This nonprovisional application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(a) on Patent Application No. 2001-2508 filed in FINLAND on Dec.19, 2001, which is herein incorporated by reference.
The invention relates to a process for manufacturing liquid packaging board and to a method by which the properties of liquid packaging boards can be improved, in particular their resistance to the penetration of liquid.
The use of peracetic acid for the bleaching of chemical pulps is known, for example, from Japanese patent publication JP 57-21591. Bleaching processes of this type aim at removing lignin from the pulp, and in this case the question is not of any intention to modify the fiber surface for the sizing process, as is the case in the process according to the present invention described below.
From patent application FI 974575 there is known a process for bleaching chemical pulps, the process comprising an after-bleaching step wherein peracetic acid is used in the presence of an alkaline-earth metal compound. The purpose of this after-bleaching is specifically to improve the brightness of the pulp.
Patent publication FI 104339 discloses a process wherein a bleached stock (chemical pulp) is modified with peracetic acid before neutral sizing. The method relates to a process for manufacturing fine paper, wherein the bleached chemical pulp is introduced, after a treatment with peracetic acid, into a papermaking process wherein a neutral size is used. In the process disclosed in the publication, the pulp being treated must be bleached (brightness >85% ISO and kappa number <4). FI-04339 thus relates to a process wherein, before the peracetic acid treatment, lignin is removed from the pulp to be treated. In the process according to the invention described hereinafter, the pulp to be treated contains a significant amount of lignin, and the sizing is carried out with a sizing composition containing a resin size.
Publication Tappi 2/1965, Vol. 48, No. 2 (Paper Bleaching—A new Process, W. H. Rapson et al.) discloses a process for bleaching paper with, for example, peracetic acid. This process aims at increasing the brightness of the paper product. In the process disclosed, peracetic acid is used in considerably large amounts, for example, on page 68, second paragraph, the dose is approx. 1.2-2.5% (i.e. 12-5 kg/ton of pulp). Such a dose may dissolve a considerable amount of lignin etc. out of the pulp, whereby the papermaking process may be severely disturbed.
The use of peracids as biocides is known, for example, from publication Kemia-Kemi, No. 3 (1995), Jyri Maunuksela, Mikrobien torjunta peretikkahapolla (Microbe Prevention with Peracetic Acid), pp. 242-244. Such a method aims only at destroying microbial populations in the paper machine. It is self-evident that peracetic acid, which is known as an effective biocide, inhibits microbial activity in the water circulation if it is present in a sufficient amount. The method disclosed in the publication uses so-called equilibrium peracetic acid, which contains considerable amounts of free acetic acid and hydrogen peroxide. The acetic acid and hydrogen peroxide present in the peracid may interfere with the papermaking process.
For use in the bleaching of mechanical pulps there have also been disclosed activators that together with hydrogen peroxide produce peracids. Such a method is disclosed, for example, in publication Appita Journal Vol. 51, No. 4, pp. 306-310 (C. Leduc et al.). The method aims at increasing pulp brightness. The method also has the disadvantage of considerably large doses of chemicals.
There have also been presented bleaching methods based on peracid, aiming at improving the brightness of the pulp as compared with conventional bleaching methods. Such a method is disclosed, for example, in publication Pulp and Paper Magazine of Canada, Convention Issue, 1972, pp. 123-131, and in issue 3/1968, pp. 51-60, of the same magazine. The peracid doses used in these methods are very large, typically 1% (i.e. 10 kg/ton of pulp), and thus they dissolve a considerable amount of lignin from the surfaces of fibers. Furthermore, these methods aim at increasing the brightness of the pulp, i.e. bleaching.
Furthermore, from publication WO-00/77301 A1 there is known a method for improving the opacity of mechanical pulp by adding a percarboxylic acid to a bleaching solution that contains hydrogen peroxide or by treating with a percarboxylic acid a mechanical pulp that has been bleached with hydrogen peroxide or dithionite. This process produces paper having a high opacity.
The object of the present invention is to provide a process for manufacturing liquid packaging board, whereby in particular the resistance of the board to the penetration of liquid is improved. In the manufacture of liquid packaging boards, the important parameters include so-called lactic acid REP and peroxide REP, which describe the penetration of lactic acid and peroxide solutions into the board. In terms of the usability of liquid packaging board it is essential that liquids cannot penetrate into the board. It has now been observed unexpectedly that by treating the board pulp with a small dose of a percarboxylic acid and by carrying out thereafter sizing with a mixture of a resin size and a neutral size, a surprising improvement can be achieved in this respect. The essential point of the invention is that the surface of the fibers in the board pulp is first modified by a percarboxylic acid treatment, whereafter the sizing is carried out with the said sizing composition.
In the peracid treatments known from the above-mentioned publications, the object has in the main been to increase brightness or to improve opacity or to inhibit microbial growth by using the peracid as a biocide. The invention specifically relates to a procedure wherein, in connection with the manufacture of liquid packaging board, a percarboxylic acid treatment is used for modifying the surface of fibers in a lignin-containing board pulp for the purpose of sizing.
In accordance with the invention there is thus provided a process for the manufacture of liquid packaging board, wherein a board pulp is treated with a percarboxylic acid by adding to the pulp a percarboxylic acid in an amount of 0.5-5 kg/ton of dry pulp, indicated as a 100 percent percarboxylic acid, whereafter, or simultaneously with the percarboxylic acid treatment, sizing is carried out with a combination of a resin size and a neutral size, which is followed by board forming.
According to the invention, the sizing with a combination of a resin size and a neutral size is preferably carried out after the percarboxylic acid treatment.
In the sizing it is possible to use a mixture of a resin size and a neutral size, or they can be added to the pulp separately.
The board pulp used may be a mechanical pulp such as groundwood (SGW, PGW), refiner mechanical pulp (TMP) or chemi-mechanical pulp (CTMP) or an unbleached chemical pulp, or mixtures thereof. Together with the pulps mentioned above it is possible to use as a mixture also chemical pulps, such as kraft pulp. The species of wood used for the manufacture of the pulp is not of significance in terms of the functioning of the invention.
A preferred percarboxylic acid dose is 1-3 kg/ton of pulp. The percarboxylic acid used may be any moderately water-soluble percarboxylic acid. Performic acid, peracetic acid and perpropionic acid have been found to be preferable, and peroxide-free distillates prepared from their equilibrium solutions have been found to be especially preferable. The process by which the percarboxylic acid is prepared does not affect the functioning of the invention. Percarboxylic acid solutions purified either by distillation or in some other manner or equilibrium solutions of percarboxylic acids can be used as the percarboxylic acid. Various mixtures of percarboxylic acids are also usable. In one variant of the invention it is possible to use a mixture of a percarboxylic acid and an inorganic peracid such as Caro's acid. In another variant of the invention, the peracetic acid can be prepared from hydrogen peroxide and an activator such as TAED (tetra-acetylethylene diamine).
In the process according to the invention, a combination of a resin size and a neutral size is used for sizing. The resin may be a resin or a reinforced resin. The neutral size may be an alkyl ketene dimer (AKD), alkenyl ketene dimer, alkenyl succinic acid anhydride (ASA) or alkyl succinic acid anhydride, preferably AKD. The amounts of size used may vary within the range 1-10 kg/ton of dry pulp and the pH may be within the range 3-11, preferably 4-9, depending on the process. The resin and the neutral size may be added to the pulp mix either separately or as a combination size. The resin/neutral size dose ratio may vary within a wide range, and preferably the ratio is, on the basis of weight, 9:1-1:9. It is also self-evident that the point at which the size is added or the order in which the other chemicals are added or the other run parameters of the paper machine do not as such affect the functioning of the invention. What is essential in the invention is that after the percarboxylic acid treatment the pulp mix is directed to the board manufacturing process, wherein a neutral size, preferably AKD, and a resin size are used for the sizing.
According to the invention the procedure may also be that a portion of the board pulp is treated with a percarboxylic acid, and this treated pulp is subsequently combined with a board pulp that has not been treated with a percarboxylic acid, and thereafter the pulp mix is sized. In this case, for example, a mechanical pulp may be treated with a percarboxylic acid and be combined with a chemical pulp that has not been treated with a percarboxylic acid.
In one preferred embodiment of the invention the percarboxylic acid treatment and/or the sizing step is carried out in the presence of an agent that stabilizes the percarboxylic acid. Such a stabilizing agent may be various complexing agents, such as DTPA or EDTA, or phosphonates, such as DTPMPA, N-bis-[(1,2-dicarboxyl-ethoxy)-ethyl]amine, N-tris-[(1,2-dicarboxyl-ethoxy)-ethyl]amine. It is also possible to use as the stabilizing agent salts of alkaline-earth metals, such as calcium compounds, for example calcium acetate or calcium carbonate, or magnesium compounds, for example magnesium sulfate, or aluminum compounds, such as alum. The complexing agents may also be used in the form of their alkaline-earth metal salts. An especially preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention is to add the complexing agents at the same time as the sizing mixture. The invention also relates to a procedure wherein an aluminum-containing compound, such as alum, is added to the pulp either in connection with the percarboxylic acid treatment or thereafter.
The consistency of the board pulp at the stage at which the percarboxylic acid is added may be 0.1-40%, and the temperature may be 20-100° C. As was pointed out above, the pH of the stock may be, depending on the process, 3-11, preferably 4-8. The suitable reaction time is 1-300 minutes, depending on the process. The delay between the percarboxylic acid treatment and the sizing does not substantially affect the functioning of the invention; the percarboxylic acid treatment can be carried out simultaneously with the sizing.
According to the invention there is additionally provided a process by which the resistance of liquid packaging board to the penetration of liquid is improved, and in which, in connection with the board manufacture, the board pulp is treated with a percarboxylic acid by adding to the pulp a percarboxylic acid in an amount of 0.5-5 kg/ton of dry pulp, indicated as a 100 percent percarboxylic acid, whereafter, or simultaneously with the percarboxylic acid treatment, sizing is carried out with a combination of a resin size and a neutral size.
In methods according to the invention the purpose of the percarboxylic acid is not to bleach the pulp; the purpose is to modify the surface of the fibers to a suitable state before the sizing. Thereafter the pulp mix is sized with a suitable sizing composition that contains a resin size and a neutral size, preferably AKD. In addition to an improved sizing result the use of a percarboxylic acid reduces microbial activity in the paper machine and reduces the odor of the board.
Owing to the small dose of percarboxylic acid in the method according to the invention, the percarboxylic acid does not dissolve lignin, etc., out of the pulp, in which case it also does not interfere with the board manufacturing process. It is especially advantageous to use percarboxylic acid solutions that have been purified so that they contain only the percarboxylic acid concerned and water. In this case the percarboxylic acid addition does not have a significant effect on the pH of the stock, and there will be no excess COD in the process. The invention differs from known methods based on peracids specifically in that its object is not to increase brightness but to make the sizing more effective so that the penetration of liquids into the board will be less.
The process according to the invention is not a bleaching process, and the chemicals used in the actual bleaching of the pulp do not have any effect on the functioning of the process. A mechanical pulp may be bleached with dithionite, peroxide, dithionite and peroxide, or it may be completely unbleached. Also, the chelating or other auxiliary agents used in the preparation of the pulp have no effect on the functioning of the invention.
The invention is described below in greater detail with the help of examples. In the present description the percentages are percentages by weight, unless otherwise specified.
A CTMP pulp was treated with perpropionic acid before sizing. The perpropionic acid used had been prepared by distillating an equilibrium solution of perpropionic acid; the solution did not contain significant amounts of free peroxide or propionic acid. A mixture of a CTMP pulp and an unbleached softwood kraft pulp was sized with a resin-AKD system (Ref.) and with a combination size (Comb.). Lactic acid REP and peroxide REP were determined from the sheets; they describe the penetration of lactic acid and peroxide solutions into the sheet. The results are shown in Table 1.
From the results it can be observed that the PPA treatment clearly improved peroxide REP.
A CTMP pulp was treated with peracetic acid before sizing. The peracetic acid had been prepared by distillation of an equilibrium solution of peracetic acid; the solution did not contain significant amounts of free peroxide or acetic acid. A mixture of the CTMP pulp and an unbleached SA pulp was sized both with the resin+AKD system (Ref.) and with combination sizes (Comb.). Lactic acid REP and peroxide REP were determined from the sized sheets. The results are shown in Table 2.
It can be seen from the results that especially the peroxide REP was improved by the PAA treatment.
An unbleached softwood kraft pulp was treated with peracetic acid before sizing. The pulp was sized with a resin+AKD system. Lactic acid REP and peroxide REP were determined from the sheets. The results are shown in Table 3.
It can be seen from the results that with softwood kraft pulp peroxide REP improved in the PAA treatment.
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