thereby cancels out the affect of erroneous voltage changes on the sensing system. For instance, if the conductivity of the aqueous mixture in the array increases due to a temperature increase, then Vout (ref. cell) will decrease causing a corresponding increase in the feedback signal. Increasing Vfeedback increases Vin which, in turn, compensates for the initial increase in conductivity of the aqueous mixture due to the temperature change. As a result, Vout from the cells only change when the weight of the aqueous mixture changes.
Instead of using an external reference cell and feedback circuit, the electrode configuration can include a built-in reference cell within the measurement electrode configuration.
The electrode configuration further includes a plurality of interspaced reference electrodes 64 built into grounded electrode 60. A circular layer of dielectric insulates each reference electrode from the elongated grounded center electrode. The reference electrodes form an array of reference cells each including a reference electrode and the portion of the grounded electrode surrounding the reference electrode. As is with the measurement electrodes, each reference electrode is coupled to an impedance element and a measurement input signal Vin in order to measure the reference electrode resistance (Rref) of the aqueous mixture between the reference electrode and ground formed by the circle of dielectric material encircling the reference electrode. In another embodiment, more than one reference electrode can be associated with a single measurement electrode segment. In still another embodiment, a single segmented electrode can be used instead of two on either side of the ground electrode, wherein the measurement electrode configuration only includes one elongated, segmented electrode and an elongated, grounded electrode.
The measurement and reference electrodes can be constructed so that they exhibit different sensitivities to a first property but exhibit relatively the same sensitivity to a second property. For instance, both the reference and measurement electrodes can have the same sensitivity to changes in bulk conductivity on the wet stock but have different sensitivities to changes in water depth. In particular, if the bulk conductivity of the wet stock changes, each of the reference and measurement electrodes detects a similar change in resistance, when the water depth is kept constant. However, the reference and measurement electrodes have different sensitivities to changes in water depth. As a result, for the same depth of the aqueous mixture, each of the reference and measurement electrodes will detect a different resistance.
The sensitivity of either a reference or measurement electrode cell to the depth of water depends on the spacing between the grounded electrode and the electrode opposite the grounded electrode which is coupled to the impedance element. For instance, the spacing between one of the measurement electrode segments and the grounded elongated electrode determines the sensitivity of that measurement cell. Similarly, the spacing of the dielectric which encircles the reference electrode between one of the reference electrodes and the grounded elongated electrode determines the sensitivity of the reference cell to water depth.
When the sensitivity of the reference electrodes to changes in water depth is made sufficiently low, then its output will be dominated by changes in the intrinsic bulk conductivity of the liquid. Its output then can be utilized to compensate for the effects of changes in the intrinsic bulk conductivity of the liquid on the measurement electrode output. The resistance, or its reciprocal the conductance, measured by the sensor is the sum of the contribution due to the intrinsic bulk conductivity of the liquid and of the contribution due to the water weight or depth. This behavior can thus be described in a single equation. It is not necessary that both the measurement and reference electrodes have a different sensitivity to a first property but have relatively the same sensitivity to a second property. Alternatively, the measurement and reference electrodes are constructed so that they have different sensitivities to both the first and second properties.
The foregoing has described the principles, preferred embodiments and modes of operation of the present invention. However, the invention should not be construed as being limited to the particular embodiments discussed. Thus, the above-described embodiments should be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive, and it should be appreciated that variations may be made in those embodiments by workers skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention as defined by the following claims.