The present invention relates to an installation, or system, for implementing a method for producing paper pulp, lignins and sugars.
The invention relates, in particular, to an installation for implementing the method disclosed in the European Patent EP-B1-1.180.171.
The present invention aims, in particular, to propose an installation allowing optimal and economical implementation of this method, allowing selective extraction, in particular, of the products such as lignins and sugars.
To this end, the invention proposes an installation for implementing a method for producing paper pulp, lignins and sugars, in which:
According to further features of the invention:
Further features and advantages of the invention will become evident from reading the detailed description which follows, for the understanding of which reference will be made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the description which follows, all identical, similar or analogous elements and components will be denoted by the same reference numerals.
The terms longitudinal, vertical and transverse will be used with reference to the trihedron L, V, T indicated in the figures.
The upstream-downstream orientation will also be used for the longitudinal circulation of the raw material from right to left, when viewing
The installation 10 shown diagrammatically in
The treatment chamber 12 is impermeable to avoid any dissipation of acid vapour into the atmosphere and it comprises an upstream inlet 14 for supplying raw material and a downstream outlet 16 for discharging the treated raw material.
Atmospheric pressure prevails within the treatment chamber 12.
Within the chamber 12 a motorized conveyor 18 is arranged of which the belt 20, in the upper portion, travels from upstream to downstream from right to left and receives, in the vicinity of its upstream end, the raw material MP to be treated, entering the treatment chamber 12 via the inlet 14.
The belt 20 conveyor 18 therefore allows the raw material to be circulated from upstream to downstream within the chamber 12 at a constant speed or controlled by drive and control means, and by means, not shown, for controlling the transport speed of the raw material MP.
As may be seen in the diagram of
The raw material MP is thus distributed in the most uniform manner possible, by means not shown, over the entire width of the belt 20 of the conveyor 18.
The belt 20 is arranged in the treatment chamber 12 so that the liquids that reach the upper face of the upper belt 20 can drain away, in this case laterally, on both sides of the longitudinal edges 22 of the belt and/or by way of a variant, not shown, through the belt 20″ which is therefore perforated to this end.
The installation 10 comprises a hopper 24 for supplying the treatment chamber 12 with raw material MP.
The hopper 24 is connected to the inlet 14 by a screw 26 for propelling the raw material into a pipe 28 connected to the inlet 14.
As shown in
The supply flow rate from the hopper 24 of the mixture of acids for pre-impregnation may be controlled by a solenoid valve 34.
When the raw material MP leaves the upper belt 20 of the conveyor 18, it falls by gravity into the outlet 16 and is discharged via a discharge pipe 36.
The type of raw materials used, such as for example straw, as well as the composition of the mixtures of organic acids and their temperatures depend on the method of producing paper pulp, lignins and sugars implemented by means of the installation 10.
By way of example, reference may be made in particular to the contents of the European Patent EP-B1-1,180,171 to understand these physico-chemical parameters.
According to the teaching of the invention, apart from the treatment chamber 12 and its means for supplying raw material MP, the installation 10 comprises successively, from upstream to downstream, a series of n treatment stations PTi with i between 1 and n.
In the example shown in
Thus, the first upstream treatment station is the station PT1 whilst the last downstream station is the station PT7.
All the components of a station PTi will be denoted by the same reference numerals indexed “I”.
Each treatment station PTi is an ‘autonomous’ station and serves to ensure the combination or brief contact of the raw material MP with a mixture of organic acids in liquid form in order to ensure ‘impregnation’ of the raw material MP at each treatment station PTi.
In the figures, the various consecutive treatment stations are delimited by vertical dotted lines.
Each treatment station PTi, arranged vertically above the upper belt 20 conveying the raw material MP, comprises means for spraying the raw material with a mixture of organic acids by gravity.
By way of non-limiting example, in this case the spraying means of the raw material MP are constituted at each station by a bucket Gi which is illustrated in the figures in the resting and filling position and which is capable of swinging about its lower horizontal axis Xi to discharge its contents vertically, and substantially over the entire transverse length of the belt 20, onto the raw material MP located on the upper belt 20 substantially to the right of the bucket Gi.
By way of a variant, not shown, the means for spraying the raw material at each station may be constituted by one or more booms for spraying or sprinkling the raw material by gravity, so as to guarantee the most uniform distribution possible of the mixture of organic acids.
Each station PTi also comprises means for recovering the mixture of organic acids for impregnation of the raw material MP, after this mixture has passed through the raw material MP, and then drained away laterally on both sides of the belt conveyor 20 and/or passed through the belt if said belt is perforated or apertured to this end with perforations of a sufficiently small size so as to allow only the passage of the liquids to be recovered.
These means for collecting the mixture of organic acids after having passed through the raw material MP are, in this case, constituted at each station by a collection trough Ai which extends transversely over the entire width of the treatment chamber 12 and substantially longitudinally over the entire length of a treatment station PTi.
In the sense of the invention, the mixture of organic acids which fills the bucket Gi at each station is known as the “fresh” mixture of organic acids and which, at the relevant station, is placed temporarily in contact with the raw material MP to impregnate said raw material by passing therethrough.
A temporary “immersion” of the raw material MP is therefore carried out at the station PTi by passing a fresh mixture of organic acids through the raw material MP by gravity.
It is also noteworthy, according to the principle of the invention, that the raw material is never received in a bath of the mixture of organic acids but said mixture of organic acids simply impregnates and briefly passes through the raw material.
Each bucket Gi is supplied with fresh mixture by a supply pipe CFi in which a solenoid valve is interposed to control the flow rate of fresh mixture EVFi.
A heat exchanger Ei, or any other equivalent heating means, provided with means Ti for controlling the temperature, allows the temperature of the fresh mixture supplying the bucket Gi to be accurately determined.
After its recovery in the collection trough Ai, the mixture of organic acids is suctioned, in this case by a pump Pi, of which the suction inlet is connected to the trough Ai via a recovery pipe CRi with a solenoid valve EVRi interposed for controlling the flow rate in the pipe CRi.
As is shown diagrammatically in the figures, the delivery outlet of the pump Pi is firstly connected to an extraction pipe CEi in which a solenoid valve EVEi is interposed to control the extraction flow rate.
The delivery outlet of the pump Pi is also connected to a pipe CRUi for recycling at least a portion of the recovered mixture of organic acids, with a solenoid valve EVRUi interposed in the pipe CRUi for controlling the flow rate.
All the solenoid valves of the installation are connected to a central control unit, not shown, as are the means for heating Ei and thermal control Ti.
The recycling pipe CRUi of a treatment station PTi is connected, in this case via the heat exchanger Ei-1, to the pipe CFi-1 which supplies the bucket Gi-1 of the treatment station PTi-1 located in this case immediately upstream of the station PTi.
Thus, according to the teaching of the invention, at the “second” treatment station Pi, the raw material MP is impregnated with a “second” fresh mixture of organic acids, then a portion of the second mixture is recovered after impregnation of the material MP so that said second mixture is recycled to form at least partially the “first” fresh acid mixture intended for impregnating the raw material MP, located immediately upstream of the station PTi, at the ‘first’ treatment station PTi-1.
Naturally, at the last downstream station PTn, i.e. in this case at the station PT7, means E7, T7 and EVF7 are provided for supplying the bucket G7 with a fresh acid mixture.
To this end, the heat exchanger E7 itself is, for example, also connected to the tank of the mixture of organic acids 32 via a pipe 36 with a solenoid valve 38 for controlling the flow rate.
The original mixture of organic acids contained in the tank 32 which supplies the last downstream station PTn is thus at least partially recycled from station to station as far as the first station PT1.
At the first upstream station PT1, the pipe CRU1 is, in this case, a discharge pipe for the mixture of organic acids suctioned by the pump P1 and which is not recycled.
Without departing from the scope of the invention, it is conceivable that each station PTi, i.e. each bucket Gi, apart from the mixture of organic acids recovered at the station located immediately downstream, be also partially supplied with a mixture of organic acids originating from another source, and, for example, from the tank 32 of the original mixture of organic acids.
The extraction pipe CE1 of each treatment station PTi allows a portion of the mixture of organic acids, having passed through the raw material MP at this station, to be removed to extract, in particular, solubilized sugar monomers and polymers, and lignins derived from the original plant material MP.
The possibility of removing mixture for the purpose of extraction(s) at each treatment station PTi provides many advantages.
It allows, in particular, lignins of specific and known molecular weights to be extracted, these lignins being able to be characterized, in the known manner, in particular by mass spectrometry.
The same applies to sugars and, in particular, hydrolysed hemicelluloses.
It is noteworthy that recovering and recycling the mixture of organic acids from station to station progressively changes said mixture into lignins and sugars, whilst the alteration of its concentration of organic acids is observed.
Being able to carry out an extraction at each station, and in particular at the first station PTi, also allows the water content to be readjusted, in particular to ascertain the moisture or water content of the raw material MP which depends on its particular type and, for example, also on its storage conditions prior to being treated in the installation.
The invention is not limited to the embodiment which has been disclosed above.
The belt conveyor may be replaced by any similar device, such as for example a screw conveyor.
All the treatment stations may be divided into successive groups in separate chambers with the transfer of the raw material and mixtures of acids from one chamber to the next.
The collection troughs have been shown in the figures in the form of discrete components, i.e. each station PTi comprising its trough Ai.
As has been shown diagrammatically in
The dimensions in the longitudinal direction L of each collection trough Ai and between the consecutive zones allow, in particular, the molecular weights or groups of molecular weights of the lignins extracted at each station to be “controlled”.
The invention also relates to a method for producing paper pulp by means of an installation according to the invention which is characterized in that a portion of said quantity of second mixture is removed to extract therefrom sugar monomers and polymers of specific molecular weights. The invention also relates to sugar monomers and polymers of specific molecular weights obtained according to this method.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05 51158 | May 2005 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2006/061715 | 4/20/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/26/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/117295 | 11/9/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090065158 A1 | Mar 2009 | US |