The present invention relates to the production of a kraftliner paper in a one to three layer construction, with a short chemical fiber composition ranging from 70% to 100%, and the remaining fraction completed with long chemical fiber.
The term kraftliner paper is widely used in the international market and is defined as paper or cardboard with no less than 80% fiber obtained by the sulfate or soda process.
Thus, kraftliner papers are produced from mixtures of chemical fibers (long fibers and short fibers). The pulp composition depends on the quality requirements of the paper, and the grammage of the resulting paper can range from 70 to 440 g/m2.
Kraftliner papers play an important role in corrugated cardboard boxes, as they take part in their composition and help to define their properties. As these boxes protect their contents from impacts during handling, transportation, storage, stacking load, extreme temperatures and humidity, kraftliner paper has to meet general strength requirements such as: tensile strength, bursting resistance, compressive strength and ply bond, and provide adequate porosity. The paper should also have good printing quality.
Bursting resistance is considered a general indicator of product strength and is associated with stiffness and rupture stress. In practice, it is the hydrostatic pressure necessary to break the product when it is subjected to a constant and uniformly distributed force, applied on one of its sides.
On the other hand, tear strength is the force required to tear the product at a fixed distance after tearing has started. The product has greater tear strength in the direction perpendicular to the fibers (transverse) and the longer the fiber, the greater is the tear strength.
Gurley porosity, or air permeance is the difficulty with which a gas volume passes through a sheet under a pressure gradient and depends on the number, size, shape and distribution of pores in the material. This property is indirectly related to sheet formation, paper strength, and penetration of printing inks into the paper. It is important for certain uses of paper, such as for packaging, bags and pouches.
The compressive strength of paper is the property of kraftliner paper to resist to the compression applied parallel to the sheet plane and is responsible, for example, for the performance of a box during its normal use, that is, from the moment of positioning the content to the delivery of the product to the final consumer. It can be assessed by both SCT (Short-span Compression Test), and RCT (Ring Crush Test). These two test methods are not interchangeable but complementary, since they measure different compressive strength properties, affected by the manufacturing process.
The term “ply bond” refers to the determination of the internal cohesion of the paper sheet, generated by the bonding between the fibers, which avoid the separation of layers of a multilayer paper.
Typical applications for kraftliner include: food, beverages, cosmetics, electronics, hygiene and cleaning, horticulture products and flowers, electrical materials, chemicals and derivatives, clothing and footwear, glass and ceramics.
Document BR 11 2016 006857-2 discloses a multilayer cardboard comprising cellulosic fiber pulp, in which 100% of the total fiber content of said cardboard is formed by hardwood fibers. The document further discloses that the cardboard under discussion may also include dry force additives, such as starch. However, the application of starch is not superficial and the paper discloses presents at least three layers.
Patent application BR 11 2017 010500-4 refers to a method to produce a load composition that will be used in the production of paper or cardboard, in which starch and/or carboxymethylcellulose is added to the calcium hydroxide suspension during carbonation. However, this document is directed to a method of producing a filler to be used in the production of paper or cardboard and not to the paper itself.
Patent application PI 0918112-1 discloses the use of a novel strength agent in the papermaking process, such as hydrophobic starch. In addition to being more focused on the starch itself and not on paper, the application of starch, according to this document, is not superficial.
However, until then, the state of the art is deficient in disclosing a kraftliner paper with all the qualities of the paper described in the present invention. This is due to the fact that, currently, a kraftliner paper with better quality (in terms of strength) is produced in machines with one to three layers construction, with 100% long chemical fiber. This better physical-mechanical resistance is provided by the better bonding between fibers.
Although the paper of the state of the art performs well in the box conversion step, this paper has the following shortcomings:
The present invention, which deals with the use of short chemical fiber, preferably eucalyptus short fiber, aims to provide an exceptional quality kraftliner paper consisting of one to three layers of long and short chemical fibers. The focus on developing a kraftliner paper with higher content of short eucalyptus fiber is due to the goal of having a product with better quality and lower cost.
With this paper, the instant invention presents a novel solution to technical problems faced, since the kraftliner paper of the present invention provides:
The present invention refers to a kraftliner paper in a one to three layer construction, composed of both long chemical fibers and short chemical fibers.
In an additional embodiment of the present invention, the short chemical fibers present in the kraftliner paper composition are short eucalyptus fibers.
The physical-mechanical properties of short eucalyptus chemical fibers are inferior to those of long chemical fibers. Thus, the present invention explored the alternative of the surface coating with starch.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a starch layer is applied on the paper surface to compensate for losses of physical-mechanical resistance when the fraction of long fiber in the composition is reduced. Thus, the kraftliner paper of the present invention is preferably composed of 100% short fibers, with a layer of starch applied superficially.
Preferably, starch is applied in an amount of 0 to 30 kg starch/t paper.
The total replacement of long fiber by short fiber, with surface application of starch, results in a product with excellent formation and quality with regard to: bursting resistance, tensile strength, tear strength, Gurley porosity, SCT (Short-span Compression Test), RCT (Ring Crush Test) and printing.
The results were surprising and the paper produced only with short eucalyptus chemical fibers presented physical-mechanical properties superior to papers produced with long chemical fibers in its composition, used as reference. This is totally unexpected and provided by coating the paper with surface starch.
In order to assess the kraftliner paper of the present invention, a series of industrial tests were carried out comparing the paper composed of 100% of short eucalyptus chemical fibers with a reference paper, produced in a one-layer paper machine, consisting of 75% of short chemical fiber of eucalyptus and 25% of long chemical fiber. All tests were performed in a paper machine with two layers and superficial application of starch.
Both the reference papers and the present invention were converted into boxes and presented the same performance in terms of quality.
The ranges of physical-mechanical properties of short eucalyptus chemical fibers that are acceptable for use in the production of kraftliner paper of the present invention are shown in table 1.
All tests to determine the physical and mechanical properties of kraftliner paper were performed according to the methods and standards listed in table 2 below, after conditioning in an air-conditioned environment at a temperature of 23° C. and 50% relative humidity.
In the production of the paper of the present invention, short eucalyptus chemical fibers were used, whose most important physical-mechanical properties are shown in table 3.
Kraftliner Paper with 100% Eucalyptus Short Chemical Fiber
The kraftliner papers of the present invention were produced in accordance with the following steps:
After the steps described above, the dried sheet was rolled up and converted into coils of specified sizes. The kraftliner papers of the present invention were produced in grammages from 90 to 185 g/m2.
The results of the most important physical-mechanical properties of kraftliner paper with 100% short eucaliptus chemical fiber in a grammage of 135 g/m2, with and without application of surface starch (0-30 kg starch/t paper), and the reference paper, are shown in table 4. The paper used as a reference was KlaLiner Paper, produced and marketed by Klabin, which has short and long fibers in its composition.
From the data presented in table 4, it is possible to observe that the comparison of the main properties of bursting resistance, SCT and RCT of the kraftliner paper with surface starch of the present invention with the reference paper demonstrates increases of 20%, 25% and 20%, respectively, for the paper of the present invention. These results demonstrate the level of excellence of the kraftliner paper produced with 100% short eucaliptus chemical fibers.
By comparing the kraftliner paper produced with 100% short chemical fibers with and without application of superficial starch, the importance of this operation in the physical-mechanical properties of this product becomes evident.
Also, the formation index of the kraftliner paper of this invention is better than the reference kraftliner paper, this property being 11.5% lower. It is noteworthy that the lower the value of the formation index, the smaller the variation in the sheet grammage and the better the formation of paper.
Tests for assessing the physical-mechanical properties were carried out for kraftliner paper with 100% short eucaliptus chemical fiber in other grammages, with and without application of surface starch, and the most important results of these grammages are presented in table 5 below.
As noted in table 5, the kraftliner paper with 100% short fibers with application of surface starch of the present invention has excellent physical-mechanical properties over a wide range of grammages.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1020170285227 | Dec 2017 | BR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/BR2018/050397 | 10/30/2018 | WO | 00 |