The invention relates to processes and apparatuses for producing a lignocellulose-containing, plastic-coated printable molding.
The processes and apparatuses use lignocellulose-containing particles. There come into consideration here as lignocellulose-containing particles in particular substances made of wood or of non-woody plants or also a mixture thereof, for example in the form of chips, fibers, so-called strands or flakes. The particles mentioned here thus include in particular woody and ligneous chips and fibers.
Wood chips or wood fibers, or ligneous chips or fibers, are here to be understood as being in particular native cellulose-containing raw materials, for example wood from various tree species and of various origins (fresh, old or recycled).
Other examples of ligneous chips or fibers within the meaning of this description are bamboo, straw from maize or cereals, fiber plants such as flax or jute.
The use of ionizing radiation for the treatment, in particular for the digestion, of native cellulose-containing raw materials for various further processing purposes is known per se. Examples are pest decontamination, facilitation of so-called refining, or fiber digestion, in paper production, or also the acceleration of saccharification and fermentation, for example in the production of bioethanol.
The invention relates in particular to the production of chipboard and MDF/HDF sheets.
In the prior art it is known to use for this purpose a chopper for chopping the ligneous starting materials, a chipper for producing chips, a screen for determining the chip or fiber sizes, a washing installation, a so-called defibrator (in MDF production), a dryer, a mixer for mixing the chips or fibers with a binder, in particular the component formaldehyde, an installation for producing a mat, a pre-press, and a full press with heating to 220° C. for example, as well as means for the after-treatment of the chipboard or MDF/HDF sheets. The use of formaldehyde is problematic here with regard to health protection and the risk of fire.
The prior art is to be improved in particular in respect of the following properties and parameters:
productivity in production, outlay in terms of energy, required temperatures, mixing and setting times, cooling times, thickness swelling, abrasion and bending strength (modulus of elasticity), transverse tensile strength, ease of further processing, printability, UV protection, resistance to temperature changes and moisture, bioresistance of the products to spores, fungi, insects, fire protection, health protection, etc.
International patent application PCT/EP 2019/074883 of the inventors, knowledge of which is here assumed, describes the production of a lignocellulose-containing molding, wherein at least some of the above-mentioned aims are at least partially achieved.
The present invention relates additionally to the problem of printing lignocellulose-containing moldings, that is to say in particular chipboard and MDF/HDF sheets.
In the prior art, the printing, for example by laser printing or inkjet printing, of lignocellulose-containing moldings, in particular chipboard and MDF/HDF sheets, is very complex. The moldings or sheets must be lacquered multiple times in respect of their surface, typically in more than 3 steps. This is complex and expensive in terms of equipment and in terms of the process.
Accordingly, the object of the present invention is to provide processes and apparatuses with which a lignocellulose-containing molding can be produced with a minimal outlay in terms of equipment and in terms of the process, in particular such that it is printable and optionally printed.
According to the invention, a process for producing a lignocellulose-containing, plastic-coated and printable molding, in particular in sheet form and in the form of an MDF/HDF sheet, comprises the following steps:
With such a process, MDF/HDF moldings, in particular sheets, can advantageously be so produced in respect of the above-mentioned problems/aims that they have an outer polymer layer which is readily printable, in particular by laser printing or by inkjet printing.
According to one embodiment of the above-mentioned process, it is provided, in particular for producing MDF/HDF moldings, in particular sheets, that are provided with an outer polymer layer on both sides, according to
The above-mentioned process steps are preferably carried out one after the other in terms of time, in the indicated order. The heating according to feature 1c) and the pressing according to feature d) can thereby be carried out wholly or partially overlapping in terms of time.
For producing an MDF/HDF molding in which the surface arranged on the bottom during production is provided with the readily printable polymer layer, the process is as follows:
The above-mentioned “melting in” of thermoplastic-containing particles, which may also be particles consisting wholly of thermoplastic, means that the entire ply of thermoplastic-containing particles does not melt in, but only part thereof penetrates by melting as a result of heating into the adjacent layer containing lignocellulose-containing particles (i.e. in particular wood particles) and thus effects optimal bonding of the layers, while there is formed on the outer side of the molding a smooth layer of substantially thermoplastic material, which is printable, in particular by inkjet printing or by laser printing, without complex further measures.
For producing chipboard with a polymer coating on one side, the layer according to feature a) above contains fine lignocellulose-containing particles and the following steps are carried out after step a) and before step b):
aa) application of a layer (A′) containing coarse lignocellulose-containing particles.
Where mention is made herein of a “layer according to the shape of the molding to be produced”, this means that the shape of the layer is not necessarily identical to the final shape of the molding but is only dependent on the latter shape.
The invention relates also to apparatuses for carrying out the above-mentioned processes, wherein, for the individual process steps mentioned above, a device is provided in each case for carrying out the process step.
The processes according to the invention can also be used to bring a molding produced in the conventional manner, such as a chipboard or an MDF/HDF sheet, into a readily printable state. To this end, there can be spread on the conventionally produced chipboard or the MDF/HDF sheet a layer of particles which contain electron-beam-reactive thermoplastic or consist substantially thereof, following which the intermediate product so produced is heated such that some of the thermoplastic particles penetrate by melting into the adjacent layer containing lignocellulose-containing particles, whereupon the intermediate product so produced is pressed and then irradiated with electrons in the mentioned energy range.
The above-mentioned heating of the layers which have been produced such that thermoplastic-containing particles melt into the layer containing lignocellulose-containing particles is preferably carried out at temperatures of from 100° C. to 180° C., in particular at from 160° C. to 170° C.
The above-mentioned pressing operation is carried out in particular with pressures of from 30 bar to 50 bar.
Mention is made hereinbefore on the one hand of layers containing electron-beam-reactive thermoplastic and on the other hand of layers containing lignocellulose-containing particles. These are preferably on the one hand layers substantially containing thermoplastic and on the other hand layers substantially containing ligneous particles. The particles are in each case suitable for spreading in the surface.
There can be admixed with the layers containing lignocellulose-containing particles in each case a polymer (likewise in particle form), wherein these admixed polymer particles, on irradiation with electrons, effect total crosslinking with inclusion of the lignocellulose particles and of the polymers.
The lignocellulose-containing particles can also be irradiated with electrons in the energy range from 1 MeV to 10 MeV prior to or during their first use in one of the processes mentioned herein. Such irradiation is accordingly then carried out twice in the process.
There can be admixed with the layers of lignocellulose-containing particles (wood particles) mass proportions of from 5% to 30% of a thermoplastic. For producing a so-called WPC molding (wood-plastic composite), mass proportions of preferably from 30% to 60% of a polymer of the above-mentioned type are admixed.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention will be described in greater detail hereinbelow with reference to the accompanying figures.
The process proceeds in
“Lignocellulose-containing particles” are by way of example “wood particles” hereinbelow.
Firstly, in a manner known per se, a fine wood particle spreader spreads fine wood particles extensively on a conveyor belt 24 to produce a layer of fine wood particles. The term “wood dust” is also commonly used for such fine wood particles.
A coarse wood particle spreader 14 spreads a layer of coarse wood particles onto the layer of fine wood particles. The coarse wood particles can also be referred to as wood chips. Subsequently, a further fine wood particle spreader 16 spreads a layer of fine wood particles onto the layer of coarse wood particles. The fine particles and the coarse particles, as they are used here, have dimensions as are conventional in the production of three-layer chipboard. The fine particles thus have smaller dimensions than the coarse particles.
The conveyor belt 24 conveys the three layers so spread one on top of the other into a preheater 18 and, from there, the layers enter a press 20. Downstream of the press 20, the pressed moldings 26 are conveyed to an electron emitter 22, where they are irradiated with electrons in the energy range between 1 MeV and 10 MeV.
This is the basic structure on which the present invention is based.
In the figures, mutually corresponding components are provided with the same reference signs, wherein components used in different places are optionally provided with a prime or with a double prime.
A thermoplastic particle spreader 30 spreads a layer of fine thermoplastic particles on the conveyor belt 24. A fine wood particle spreader 12 then spreads a layer of fine wood particles on the layer of thermoplastic particles. Then a coarse wood particle spreader spreads a layer of coarse wood particles on the mentioned layer of fine wood particles. Then a further fine wood particle spreader 12′ spreads a layer of fine wood particles on the layer of coarse wood particles. A further thermoplastic particle spreader 30′ then spreads a layer of fine thermoplastic particles on the layer of fine wood particles which has been produced.
The layer thicknesses of the mentioned thermoplastic particle layers are preferably in the range from 100 to 500 micrometers (µm). Preferably, in all the two-sided coatings described here, the thickness of the polymer layers produced with the thermoplastic particles on both sides of the molding is the same. This has the advantage that warping (deformation) of the molding is counteracted (the so-called “banana effect” is avoided).
Downstream of the thermoplastic particle spreader 30′ according to
The observations made above in connection with
The molding 26 produced using the apparatus according to
A thermoplastic particle spreader 30 spreads a layer of thermoplastic particles on the conveyor belt. A wood fiber spreader 32 spreads a layer of wood fibers on the mentioned layer of thermoplastic particles. A mat former 34 shapes the two mentioned layers into a mat. A second thermoplastic particle spreader 30′ spreads a layer of thermoplastic particles on the mat. The intermediate product so produced then enters, in the manner already described, a preheater 18 and a press 20 as well as an electron emitter 22 in the manner described above with reference to
In all the exemplary embodiments described above, polymers which crosslink under electron bombardment can be added to the fine wood particle layers and the coarse wood particle layers.
The references to figures in the claims serve to facilitate correlation with the exemplary embodiments and are not part of the claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2020/058087 | 3/24/2020 | WO |