A process to produce dried singulated cellulose pulp fibers is described in U.S. application Ser. No. 09/998,143 (hereinafter the '143 application), filed on Oct. 30, 2001, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, and is assigned to the assignee of the present application. A representative schematic illustration of the process of the '143 application is provided herein as
However, it has been determined that the airlock described in the '143 application negatively affected the operation of the jet dryer, resulting in pulp fibers of uneven moisture content and high sonic knots. Furthermore, production capacity was limited as a result of the airlock. It has also been determined that the jet dryer described in the '143 application runs most efficiently when pulp mass flow, pulp particle size, and pulp moisture content are controlled within certain parameters, which the rotary airlock was unable to accomplish. The rotary airlock was incapable of metering pulp to the degree necessary to produce an even mass flow rate of feed pulp to the dryer. The problem with the rotary airlock was that there were unequal volumes of pulp in the cavities between vanes, which caused the dryer to oscillate or “pulse” because of the timed deposits of the unequal volumes introduced into the dryer loop. The pulp came in bundled amounts; therefore, the moisture content of the pulp was unevenly distributed throughout each bundle. The air lock cavities between the vanes were too small and would fill up, causing the rotor to jam due to the pulp bundles being caught between the rotor vane and the rotor housing. Furthermore, the use of the airlock would cause the dryer to surge, thereby also contributing to the fibers having unacceptable varying moisture content. Accordingly, there is a need to provide for an improved method and apparatus to feed a jet dryer. The present invention overcomes the problems with the rotary airlock and has further related advantages.
The present invention is related to methods for conveying, mixing, leveling, and flaking dewatered pulp to produce pulp flakes suitable to be used in the jet dryer described in the '143 application. The present invention is also related to a method for producing a consistent flow rate of pulp and for producing uniform pulp flakes in terms of pulp flake size and pulp flake moisture content. One embodiment of a method includes introducing a dewatered pulp to a rotating shaftless screw conveyor. The rotating shaftless screw conveyor can simultaneously mix and convey the pulp along a length of the screw conveyor. The pulp is deposited from the screw conveyor onto a moving belt conveyor via a chute. The chute retains the pulp, prevents scattering of the pulp on the belt conveyor, and results in a pulp pile of uniform width. Even with the use of a chute, when the pulp is deposited from the chute onto the belt conveyor, the pulp can form uneven quantities of pulp along a length of belt conveyor due to the nature of the rotating shaftless screw conveyor design, and can result in the pulp having a sinusoidal profile. The pulp is flattened out, or leveled, with a rotary doctor located above the belt conveyor to produce a substantially even rate of mass flow of pulp along a length of belt conveyor. Substantially even, uniform, and consistent quantities of pulp per unit time can then be fed from the belt conveyor to a pulp flaker that translates into an even rate of mass flow to the jet dryer. The pulp flaker can reduce the size of the pulp into pulp flakes of consistent or uniform size.
Another embodiment of the present invention is used for producing pulp flakes. The method includes introducing dewatered pulp to a pulp flaker. The pulp flaker has rotating first and second rotors, wherein the rotors are rotating in opposite directions at a differential speed. Each of the rotors includes a plurality of fingers that are arranged circumferentially and longitudinally along the rotors. As the rotors rotate, the fingers of one rotor pass interspaced between the fingers of the second rotor in the region between rotors.
Another embodiment of the present invention is related to a pulp flaker. The pulp flaker includes a housing configured with an inlet and an outlet for allowing the introduction and discharge of pulp to and from the pulp flaker. The pulp flaker includes a first and second rotor housed within the housing. The rotors are configured parallel to one another inside of the housing. Each rotor is provided with a plurality of fingers, wherein the fingers are arranged circumferentially and longitudinally on the rotors. Each finger has a leading edge. As the rotors rotate, the fingers of one rotor pass interspaced between the fingers of the second rotor in the region between rotors. In one embodiment of a pulp flaker, three dimensions are designed to be within a specified range. These are: the distance between the leading edges on the ends of the fingers to the housing, the distance from the leading edges on the ends of the fingers to the opposing rotor, and the distance from the fingers of one rotor to the fingers of the opposing rotor as the fingers of the first rotor pass between the fingers of the second rotor. The three distances can be approximately the same to one another or independently different to one another. The distances can be approximately one-eighth of an inch or less. The rotors are configured to operate at a speed differential. At least one rotor is rotating at a speed of about 500 rpm (revolutions per minute) to about 3600 rpm. The second rotor is configured to rotate at approximately one-third the speed of the first rotor; however, the second rotor can rotate anywhere in the range of about one-tenth to about nine-tenths the speed of the first rotor. The fingers are configured with at least one leading edge that can impact the pulp as it enters the flaker housing. In a different configuration, each finger can have two leading edges.
Another embodiment of the present invention is related to a system and method for producing singulated pulp fibers. The system includes a shaftless screw conveyor for mixing and conveying dewatered pulp. The system includes a belt conveyor configured to receive the pulp from the shaftless screw conveyor. The system includes a chute and rotary doctor located above the belt conveyor for leveling the pulp that is deposited on the belt conveyor to provide a substantially even rate of mass flow of pulp along a length of belt conveyor. The system includes a pulp flaker configured to receive a substantially even rate of mass flow of pulp from the belt conveyor. The pulp flaker produces pulp flakes of uniform size and moisture content and at an even rate of mass flow, to a dryer. The system includes a jet dryer configured to receive pulp from the pulp flaker to produce the dried singulated pulp fibers.
The present invention thus provides a consistent rate of mass flow of pulp for dryers. The pulp flakes leaving the flaker are, on average, consistently about one-sixteenth to about one-half of an inch in size. As a result, the moisture content of the pulp flakes varies less with the methods described herein as compared with the airlock.
The singulated pulp fibers and pulp flakes made in accordance with the present invention have many end uses, such as in animal bedding, reinforcing fibrous materials in cementitious products, sponges, and insulation.
The present invention is related to a system for producing a consistent flow rate of pulp and for producing uniform pulp flakes in terms of size and moisture content. This summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in a simplified form that are further described below in the Detailed Description. This summary is not intended to identify key features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter.
The foregoing aspects and many of the attendant advantages of this invention will become more readily appreciated as the same become better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring to
Referring again to
The present invention overcomes the problems of the rotary airlock and provides a process to mix and convey pulp, provide uniform pulp size, and consistent pulp mass flow to a dryer. The conveying and mixing steps 102 and 104, respectively, although shown as discrete blocks, can be accomplished simultaneously, or discretely. One embodiment of a process according to the present invention provides for simultaneously conveying and mixing dewatered pulp coming from a dewatering operation 100. It is to be appreciated, however, that dewatering step 100 can be omitted if the pulp is obtained with the desired moisture content. In one embodiment of the present invention, the simultaneous conveying and mixing of dewatered pulp is accomplished with a shaftless screw conveyor. Besides shaftless screw conveyors, other type mixers may be suitable to initially break up the pulp clumps leaving the screw press dewatering operation 100. If a shaftless screw conveyer is utilized, the pulp exiting from the shaftless screw conveyor can be deposited onto a belt conveyor. However, shaftless screw conveyors unevenly deposit the pulp along the length of the moving belt conveyor due to the sinusoidal nature of the shaftless screw conveyor operation.
In order to overcome the uneven distribution of pulp produced by the shaftless screw conveyor, a chute and rotary doctor can be provided to level and shape the pulp into even quantities of pulp along the belt conveyor. The chute can be located at the discharge of the shaftless screw conveyor that is closely coupled to the belt conveyor. The chute retains the pulp to within a specific area on the belt conveyor so that the discharged pulp falls from the shaftless screw conveyor onto the belt conveyor in a pile having a substantially uniform width. The chute is mechanically configured with the correct opening size to provide the predetermined width to the deposited pulp. Even with the use of a chute, the pulp can be distributed unevenly onto the belt conveyor, taking the form of peaks and valleys. A rotary doctor can be used as a trim device to trim the height of the pulp, and to smooth, or level any peaks. The pulp width is set mechanically by the chute opening and the pulp height on the belt conveyor can be set by controlling the speed of the belt conveyor or by adjusting the rotary doctor height. A slower belt conveyor speed results in a higher pile of pulp, and a faster belt conveyor speed results in a lower height of pulp.
“Leveling” refers to creating a flat, smooth or even top surface of the pulp pile along a length of belt conveyor. A combination of the chute and rotary doctor can perform the leveling function. This leveling results in a substantially even rate of pulp mass flow from the belt conveyor to the pulp flaker, and eventually translates into a uniform, consistent rate of mass flow to the jet dryer. Leveling is intended to encompass all forms of providing consistent even rates of mass flow, wherein in one embodiment, a chute in combination with a rotary doctor can be used to level the pulp.
Referring now to
In another embodiment, the shaftless screw conveyor, belt conveyor, chute, and rotary doctor can be omitted from the system, and the dewatering device can feed directly to the pulp flaker 210. This would be desirable in the case where a pulp flake is the desired product as opposed to the singulated pulp fibers produced in accordance with the previous '143 application. Such pulp flakes find many uses, including fibrous agents in cementitious products, as animal bedding material, as insulation, or used to make sponges. To produce animal bedding, or any of the other products, it may be desirable to increase one or more of the three distances relating to the design of the pulp flaker to be more than one-eighth of an inch. The distances are described in greater detail below, for now these are: the finger to finger distance, the finger to rotor distance, and the finger to housing distance.
Furthermore, the pulp flaker 300, in accordance with the invention, may feed dryers other than jet dryers.
The pulp 200 fed to the shaftless screw conveyor 202, may be bleached pulp, unbleached pulp, mechanical pulp, chemical pulp, dissolving grade pulp, once-dried and reslurried pulp, recycled pulp, or any other pulp type. Typically, the dewatering device will have removed a portion of the water from pulp to increase the consistency of the feed pulp 200 to anywhere in the range of about 10% to about 55%. Preferably, however, the consistency of the pulp 200 should be about 30% to about 50%. The dewatered pulp 200 may be treated in a manner similar to the treatments described in the aforementioned '143 application. The treatment agents may include, but are not limited to surfactants, crosslinking agents, hydrophobic agents, mineral particulates (such as gypsum), superplasticizers, foams, and other materials to impart specific end user fiber properties. Reference is made to the '143 application for a listing of representative treating agents and for a description of methods of treating.
The shaftless screw conveyor 202 has a shaftless screw housed within and configured to rotate in a housing. The shaftless screw conveyor feeds wet pulp at an incline that rises above a belt conveyor 204 so that the shaftless screw conveyor outlet deposits the pulp into the chute 216 that directs the pulp to the upper surface along a length of the belt conveyor 204.
As shown in
Referring now to
The pulp flaker 300 includes a driver 306. The driver shaft (not shown) is coupled directly or indirectly through gears to at least one first rotor within housing 302. A second rotor can be coupled to an independent driver, or alternatively, can be coupled to the same driver 306 with or without a reduction or increase in gear ratio. First and second rotors are configured to rotate at a specified speed differential, and in opposite directions. Opposite directions means that one rotor turns clockwise and one rotor turns counterclockwise. At least one rotor is configured to rotate at a speed from about 500 rpm to about 3600 rpm. This rotor is referred to as the “full speed rotor.” The speed of the full speed rotor is dependent on the type of pulp, shape and size of pulp bundles, and processing times. The second rotor is configured to operate at a reduced ratio that is one-tenth to nine-tenths the speed of the full speed rotor. The rotor that operates at a reduced speed is referred to as the “off speed rotor.” The off speed rotor may additionally function to clean the full speed rotor to allow uniform feed throughput. In one embodiment, the preferred speed of rotation for the second or off speed rotor is about one-third the speed of the full speed rotor. It is theorized that rotors operating at about a 3 to 1 speed ratio optimally produce the pulp in the desired flake size range suitable for a dryer, such as a jet dryer.
Referring now to
As shown in
Various configurations of fingers are possible. Finger configuration is designed to impact the pulp in a manner to produce flakes in the desired size range. Fingers on both rotors include at least one leading edge 314, whereby upon rotation the leading edge passes in close proximity to the inner surface of one of the semicircular housing members 330 and 332. The clearance distance 316 between the leading edge of fingers and the semicircular housing is designed to produce pulp in the particulate size desired, typically in the range of about one-sixteenth of an inch to about one-half of an inch, on average. The leading edge 314 of fingers 312 is not spaced so far apart from the semicircular housing, so as to merely roll or push the pulp around the housing without significant breaking up of the pulp. In one embodiment, the clearance distance 316 between the leading edge 314 and the housing is about one-eighth of an inch or less.
In one embodiment of a pulp flaker finger 312, the finger is symmetrical with respect to an axis line extending along a radius line from the rotor center. Two leading edges are provided on each finger on either side of the axis line. A space is provided between the leading edges. The effect of this design is to double the number of impacts, while operating at a lower rpm. It is believed that increasing rpms beyond an upper limit will have a negative effect on the pulp. Too high an rpm will result in the pulp fiber integrity being compromised. At the same time, the rpm of the full speed rotor is not so low so as to cause unacceptably large pulp particulates leaving the flaker. The rpm of the full speed rotor is from about 500 rpm to about 3600 rpm.
An alternative design for a pulp flaker finger plate 400 is illustrated in
Referring back to
Referring now to
The longitudinal distance (324 in
The selected clearance distance between the leading edges and the opposing rotor, the clearance distance between the fingers as they pass one another, and the clearance distance between the fingers as they pass the semicircular housing portion, enables the pulp to be processed by the flaker without damaging cellulose fibers or jamming the flaker. Additionally, the ends of the fingers have a flat spot 340 of specific width, the width being perpendicular to a radius line from the rotor. The pulp flaker finger embodiment of
Referring now to
While illustrative embodiments have been illustrated and described, it will be appreciated that various changes can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/674,609, filed Sep. 29, 2003, incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10674609 | Sep 2003 | US |
Child | 12122934 | US |