1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a paper machine, and, more particularly, to a method and apparatus of drying a structured fiber web on a structured fabric in a paper machine.
2. Description of the Related Art
In a wet molding process, a structured fabric in the standard Crescent Former press fabric position impresses a three dimensional surface on a web while the fibrous web is still wet. Such an invention is disclosed in International Publication No. WO 03/062528 A1. A suction box is disclosed for the purpose of shaping the fibrous web while wet to generate the three dimensional structure by removing air through the structural fabric. It is a physical displacement of portions of the fibrous web that leads to the three dimensional surface. Similar to the aforementioned method, a through air drying (TAD) technique is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,191,609. The TAD technique discloses how an already formed web is transferred and molded into an impression fabric. The transformation takes place on a web having a sheet solids level greater that 15%. This results in a low density pillow area in the fibrous web. These pillow areas are of a low basis weight since the already formed web is expanded to fill the valleys thereof. The impression of the fibrous web into a pattern, on an impression fabric, is carried out by passing a vacuum through the impression fabric to mold the fibrous web.
In a wet pressing operation a fibrous web sheet is compressed at a press nip to the point where hydraulic pressure drives water out of the fibrous web. It has been recognized that conventional wet pressing methods are inefficient in that only a small portion of a rollers circumference is used to process the paper web. To overcome this limitation, some attempts have been made to adapt a solid impermeable belt to form an extended nip for pressing the paper web to dewater the paper web. A problem with such an approach is that the impermeable belt prevents the flow of a drying fluid, such as air through the paper web. Extended nip press (ENP) belts are used throughout the paper industry as a way of increasing the actual pressing dwell time in a press nip. A shoe press is the apparatus that provides the ability of the ENP belt to have pressure applied therethrough, by having a stationary shoe that is configured to the curvature of the hard surface being pressed, for example, a solid press roll. In this way the nip can be extended well beyond the limit of the contact between the press rolls themselves. An ENP belt serves as a roll cover on the shoe press. This flexible belt is lubricated on the inside to prevent frictional damage. The belt and shoe press are non-permeable members and dewatering of the fibrous web is accomplished by the mechanical pressing thereof.
A fabric is utilized to carry the fiber web during the formation of the web. After the web takes form it is usually subjected to a drying process. The same fabric used during formation of the web or another fabric may come in contact with the web, to move the web across a vacuum section for the remove of moisture from the web. Additionally the web is sent, with a press fabric, through a press section. The problem is that if a structured fabric is sent to the press section no gain in dryness is achieved without using an expensive TAD method.
What is needed in the art is a method to effectively dewater a structured fibrous web.
The present invention provides a method and apparatus for dewatering a fibrous web in a paper machine.
The invention comprises, in one form thereof, a method of dewatering a fibrous web in a paper machine including the steps of carrying the fibrous web on a side of a first fabric; contacting the fibrous web with a side of a second fabric, the fibrous web being between the first fabric and the second fabric; and passing air successively through the first fabric, the fibrous web and the second fabric.
An advantage of the present invention is that water is removed from the fibrous web in an efficient manner by the present method.
Another advantage of the present invention is that a thin dewatering fabric with a low retention characteristic removes water from the web.
Still yet another advantage of the present invention is that the dewatering system combines the advantages of a permeable press belt, a dewatering fiber and subsequent drying sections to remove moisture from a fibrous web.
The above-mentioned and other features and advantages of this invention, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and the invention will be better understood by reference to the following description of embodiments of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. The exemplifications set out herein illustrate one preferred embodiment of the invention, in one form, and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
Referring now to the drawings, and more particularly to
Forming roll 34 may be solid or permeable. Moisture travels through forming fiber 26 but not through structured fabric 28. This advantageously shapes structured fibrous web 38 into a more absorbent web than the prior art.
Prior art methods of moisture removal, remove moisture through a structured fabric by way of negative pressure. It results in a cross-sectional view as seen in
In contrast, structured web 38, as illustrated in
As shown in
The prior art web shown in
In
The increased mass ratio of the present invention, particularly in the pillow area, which carries more water than the compressed areas, results in at least two positive aspects of the present invention. First, it allows for a good transfer of the web to the Yankee surface at a lower overall sheet solid content than had been previously attainable. It is believed that the compressed areas are dryer than the pillow areas, thereby allowing an overall transfer of the web to another surface, such as a Yankee dryer, with a lower solids content. Secondly, the construct allows for the use of higher temperatures in the Yankee hood without scorching or burning of the pillow areas, which occurs in the prior art pillow areas. The Yankee hood temperatures are often greater than 350° C. and preferably greater than 450° C. and even more preferably greater than 550° C. As a result the present invention can operate at lower average pre-Yankee press solids than the prior art, making more full use of the capacity of the Yankee hood drying system.
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A shoe press 56 is placed adjacent to structured fabric 28, holding it in a position proximate Yankee roll 52. Structured web 38 comes into contact with Yankee roll 52 and transfers to a surface thereof, for further drying and subsequent creping.
A vacuum box 58 is placed adjacent to structured fabric 28 to achieve a solids level of 15-25% on a nominal 20 gsm web running at −0.2 to −0.8 bar vacuum with a preferred operating level of −0.4 to −0.6 bar. Web 38, which is carried by structured fabric 28, contacts dewatering fabric 82 and proceeds toward vacuum roll 60. Vacuum roll 60 operates at a vacuum level of −0.2 to −0.8 bar with a preferred operating level of at least −0.4 bar. Hot air hood 62 is optionally fit over vacuum roll 60 to improve dewatering. The length of the vacuum zone inside the vacuum roll can be from 200 mm to 2,500 mm, with a preferable length of 300 mm to 1,200 mm and an even more preferable length of between 400 mm to 800 mm. The solids level of web 38 leaving suction roll 60 is 25% to 55% depending on installed options. A vacuum box 67 and hot air supply 65 can be used to increase web 38 solids after vacuum roll 60 and prior to Yankee roll 52. Wire turning roll 69 can also be a suction roll with a hot air supply hood. Roll 56 includes a shoe press with a shoe width of 80 mm or higher, preferably 120 mm or higher, with a maximum peak pressure of preferably less than 2.5 MPa. To create an even longer nip to facilitate the transfer of web 38 to Yankee 52, web 38 carried on structured fabric 28 can be brought into contact with the surface of Yankee roll 52 prior to the press nip associated with shoe press 56. Further, the contact can be maintained after structured fabric 28 travels beyond press 56.
Vacuum roll 60 has a roll thickness of between approximately 25 mm to 50 mm, but can also be thicker. The mean airflow speed through web 38 at vacuum roll 60 is approximately 6 m/s, but can vary according to the type of dewatering fabric, basis weight and/or furnish properties.
Dewatering fabric 82 may have a permeable woven base fabric connected to a batt layer. The base fabric includes machine direction yarns and cross-directional yarns.
In another embodiment of dewatering fabric 82 there is included a fabric layer, two batt layers, an anti-rewetting layer and an adhesive. The base fabric is substantially similar to the previous description. At least one of the batt layers include an adhesive to supplement fiber to fiber bonding. On one side of the base fabric, there is attached an anti-rewetting layer, which may be attached to the base fabric by an adhesive, a melting process or needling wherein the material contained in the anti-rewet layer is connected to the base fabric layer and a batt layer. The anti-rewetting layer is made of an elastomeric material thereby forming elastomeric membrane, which has openings therethrough.
The batt layers may be needled to thereby hold dewatering fabric 82 together. This advantageously leaves the batt layers with many needled holes therethrough. The anti-rewetting layer is porous having water channels or pores therethrough.
In yet an other embodiment of dewatering fabric 82, there is a construct substantially similar to that previously discussed with an addition of a hydrophobic layer to at least one side of de-watering fabric 82. The hydrophobic layer does not absorb water, but it does direct water through pores therein.
In yet another embodiment of dewatering fabric 82, the base fabric has attached thereto a lattice grid made of a polymer, such as polyurethane, that is put on top of the base fabric. The grid may be put on to the base fabric by utilizing various known procedures, such as, for example, an extrusion technique or a screen-printing technique. The lattice grid may be put on the base fabric with an angular orientation relative to the machine direction yarns and the cross direction yarns. Although this orientation is such that no part of the lattice is aligned with the machine direction yarns, other orientations can also be utilized. The lattice can have a uniform grid pattern, which can be discontinuous in part. Further, the material between the interconnections of the lattice structure may take a circuitous path rather than being substantially straight. The lattice grid is made of a synthetic, such as a polymer or specifically a polyurethane, which attaches itself to the base fabric by its natural adhesion properties.
In yet another embodiment of dewatering fabric 82 there is included a permeable base fabric having machine direction yarns and cross-direction yarns, that are adhered to a grid. The grid is made of a composite material the may be the same as that discussed relative to a previous embodiment of dewatering fabric 82. The grid includes machine direction yarns with a composite material formed therearound. The grid is a composite structure formed of composite material and machine direction yarns. The machine direction yarns may be pre-coated with a composite before being placed in rows that are substantially parallel in a mold that is used to reheat the composite material causing it to re-flow into a pattern. Additional composite material may be put into the mold as well. The grid structure, also known as a composite layer, is then connected to the base fabric by one of many techniques including laminating the grid to the permeable fabric, melting the composite coated yarn as it is held in position against the permeable fabric or by re-melting the grid onto the base fabric. Additionally, an adhesive may be utilized to attach the grid to permeable fabric.
The batt fiber may include two layers, an upper and a lower layer. The batt fiber is needled with the base fabric and the composite layer, thereby forming a dewatering fabric 82 having at least one outer batt layer surface. Batt material is porous by its nature, additionally the needling process not only connects the layers together, it also creates numerous small porous cavities extending into or completely through the structure of dewatering fabric 82.
Dewatering fabric 82 has an air permeability of from 5 to 100 cubic feet/minute preferably 19 cubic feet/minute or higher and more preferably 35 cubic feet/minute or higher. Pore diameters in dewatering fabric 82 are from 5 to 75 microns, preferably 25 microns or higher and more preferably 35 microns or higher. The hydrophobic layers can be made from a synthetic polymeric material, a wool or a polyamide, for example, nylon 6. The anti-rewet layer and the composite layer may be made of a thin elastomeric permeable membrane made from a synthetic polymeric material or a polyamide that is laminated to the base fabric.
The batt fiber layers are made from fibers ranging from 0.5 d-tex to 22 d-tex and may contain an adhesive to supplement fiber to fiber bonding in each of the layers. The bonding may result from the use of a low temperature meltable fiber, particles and/or resin.
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Belt 66 is a specially designed Extended Nip Press Belt 66, made of, for example reinforced polyurethane and/or a spiral link fabric. Belt 66 is permeable thereby allowing air to flow therethrough to enhance the moisture removing capability of belt press 64. Moisture is drawn from web 38 through dewatering fabric 82 and into vacuum roll 60.
Belt 66 provides a low level of pressing in the range of 50-300 KPa and preferably greater than 100 KPa. This allows a suction roll with a 1.2 meter diameter to have a fabric tension of greater than 30 KN/m and preferably greater than 60 KN/m. The pressing length of permeable belt 66 against fabric 28, which is indirectly supported by vacuum roll 60, is at least as long as a suction zone in roll 60. Although the contact portion of belt 66 can be shorter than the suction zone.
Permeable belt 66 has a pattern of holes therethrough, which may, for example, be drilled, laser cut, etched formed or woven therein. Permeable belt 66 may be monoplanar without grooves. In one embodiment, the surface of belt 66 has grooves and is placed in contact with fabric 28 along a portion of the travel of permeable belt 66 in belt press 64. Each groove connects with a set of the holes to allow the passage and distribution of air in belt 66. Air is distributed along the grooves, which constitutes an open area adjacent to contact areas, where the surface of belt 66 applies pressure against web 38. Air enters permeable belt 66 through the holes and then migrates along the grooves, passing through fabric 28, web 38 and fabric 82. The diameter of the holes may be larger than the width of the grooves. The grooves may have a cross-section contour that is generally rectangular, triangular, trapezoidal, semi-circular or semi-elliptical. The combination of permeable belt 66, associated with vacuum roll 60, is a combination that has been shown to increase sheet solids by at least 15%.
An example of another structure of belt 66 is that of a thin spiral link fabric, which can be a reinforcing structure within belt 66 or the spiral link fabric will itself serve as belt 66. Within fabric 28 there is a three dimensional structure that is reflected in web 38. Web 38 has thicker pillow areas, which are protected during pressing as they are within the body of structured fabric 28. As such the pressing imparted by belt press assembly 64 upon web 38 does not negatively impact web quality, while it increases the dewatering rate of vacuum roll 60.
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Advantages of the HPTAD process are in the areas of improved sheet dewatering without a significant loss in sheet quality, compactness in thickness and energy efficency. Additionally, it enables higher pre-Yankee solids, which increase the speed potential of the invention. Further, the compact size of the HPTAD allows easy retrofit to an existing machine. The compact size of the HPTAD and the fact that it is a closed system means that it cam be easily insulated and optimized as a unit to increase energy efficiency.
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Fabric 26 may be uniformly permeable or have a pattern of non-permeable portions, which serve to enhance a pattern in web 38. The depth of the patterns can be adjusted differently for different tissue products. Pattern portions are also referred to as having zones of differing permeability.
The fiber density distribution of web 38 in this invention is opposite that of the prior art, which is a result of removing moisture through the forming fabric and not through the structured fabric. This allows a high percentage of the fibers to remain uncompressed during the process. The sheet absorbency capacity as measured by the basket method, for a nominal 20 gsm web is equal to or greater than 12 grams of water per gram of fiber and often exceeds 15 grams of water per gram fiber. The sheet bulk is equal to or greater than 10 cm3/gm and preferably greater than 13 cm3/gm. The sheet bulk of toilet tissue is expected to be equal to or greater than 13 cm3/gm before calendering.
With the basket method of measuring absorbency, five (5) grams of paper are placed into a basket. The basket containing the paper is then weighted and introduced into a small vessel of water at 20° C. for 60 seconds. After 60 seconds of soak time, the basket is removed from the water and allowed to drain for 60 seconds and then weighted again. The weight difference is then divided by the paper weight to yield the grams of water held per gram of fibers being absorbed and held in the paper.
Web 38 is formed from fibrous slurry 24 that headbox 22 discharges between forming fabric 26 and structured fabric 28. Roll 34 rotates and supports fabrics 26 and 28 as web 38 forms. Moisture M flows through fabric 26 and is captured in save all 36. It is the removal of moisture in this manner that serves to allow pillow areas of web 38 to retain a greater thickness than if the moisture were to be removed through structured fabric 28. Sufficient moisture is removed from web 38 to allow fabric 26 to be removed from web 38 to allow web 38 to proceed to a drying stage. Web 38 retains the pattern of structured fabric 28 and any zonal permeability effects from fabric 26 that may be present.
Now, additionally referring to
In
Batt layers 92 and 94 may be needled to thereby hold dewatering fabric 82 together. This advantageously leaves Batt layers 92 and 94 with many needled holes 100 therethrough. Layer 96 is a porous anti-rewetting layer 96 having water channels or pores 106 therethrough.
In
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Dewatering fabric 82 has an air permeability of from 5 to 100 cubic feet/minute preferably 19 cubic feet/minute or higher and more preferably 35 cubic feet/minute or higher. Pore diameters 100, 68 and/or 106 are from 5 to 75 microns, preferably 25 microns or higher and more preferably 35 microns or higher. Hydrophobic layers 108 can be made from a synthetic polymeric material, a wool or a polyamide, for example, nylon 6. Anti-rewet layer 96 and composite layer 112 may be made of a thin elastomeric permeable membrane made from a synthetic polymeric material or a polyamide that is laminated to fabric 84. Layer 96 is preferably equal to or less than 1.05 millimeters thick.
Batt fiber layers 86, 92, 94 and 118 are made from fibers ranging from 0.5 d-tex to 22 d-tex and may contain an adhesive to supplement fiber to fiber bonding in each of layers 86, 92, 94 and 118. The bonding may result from that makes use of, for example, a low temperature meltable fiber, particles and/or resin. The overall thickness of dewatering fabric 82 is less than 2.0 millimeters, preferably less than 1.50 millimeters, and preferably less than 1.25 millimeters and more preferably less than 1.0 millimeter thick. Machine direction yarns 88, also known as weft yarns 88, are made of a multi-filament yarn, normally twisted/plied or can be a solid monolithic strand usually of less than 0.30 millimeter diameter, with a preferable diameter of 0.20 millimeter or as low as 0.10 millimeter. The fibers are formed in a single strand, twisted cabled or joined side by side to form a flat shaped fabric 84. Woven permeable fabric 84 may have openings 100 of layers 92 and 94, punched with through fabric 84 as well thereby causing a straight through drainage channel 100 through dewatering fabric 82. Additionally, a hydrophobic layer 108 may be applied to at least one surface.
As to the uses of dewatering fabric 82 in paper machine 50, pressure is applied by belt press 64 against web 38 as a mechanical force that creates a hydraulic pressure in the moisture contained in web 38. The squeezing action is coupled with a vacuum in vacuum roll 60, to drive moisture from web 38 and through de-watering permeable membrane 82. Advantageously, moisture is removed through the combination of the pressure applied by the extended nip press contact of belt 66 and the introduction of air through belt 66, fabric 28 and dewatering fabric 82 enhance the dewatering capability of the present invention.
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Fabric 82 proceeds past showers 30, which apply moisture to fabric 82 to clean fabric 82. Fabric 82 then proceeds past a Uhle box, which removes moisture from fabric 82.
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Permeable belt 66 has a pattern 122 of holes 120 therethrough, which may, for example, be drilled, laser cut, etched, formed or woven therein. Permeable belt 66 may be monoplanar without the grooves shown in
Permeable belt 66 is capable of running at high running tensions of at least 30 KN/m or 60 KN/m or higher with a relatively high surface contact area of 25% or greater and a high open area of 25% or greater. The composition of permeable belt 66 may include a thin spiral link having a support layer within permeable belt 66.
The circumferential length of vacuum zone Z can be from 200 mm to 2,500 mm, with a preferable length of 300 mm-1,200 mm, and an even more preferable length of 400 mm-800 mm. The solids leaving vacuum roll 60 in web 38 will vary between 25% to 55% depending on the vacuum pressures and the tension on permeable belt as well as the length of vacuum zone Z and the dwell time of web 38 in vacuum zone Z.
In one embodiment of permeable belt 66, as illustrated in
In another embodiment of permeable belt 66, as illustrated in
In yet another embodiment of permeable belt 66, as illustrated in
Permeable belt 66 is capable of applying a line force over an extremely long nip, thereby ensuring a long dwell time in which pressure is applied against web 38 as compared to a standard shoe press. This results in a much lower specific pressure, thereby reducing the sheet compaction and enhancing sheet quality. The present invention further allows for a simultaneous vacuum and pressing dewatering with airflow through the web at the nip itself.
Advanced dewatering system 50 utilizes belt press 64 to remove part of the water from web 38. The physical pressure applied by belt 66 places some hydraulic pressure on the water in web 38 causing it to migrate toward fabrics 28 and 82 and even into grooves 124. As this coupling of web 38 with fabrics 28 and 82, and belt 66 continues around vacuum roll 60 in machine direction W, it encounters a vacuum zone Z through which air is passed through permeable belt 66, fabric 28, thereby drying web 38 and the moisture picked up by the airflow proceeds further through dewatering fabric 82 and through a porous surface of vacuum roll 60. Drying air that passes through holes 120 is distributed along grooves 124 before passing through fabric 28. As web 38 leaves belt press 64, belt 66 separates from fabric 28. Shortly thereafter dewatering fabric 82 separates from web 38, and web 38 continues with fabric 28 past a pick up vacuum, which additionally suctions moisture from fabric 28 and web 38. Web 38 is further dried by the use of a Yankee roll 52, a suction roll 56, a hot air hood 68, a boost dryer 70, an HPTAD 78 and/or a two pass HPTAD 80.
While this invention has been described as having a preferred design, the present invention can be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains and which fall within the limits of the appended claims.