Not applicable.
The invention relates to a precalendering method, in which a paper or paperboard web that has undergone earlier dewatering stages is calendered to attain a suitable surface for the coating process. The invention also relates to a finishing method for paper or paperboard. Furthermore, the invention also relates to an apparatus for implementing the methods.
In the papermaking process the dewatering stages include the initial dewatering that has taken place in the wire section for formation of a web, dewatering of the formed web by pressing in the press section and drying by means of heat in the drying section, in which the moisture of the web is reduced to a suitable level for further processing.
After the paper has been dried, desired surface structure of the web is attained by means of a mechanical treatment applied to the surface, i.e. calendering. There are many calendering methods, but it is characteristic to all of them that the web is brought through one or more nips, which is/are formed between two surfaces, typically between rotating roll surfaces. The purpose of calendering is to improve the paper quality by pressing the paper into a particular standard thickness and especially by smoothening its surface. In view of the coating to be applied to the paper at the next stage, the purpose of calendering is to bind loose particles on the surface and close the surface so that the coating layer would become even.
It is well known that by means of calendering it is possible to attain a desired quality, such as smoothness and gloss for the paper produced and processed at earlier stages. At the same time a fixed final density is attained for the paper. Thus, the calendering affects both the visual and structural properties of paper. In the technique according to the present application, calendering is conducted as a preliminary treatment especially with that purpose in mind that the desired properties are attained on the surface of the paper for the coating of the paper to be conducted at the next stage, and thus the visual properties of the base paper, such as gloss, are not significant.
Due to different machine concepts, one-sidedness occurs in the web going through the above-described dewatering stages, which can be caused for example by one-sidedness of dewatering and the different properties of surfaces located against the paper web. It is for example possible that one side is more closed and possibly rougher, and the other side is more open and possibly smoother. One-sidedness causes problems when paper is coated on both sides, and thus the aim is to make the paper surface suitable for the spreading of the coating composition by means of so-called precalendering before the coating operation.
The purpose of precalendering before the coating process is to improve especially the smoothness of the rougher side. By means of precalendering it is possible to eliminate one-sidedness in smoothness, but one-sidedness in absorption increases further, because after the treatment of more closed and rougher surface the surface becomes even more closed. In a film transfer coating process conducted by means of two rotating application rolls, in which the web precalendered in this way is coated on both sides, it is important to control the detachment of the web after a coating nip formed between the rolls. The aim is that the web would be detached from the lower roll last, because in this way it is possible to avoid runnability problems. Because many machine concepts cause such an effect that the upper side, which typically is placed against the upper application roll in the coating nip as well, remains in a more closed state, and the one-sidedness in absorption resulting therefrom cannot be corrected by means of precalendering even though the smoothness would be brought on the same level, the more open lower surface absorbs too much coating colour, whereas on the upper side more coating colour remains on the surface. Thus, due to the larger amount of coating colour, the upper side tends to follow the upper roll after the nip, and it is last released therefrom, which causes runnability problems.
One runnability problem that possibly occurs is formation of mist and this is solved by arranging auxiliary devices on the outlet side of the coating nip, as is disclosed in the Finnish patent 101092 and in the corresponding international publication WO 97/29239. In cases where mist formation takes place, the problems typically occur on that side from which the web is released last. If the web is last released from the lower roll, the fuming can be restricted to the lower side where it causes fewer problems.
Furthermore, as for the basic principle of a film transfer coater, reference is made to publication EP 608 206 A1.
In theory, the problem can be solved by using clearly unequal amounts of coating composition on different sides. Then, however, another problem occurs: the quality becomes one-sided, which is not a good aspect in printing papers.
The purpose of the invention is to present a solution for the above-mentioned drawbacks and to introduce a precalendering method by means of which it is possible to improve the runnability of the web in the film transfer coating process following thereafter without impairing the quality.
After pressing and drying, the paper or paperboard web is calendered one-sidedly in such a manner that the absorption level of the second side, which is higher than the level of the first side before said calendering, is reduced nearly or at least to the same level with the first side. Thus, in the precalendering the web is run through the calendering nip, in which the different sides are subjected to a different treatment. The absorption level of the outer surface of the second side can be reduced by bringing it in contact with a hot surface in the nip for a sufficiently long period of time. Preferably this is implemented by means of a suitable so-called long-nip structure, which has extension in the travel direction of the web, wherein the residence time in the nip is the length of the nip divided with the web speed. The temperature is selected in such a manner that the aforementioned target comes true. The inlet moisture of the web to the calendering can be used as one variable.
The first side is only under calendering pressure in the nip without heat being exerted thereon to a significant degree. It is, however, possible that the surface in the nip that is placed against the first side is also by means of active heating measures brought to a temperature higher than the ambient temperature, but the surface placed against the second side has to be in a clearly higher temperature with respect thereto, so that the absorption level can be affected one-sidedly in the calendering. Thus, the absorption level of the second side is advantageously reduced at least to such a degree that the absorption level of the second side of the web departing from the calender is nearly as low or at least equally low as the absorption level of the outer surface of the first side. Especially if the one-sidedness in absorption has been very large before calendering, it is sufficient that the absorption level of the second side is reduced almost to the same level compared with the level of the other side, down to a difference of less than 1.0 g/m2 therefrom when expressed as Cobb-Unger oil absorption.
Advantageously, the calendering is conducted one-sidedly in such a manner that the absorption level of the outer surface of the second side is lower than the absorption level of the outer surface of the first side in the web departing from the calender.
It is easier to run the web precalendered in the above-mentioned manner through a film transfer coating unit which is formed of two application rolls located on top of each other diagonally, for example in an angle of approximately 40 to 60°, or directly on top of each other (vertical angle). The rolls may also be positioned horizontally with respect to each other. In such a unit the web is run through the nip between the application rolls. If the second side whose absorption level is reduced nearly as low or at least equally low as the absorption level of the first side, is the lower side of the web passed to the nip between the rolls, the web is more reliably released last from the lower roll after the coating nip.
In the following, the invention will be described in more detail with reference to the appended drawings, in which
If in
The residence time of the web in the nip N is the length of the nip divided with the speed of the paper web. During this time the lower surface W2 of the web is in a pressurized contact with the surface 2a of the roll at a fixed temperature, from which surface heat is transferred to the web. At present high machine speeds it is important to produce a sufficiently long nip, so that the web would be subjected to the effect of pressure and temperature for a sufficiently long time. By means of the geometry (shape and position) of the shoe element it is also possible to affect the pressure distribution in the long nip.
When the web W has travelled through the calender nip N, the lower surface W2 of said web has reached a state in which it is permanently plasticized. Thereafter the web W is guided to the film transfer coating process S, in which coating colour is spread on both its surfaces W1, W2. The aqueous coating agent composition is spread by spreading a thin layer of coating agent evenly on the surface of both application rolls 3, 4 by means of a suitable application device, such as a blade, rod or jet application device and by transferring the coating in the coating nip N= on the surfaces of the web W1, W2. The portioned amount of coating is substantially the same for both sides. Thereafter the paper is dried in a known manner, possibly calendered, and finally reeled in the reel-up. The figure shows the beginning of a drying section 5, in which the web is guided along a curved path by means of air blowing boxes. In addition to or instead of them it is possible to use other drying solutions.
In the coating unit shown in the figure, the travel path of the web W is guided diagonally downwards, preferably in such a manner that it travels directly through the nip N=, i.e. the travel path is at right angles to the plane A between the central axes of the application rolls 3, 4, which is, in a known manner, in an angle of approximately 40 to 60 with respect to the vertical plane. The invention is not, however, restricted only to particular path geometries, and balancing of one-sidedness in absorption is advantageous in all coating units formed by application rolls. The web W follows the lower roll 4 a short distance after the nip N= and is released therefrom travelling along a path marked with a broken line W= to the turning point of the path located within the drying section 5, deviating slightly from the direct path.
As was mentioned above, it is often sufficient that the absorption level of the more open side is reduced at least to the same level as the more closed side has, or close to it, the more closed side meaning the more closed side before the calendering. Thus, by means of minor auxiliary means, it is possible to influence the web so that it is last released from the lower roll of the coating unit and it does not start to follow the upper roll.
The following tests illustrate the possibilities to calender the web one-sidedly in such a manner that the absorption level of the originally more open surface is reduced at least to the same value with the originally more closed surface. Although in the tests the lower surface of the web (which, when the web remains in the same position also forms the side positioned against the lower roll in film transfer coating) has already originally been more closed than the upper side, the effects of the one-sided calendering, both when conventional soft calendering and long-nip calendering are used, are shown in such a manner that the oil absorption of one side, correlating with the absorption level, is more clearly reduced on this side. Thus, it can be concluded that the originally more open side (with higher oil absorption) can be made more closed than the opposite side by arranging it against a hot surface in the calender nip and by selecting the conditions so that the one-sidedness in absorption is definitely eliminated or reversed.
Base paper with a basis weight of 40 g/m2, in which 35% of the fibres consisted of chemical pulp and 65% of mechanical pulp and whose filler content was 5%, was subjected to precalendering tests by means of a soft calender with a hard roll and a soft-faced polymer roll as rolls forming a relatively short nip, and to other precalendering tests in a nip of 70 to 100 mm in length in a so-called shoe calender. The web speed was 1,000 m/min. The results are presented in the following table.
On the basis of the results it can be said that by means of calendering it is possible to correct even difficult cases of one-sidedness in absorption. In soft calendering conducted by means of a soft/hard roll combination, it has in tests been possible to reduce the Cobb-Unger oil absorption of the more closed side by 3.4 g/m2 at the most (approx 21% from the original value), when in similar conditions it has been reduced by 1.6 g/m2 on the opposite side. Correspondingly, with a long nip it has been possible to reduce the value on the more closed side even by 10 g/m2 (approx 61% from the original value), whereas on the opposite side the reduction has been only 5.9 g/m2.
The invention is suitable for all coatable base papers as well as paperboards, especially for pretreatment of base papers and paperboards to be coated in film transfer coating. When the invention is utilized in the treatment of grades coated in film transfer coating, it is advantageous in such cases where the surface of the web which in the film transfer coating forms the lower side, has a higher absorption level as a result of the earlier dewatering stages, which drawback can be corrected in the calendering preceding the coating.
The invention is not restricted solely to the embodiments shown in the drawings. It is also possible to use two successive precalendering nips of which the first one has higher inlet moisture content and lower calendering temperature, and the second one has lower inlet moisture and higher temperature. As a result of the high inlet moisture content, excessive drying of the web can be avoided in calendering and because the moisture is one of the variables affecting the calendering result, it is possible to use lower temperature in the first nip because of the high initial moisture content. Both nips can be long nips according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20001456 | Jun 2000 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI01/00594 | 6/20/2001 | WO | 00 | 6/30/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/00998 | 1/3/2002 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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198 24 804 | Dec 1999 | DE |
0 608 206 | Jul 1994 | EP |
WO 9729239 | Aug 1997 | WO |
WO 9967462 | Dec 1999 | WO |
WO 0200998 | Jan 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040020618 A1 | Feb 2004 | US |