The invention relates to method of controlling the operation of stock preparation of a paper machine, the stock preparation being configured to produce machine stock to be fed to the short circulation of the paper machine either from one or more component stocks by blending them with each other, and the stock preparation including a plurality of successive blending points, where the component stocks are blended with each other, a second raw material of the machine stock is added to the stock and/or the stock is diluted by blending dilution water with the stock, and in which method the flow and/or consistency of one or more stocks arriving at a blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at a blending point is adjusted and/or the flow and consistency of the stock leaving a blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving a blending point is adjusted.
The invention further relates to an apparatus for controlling the operation of stock preparation of a paper machine, the stock preparation being configured to produce machine stock to be fed to the short circulation of the paper machine either from one or more component stocks by blending them with each other, and the stock preparation including a plurality of successive blending points, where the component stocks are blended with each other, a second raw material of the machine stock is added to the stock and/or the stock is diluted by blending dilution water with the stock, the apparatus being configured to adjust the flow and/or consistency of one or more stocks arriving at a blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at a blending point and/or to adjust the flow and consistency of the stock leaving a blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving a blending point.
The invention also relates to a method of controlling the operation of stock preparation of a paper machine, the stock preparation being configured to produce machine stock to be fed to the short circulation of the paper machine either from one or more component stocks by blending them with each other, and in which stock preparation a second raw material of the machine stock is added to the stock and/or the stock is diluted by blending dilution water with the stock, and in which method the flow and consistency of the stock flowing forward in the dosing line of the stock preparation and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock are adjusted.
In papermaking, the measured basis weight or variables derived from it, such as the air-dry or completely dry basis weight, of a paper web being made are adjusted by controlling the dosing of the paper stock or paper pulp being transferred to the short circulation of the paper machine from the stock preparation of the paper machine. The stock fed into the short circulation of the paper machine is typically called machine stock. Since the quality and amount of machine stock produced cannot be made so even that the stock could be led from the manufacturing equipment directly to the paper machine, the stock preparation comprises a plurality of different storage and intermediate chests. The various component stocks included in the machine stock, i.e. stocks containing different kinds of fibers, constitute the first raw material of the machine stock, i.e. the fibrous raw material of the machine stock. Different fillers, additives or chemicals added to the machine stock or the component stocks constitute the second raw material of the machine stock. These different fillers, additives and chemicals are used to improve the quality and printability of finished paper or the operability of the manufacturing process. Typically, the component stocks, fillers, additives and chemicals are stored in large storage chests. The composition of the machine stock conveyed to the paper machine is adjusted in a dosing system at the stock preparation, where the different stock components included in the stock are blended with each other both in a pipe leading to the blending chest and in the blending chest itself, from where the stock is conveyed to the machine chest and from there further to the short circulation of the paper machine. The consistency of the machine stock conveyed to the short circulation is typically kept at three percent. Since the consistency of the component stocks stored in storage chests is usually 10 to 14%, and the consistency of repulped stock is usually about 5%, the consistency of the different component stocks and, if need be, that of the blended stock are diluted by addition of water, which is typically white water separated from the short circulation of the paper machine. Accordingly, the consistency of the stock to be fed into the paper machine is adjusted by changing the amount of dilution water fed into the stock, i.e. the adjustment of the consistency of the stock always relates to the addition of dilution water to the stock in a suitable ratio to the amount and consistency of the stock.
The basis weight of the paper web to be made is adjusted by changing the fiber flow conveyed to the paper machine. In practice, the basis weight is adjusted by changing the flow of machine stock. Since the basis weight adjustment is unaware of future variations in stock consistency, consistency variations can be eliminated for instance by including, in the machine stock flow request, an additional specification ‘at 3% consistency’ relating to the consistency of the stock to be fed, i.e. the desired consistency of the machine stock to be fed is 3%. If the measured consistency deviates from the target, the flow target is amended respectively. The desired fiber flow is thus conveyed to the paper machine. The basis weight adjustment requests for the necessary amount of fiber flow or machine stock flow from the machine chest in the stock preparation, the intent being to keep a constant amount of stock therein at all times. The change in the machine stock flow caused by a change in the basis weight, i.e. a flow disturbance, travels from the paper machine towards the storage towers for the component stocks, the flow disturbance being strengthened further by the action of the adjustment of the surface level in each intermediate chest in the dosing line. Because the flow disturbances are strong and rapid, the consistency adjustments are unable to keep up, causing consistency disturbances that proceed along with the stock flow towards the paper machine. Because of the large volume of the intermediate chests and the significant length of the dosing line, the process involves long delays, wherefore the stock preparation adjustment is extremely sensitive to variations both in the consistency of the component stocks and in the concentrations of fillers, additives and chemicals, which, in turn, easily lead to retention variation in the wire section of the paper machine. Retention variation in the wire section also causes changes in the ash content and basis weight of the paper web. Accordingly, the flow disturbance caused by a change in the basis weight first proceeds as a flow disturbance from the machine chest through the dosing chests towards the stock towers and returns as a consistency disturbance through the dilution steps in the dosing line to the machine stock and further all the way to the basis weight of the paper. The basis weight is measured at the dry end of the paper machine immediately before the web is reeled into a machine roll, whereby a basis weight error detected in the measurement causes a new change, i.e. a flow disturbance, by changing the machine stock flow. As a result, a state of vibration, which is difficult to manage, is created, during which paper or board having the wrong basis weight and ash content is produced. This vibration also causes other disturbances in the operation of the process via dilution lines, for example.
The above-described dosing solution based on the blending capacity of the machine chest and the blending chest is not the only usable solution. Component stock dosing and blending can also be solved in other ways. For example, the machine chest and the blending chest may be two successive blending chests and the machine chest as a third chest, whereby blending is believed to be under still better control. If the consistency and other properties of the component stocks are well controlled, one chest may be sufficient. In new solutions, the aim is to blend the component stocks with each other in a separate blending device in the short circulation, whereby the process does not include any blending chest or machine chest.
At present, stock preparation dosing is controlled by adjusting the surface levels of the different stock chests and the consistencies and flow rates of the stock flows at different points of the process with unit controllers based on feed forward coupling, examples of which are the method for regulating the surface level and the consistency in a stock chest for a component stock disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,210,529, and the method for regulating the basis weight of paper or board by dosing component stocks disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,203,667, both methods utilizing feed forward coupling to adjust the process. However, the use of feed forward coupling in the adjustment is problematic, since when feed forward coupling is used, the action of adjustment changes on the process part succeeding the controller cannot be taken into account.
The object of the present invention is to provide a new type of solution for controlling the operation of stock preparation.
The method of the invention is characterized by determining the consistency of one or more stocks arriving at a blending point or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at a blending point and by determining the consistency of the stock leaving a blending point or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving a blending point, by determining the flow of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and the flow of the stock leaving the blending point, by determining a consistency prediction for the consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point or a concentration prediction of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at a blending point, by determining a flow prediction for the flow of the stock leaving the blending point, by determining a consistency target for the consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point or a target concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at the blending point and/or by determining a consistency target of the consistency of the stock leaving the blending point or the target concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving the blending point, by determining a flow target for the flow of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or a flow target for the flow of the stock leaving the blending point, and by adjusting the flow and/or consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at the blending point based on the flow prediction of the stock leaving the blending point and/or the consistency prediction of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or the concentration prediction of the second raw material of the machine stock in such a manner that the flow of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point follows the determined flow target and/or the consistency follows the determined consistency target and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock follows the determined target concentration and/or by adjusting the flow and consistency of the stock leaving the blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving the blending point based on the flow prediction of the stock leaving the blending point and/or the consistency prediction of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or the concentration prediction of the second raw material of the machine stock in such a manner that the flow of the stock leaving the blending point follows the determined flow target and the consistency follows the determined consistency target and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock follows the determined target concentration.
The apparatus of the invention is characterized in that the apparatus is configured to determine the consistency of one or more stocks arriving at a blending point or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at a blending point and to determine the consistency of the stock leaving a blending point or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving a blending point, to determine the flow of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and the flow of the stock leaving the blending point, to determine a consistency prediction of the consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point or a concentration prediction of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at the blending point, to determine a flow prediction for the flow of the stock leaving the blending point, to determine a consistency target for the consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point or a target concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at the blending point and/or to determine a consistency target for the consistency of the stock leaving the blending point or a target concentration for the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving the blending point, to determine a flow target for the flow of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or a flow target for the flow of the stock leaving the blending point and to adjust the flow and/or consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at the blending point based on the flow prediction of the stock leaving the blending point and/or the consistency prediction of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or the concentration prediction of the second raw material of the machine stock in such a manner that the flow of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point follows the determined flow target and/or the consistency follows the determined consistency target and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock follows the determined target concentration and/or to adjust the flow and consistency of the stock leaving the blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving the blending point based on the flow prediction of the stock leaving the blending point and/or the consistency prediction of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or the concentration prediction of the second raw material of the machine stock in such a manner that the flow of the stock leaving the blending point follows the determined flow target and the consistency follows the determined consistency target and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock follows the determined target concentration.
The method of the invention for adjusting the flow and consistency of the stock leaving the blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock is further characterized by determining flow data and a flow prediction for the machine stock, determining flow data and a flow prediction for one or more component stocks, transferring the flow data and flow prediction of a component stock along the dosing line of the stock preparation backwards in such a manner that adjustments controlling the stock flows forward along the dosing line utilize predicted future flow changes, determining consistency data and a consistency prediction of one or more component stocks and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock and a concentration prediction in the stock, and transferring the consistency data and consistency prediction of a component stock and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock and a concentration prediction in the stock forward along the dosing line in the stock preparation in such a manner that the adjustments controlling the consistency of the stock or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock utilize the predicted future consistency changes or the changes in the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock.
An essential idea of the invention is to control the operation of the stock preparation of a paper machine, the stock preparation being adapted to produce machine stock to be fed into the short circulation of the paper machine from either one component stock or several component stocks by blending them with each other and comprising a plurality of successive blending points where the component stocks are blended with each other, the second raw material of the machine stock is added to the stock and/or the stock is diluted by mixing dilution water to the stock, by adjusting the flow and/or consistency of one or more stocks arriving at a blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at a blending point and/or by adjusting the flow and consistency of the stock leaving a blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving a blending point. The essential idea comprises determining the consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at the blending point, determining the consistency of the stock leaving the blending point or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving the blending point, determining the flow of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and the flow of the stock leaving the blending point. The essential idea further comprises determining a consistency prediction for the consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point or a prediction for the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at the blending point, determining a flow prediction for the flow of the stock leaving the blending point, determining a consistency target for the consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point or a target concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at the blending point and/or determining a consistency target for the consistency of the stock leaving the blending point or the target concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving the blending point and determining a flow target for the flow of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or a flow target for the flow of the stock leaving the blending point. The essential idea further comprises adjusting the flow and/or consistency of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock arriving at the blending point in such a manner that the flow of one or more stocks arriving at the blending point follows the determined flow target and/or the consistency follows the determined consistency target and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock follows the determined target concentration and/or adjusting the flow and consistency of the stock leaving the blending point and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock leaving the blending point in such a manner that the flow of the stock leaving the blending point follows the determined flow target and the consistency follows the determined consistency target and/or the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock follows the determined target concentration. According to the essential idea of the invention, a predicted consistency change can be used instead of a consistency prediction, and a predicted concentration change can be used instead of a prediction for the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock in the stock. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, a model predictive control method is used for controlling the operation of the stock preparation, comprising a process model descriptive of the process or a part thereof and optimization in such a manner that the cost function associated with the optimization is minimized for optimal control of the operation of the stock preparation. According to a second preferred embodiment of the invention, dynamic process models are used as process models.
An advantage of the invention is that the stock preparation is rapidly and exactly able to respond in different states of paper machine production changes, such as paper web breaks, paper machine start-up, grade changes and speed changes. The solution presented eliminates the presently very common vibrations in stock preparation flows, surface levels, consistencies and concentrations and, consequently, the effect of these disturbances on paper quality, and enables a much more accurate adjustment in time than methods being used at present.
The solution of the invention is quite similar in the production of board and soft tissue, and, consequently, in the present description, the term ‘paper’ refers not only to paper, but also to board and soft tissue.
The invention will be described in detail in the attached drawings, in which
The consistency of the paper stock fed into the wire section of a paper machine typically varies between 0.3 and 1.5%. At an upper section 1a of the stock tower 1, whereto new component stock OM1 is fed, the consistency of component stock OM1 is typically 10 to 14%. Thus, component stock OM1 has to be diluted before being pumped to the paper machine 8. The component stocks OM1, OM2 and OM3 are diluted by addition of dilution water into the stock in such a manner that the consistency of the machine stock KM to be fed in due course into the short circulation is about 3%. As dilution water is typically used white water, which is separated from the short circulation of the paper machine 8 and from which fibers and fine matter and ash are usually removed with a disc filter. The component stocks are diluted in several steps.
The size of the stock tower 1, the component stock chest 3 and the blending/machine chest 5 depends on the production capacity of the paper machine 8 and the paper qualities produced with it, wherefore the size of the chests may vary significantly. When the same paper grade is manufactured at all times, larger chests are used than when the paper grade changes very often. In newspaper mills, large stock towers 1 and component stock chests 3 are typically used. In this case, the volume of the stock tower may be up to thousands of cubic meters. In a fine paper mill manufacturing a plurality of paper grades, the stock tower 1 or the component stock chest 3 may have a volume of some tens of cubic meters only. The stock tower 1 is usually considerably larger than the component stock chest 3 and the blending/machine stock chest 5.
When the basis weight of paper is being adjusted, a basis weight adjustment unit 9 requests for the necessary fiber flow or machine stock KM flow. Since the desired grammage is generated from the fiber flow in the paper machine, the solution of the basis weight adjustment is based on equation
MS·L·BW=F·Cs·k, (1)
wherein MS is machine speed at reeler [m/s],
Since the basis weight adjustment unit 9 cannot be aware of future stock consistency variations, the term ‘at 3% consistency’ is added to the machine stock KM flow request, i.e. in all cases the desired fiber flow is led to the paper machine. The machine stock KM is pumped from the blending/machine chest 5 with pump P3 along the machine stock dosing pipe 7 to the short circulation of the paper machine 8. From the blending chest, new stock is pumped into the machine chest in such a manner that stock flows at all times from the machine chests via an overflow bin back into the blending chest. This ensures a constant state for machine stock KM pumping and, similarly, the machine chest contains a constant amount of machine stock KM at all times. The blending chest surface level varies, and blending chest surface level measurement is used to adjust the flow of component stocks entering the blending chest in order to keep the surface of the blending chest at the desired level. Process-dynamically, the blending chest is an integrating chest, wherefore the adjustment of the blending chest surface level is slow and results in overshoots, since as the output flow increases for instance 0.01 m3/s, the flow into the blending chest has to be momentarily changed to level 0.02 m3/s before the surface is at the desired level. In this way, a single machine stock KM flow change increases gradually towards the stock towers 1 as high as up to 0.2 m3/s, and presently used adjusting methods are unable to adjust the basis weight BW of the web sufficiently rapidly in a controlled manner.
The solution of the invention for controlling the operation of the stock preparation in a paper machine 8 utilizes the ability of model predictive control (MPC) to calculate a prediction, i.e. future control commands, for control messages required for controlling the operation of the stock preparation. These calculated control predictions are utilized by shifting the flow data and prediction for component stocks OM1, OM2 and OM3, determined based on the machine stock KM flow data and prediction, which take into account the machine stock KM flow change caused by the basis weight adjustment unit 9 backwards along the process flow produced by the dosing line, whereby the adjustments guiding the process stock flow forward utilize the predicted future flow changes. This means that the prediction for the feed flow of a given chest can be used as an indication of the amount of stock to be pumped from the chest. Besides stock flows, stock dilution steps and stock consistencies also need to be administered, and therefore the consistency data and consistency prediction transferred forward along the dosing line can be used by dynamic process models to predict and take into account the stock consistency variation caused by stock flow changes when adjusting the fiber flow and dilution.
In the following, the operation of the solution of the invention will be studied by way of example in the adjustment of the basis weight of a paper web. The operation of the stock preparation is dividable into sections and, for the sake of clarity, the solution of the invention is presented by means of subprocesses descriptive of the stock preparation portions.
When the basis weight of paper is being adjusted, the basis weight adjustment unit 9 requests for the required fiber flow or machine stock KM flow from the blending/machine chest 5, from where the dosing of machine stock KM is controlled with a first control unit CONTROL1. The first control unit CONTROL1 controls the dosing of machine stock KM by controlling the third pump P3 or by controlling the set value of flow control. Flow control can also take place by means of an adjusting valve mounted after pump P3. The specially structured valve is called a basis weight valve and it is extremely accurate. Generally, flow control or flow rate control can be carried out by changing the valve opening, pump speed or rotational volume or all these manners known per se. The basis weight BW of a paper web is measured at the dry end of the paper machine 8, for example immediately before the reeler, whereby the basis weight adjustment unit 9 requests for the necessary machine stock KM flow based on the difference between the desired basis weight BW value and the measured value. Machine stock KM flow control constitutes a first subprocess 10, which is schematically shown in
Modern paper machine basis weight control calculates several future flow changes for the fiber flow, which constitute the future target value trajectory. Based on this information and by calculating the future consistency trajectory of the preceding chest, an optimal flow trajectory can be adjusted and it is implemented by flow control. Since this method provides, at the dilution step, information about the consistency trajectory of the stock arriving at a blending point, i.e. future consistency, and the flow trajectory and consistency target of the stock leaving the blending point are also known, an optimal dilution water or component stock flow trajectory can be set, which is implemented by flow control. Instead of stock consistency, the concentration of the second raw material of the machine stock, such as various fillers, additives or chemicals in the stock, can also be controlled, i.e. in addition to or instead of stock consistency, the solution of the invention can be used to control the concentration of fillers, additives or chemicals in the stock. Dilution water and various fillers, additives and chemicals can also be added at the same blending point, which is usually before the pump. Fillers, additives or chemicals can also be fed into the inlet of a chest not containing dilution. For the sake of clarity, the figures do not show the addition of fillers, additives or chemicals to machine stock or component stocks, or the measurement of their concentration in the stock.
The dynamic stock making process models, used in the solution of the invention, are fully known per se. For instance Donald P. Campbell: Process Dynamics, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1958 describes a basic theory of creating dynamic models for physical processes. The invention presents a solution for coupling together general models descriptive of process dynamics and model predictive controls. The present invention utilizes the capability of dynamic models to calculate a prediction for process flows, surfaces and consistencies and the capability of model predictive controls to bind the prediction to the last measurement result of the process and to utilize it in control calculation. In addition, model predictive control couples successive control cycles together in an intelligent manner both by giving control changes a penalty and by utilizing historical data on the control changes on previous control cycles. The present invention utilizes the ability of MPC to calculate a prediction, i.e. future control commands, for a control message. This control prediction is utilized by conveying a flow prediction caused by basis weight control or a corresponding measure, such as grade change, backwards in the process flow, whereby the controls pumping process flow forward utilize the predicted future flow changes, whereby the feed flow prediction of the chest know how much is going to be pumped from the chest. Since it is desirable to control not only flows but also dilution processes and consistencies, the consistency variation proceeding with the process can be predicted and taken in account by means of dynamic process models in both fiber flow controls and dilution controls. In this case, the calculation proceeds stepwise.
Cs(t)=Csto(t−td1)−Csto(t0−td1)+Cs(t0), (2)
wherein Cs(t) is chest output consistency [g/l],
Formula (2) can be used to correct the effect of errors in the process model. The desired future flow at the blending point can be solved by the formula
F(t)=FF(t)/Cs(t−td2), tmax>t>t0, (3)
wherein td2 is delay caused by flow from consistency measurement to blending point SP and
The dilution step modelling can be schematically expressed by means of
Cstou(t)=Csto(t)−Csto(t0−td3−td4)+Cstou(t0−td3−td4) and (5)
wherein Cstou(t) is chest output consistency [g/l],
Formulas (4) to (6) serve to determine the level of chest output consistency at the start of the calculation. This level calibrates the measurements by maintaining mass balance. Output consistency is derived from the chest consistency prediction taking into account the predicted changes in the chest consistency.
wherein X(t) is total fiber flow determined based on feed consistencies,
During dosing into the blending chest, the desired component stock flow can be determined at the same time in such a manner that both the total flow target and the desired fiber fraction target for each component stock are simultaneously fulfilled. The total consistency target cannot, however, be fulfilled. The formulas presented do not take into account the changes between the disc filter 11 input and the return flow, for example, but they are eliminated in chest surface level management, allowing one to assume that the fiber flows to and from the disc filter 11 are the same at all times.
The modelling of the flow to a chest is schematically shown in
LTr(t)=f(Lsp,L(t0)), tmax>t>t0, (10)
wherein Fi(t) is input flow to chest [l/s],
Depending on the difference between the measurement and the set value, different target functions LTr(t) can be used. If, in addition, an unknown disturbance flow is associated with the process, its effect can be eliminated by control engineering methods known per se.
The solution of the invention thus utilizes normal process operation, and all stock preparations can be adjusted in the manner of the solution presented. The solution is also well suitable for managing water cycles, whereby the water amounts and flows in chests can be managed by management of chest inputs and outputs. The solution utilizes the capability of the optimization cost function belonging to the MPC technology to give a penalty for both a process output error and a control change calculated by the controller. This allows process operation to be stabilized and enables the achievement of so-called soft, i.e. slowly acting, but timely control measures. The solution presented also enables exact monitoring of the operation of measurements, actuators and adjustments, and calling the operator if the process does not operate in the way predicted by the models.
Accordingly, the disc filter 11 shown in
The drawings and the related specification are only intended to illustrate the inventive idea. The details of the invention may vary within the scope of the claims. It is thus clear that the solution of the invention is in continuous use in the control of stock preparation, i.e. it is not intended only for use in states of change, such as for basis weight control or another grade change relating to the product being produced. Furthermore, the solution presented is usable not only in the manufacture of paper and board stock but also in other chained processes, where changing and adjusting consistencies and concentrations constitute a significant factor in the process. The control units used to control stock preparation are preferably microprocessor or signal processor-based data processor units, in which at least part of the required functions can be implemented by software. It would also be possible to use only one single control unit for controlling the operation of stock preparation and it would implement all necessary functions, but the functions are preferably distributed to several separate control units. Flows, consistencies and concentrations can be measured using any sensors and other measuring devices known per se.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20012037 | Oct 2001 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FI02/00811 | 10/18/2002 | WO |