This application is a national stage application, filed under 35 U.S.C. §371, of International Application No. PCT/FI2008/050536, filed Sep. 25, 2008, which claims priority to Finnish Application No. 20075684, filed Sep. 28, 2007, both of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
1. Field of Invention
The invention relates to a refiner comprising a stator and a rotor, the stator and the rotor comprising a flat portion and a conical portion, the conical portion having a first end of smaller diameter and a second end of greater diameter such that the first end of the conical portion having smaller diameter is directed towards the fiat portion and the second end of the conical portion having greater diameter is directed away from the flat portion, and which flat portion and the conical portion comprise refining surfaces provided with blade to bars and blade grooves therebetween.
The invention further relates to a blade segment of a refiner comprising a stator and a rotor, the stator and the rotor comprising a flat portion and a conical portion, the conical portion having a first end of smaller diameter and a second end of greater diameter such that the first end of the conical portion having smaller diameter is directed towards the flat portion and the second end of the conical portion having greater diameter is directed away from the flat portion, and which blade segment is configurable to form at least part of the refining surface of the conical portion of the stator and which blade segment comprises blade bars and blade grooves therebetween, which together form the refining surface of the blade segment.
Refiners for processing fibrous material typically comprise two, but possibly also more, oppositely situated refining surfaces, at least one of which is arranged to rotate about a shaft such that the refining surfaces turn relative to one another. The refining surfaces of the refiner, i.e. its blade surfaces or the blade set, typically consist of protrusions, i.e. blade bars, provided in the refining surface and blade grooves between the blade bars. Hereinafter, blade bars may also be referred to as bars and blade grooves as grooves. The refining surface often consists of a plural number of juxtaposed blade segments, in which case the refining surfaces of individual blade segments together form an integral, uniform refining surface.
2. Description of Related Art
WO 97/18037 discloses a refiner provided with a stator, i.e. a fixed, immobile refiner element, and a refiner element to be rotated by means of a shaft, i.e. a rotor. Both the stator with its refining surface and the rotor with its refining surface are formed of a flat portion substantially perpendicular to the rotor shaft and a conical portion provided after this fiat portion and arranged at an angle to the flat portion. The conical portion therefore has the first end of smaller diameter and the second end of greater diameter such that the first end of the conical portion having the smaller diameter is directed towards the flat portion of the refiner and the second end of the conical portion having the greater diameter is directed away from the flat portion of the refiner. The flat and conical portions of the stator and the rotor are spaced apart such that a blade gap is formed between the refining surface of the stator and the refining surface of the rotor. The fibrous material to be refined is fed into the blade gap between the fiat portions of the stator and the rotor. As the material to be refined is being processed, it moves forward in the blade gap between the refining surfaces of the flat portion and further into the blade gap between the refining surfaces of the conical portion and finally away from the blade gap.
An object of the invention is a novel refiner providing improved pulp quality.
The refiner of the invention is characterized in that the refining surface of the conical portion of the stator comprises at least an outer zone arranged at the second end of the conical portion having greater diameter and an inner zone arranged relative to the outer zone on the side of the first end of the conical portion having smaller diameter, the length of the outer zone being half of the total length between the first end and the second end of the conical portion of the stator and that a portion of the length of the blade bars in the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator are arranged relative to the rotation direction of the rotor such that they have a retentive effect on the material to be refined and that this portion of the length of the blade bars in the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator corresponds to at least 10% of the total length between the first end and the second end of the conical portion of the stator.
A blade segment of the invention is characterized in that the blade segment comprises at least an outer zone arrangeable at the second end of the conical portion of the stator having greater diameter and an inner zone arrangeable relative to the outer zone on the side of the first end of the conical portion of the stator having smaller diameter, the length of the outer zone being half of the total length of the blade segment and that a portion of the length of the blade bars in the outer zone of the blade segment are arrangeable relative to the rotation direction of the rotor such that they have a retentive effect on the material to be refined and that this portion of the length of the blade bars in the outer zone of the blade segment corresponds to at least 10% of the total length of the blade segment.
The refiner comprises a stator and a rotor and the stator and the rotor comprise a flat portion and a conical portion. The conical portion has a first end of smaller diameter and a second end of greater diameter such that the first end of the conical portion having smaller diameter is directed towards the flat portion and the second end of the conical portion having greater diameter is directed away from the flat portion. The flat portion and the conical portion comprise refining surfaces provided with blade bars and blade grooves there between. The refining surface of the conical portion of the stator comprises at least an outer zone arranged at the second end of the conical portion having greater diameter and an inner zone arranged relative to the outer zone on the side of the first end of the conical portion having smaller diameter. The length of the outer zone is half of the total length between the first end and the second end of the conical portion of the stator. A portion of the length of the blade bars in the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator are arranged relative to the rotation direction of the rotor such that they have a retentive effect on the material to be refined and this portion of the length of the blade bars in the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator corresponds to at least 10% of the total length between the first end and the second end of the conical portion of the stator.
With the blade bars arranged relative to the rotation direction of the rotor such that they have a retentive effect on the material to be refined, in other words, retentive blade bars generally refer to a blade bar that produces in the mass particle to be refined a velocity component towards the first end of smaller diameter, i.e. towards the centre of the refiner. Because in this case the retentive blade bar portions are arranged in the conical portion of the stator, the retentive blade bar portions in practice produce no specific velocity component to the mass particle but they prevent the fibrous material to be refined from moving from the first end of smaller diameter towards the second end of greater diameter and finally away from the blade gap such that the speed of the movement of the fibrous material slows down at least on some part of the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator. This increases the amount of material to be refined in the blade gap, thus improving pulp quality and making the pulp to be refined more uniformly.
According to an embodiment of the invention the retentive blade bar portions are arranged in the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator such that the retentive blade bar portions create a negative blade bar angle relative to the rotation direction of the rotor in the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator.
According to an embodiment of the invention the retentive blade bar portions are arranged in the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator such that the retentive blade bar portions create a blade bar angle value between 0 degree to minus 30 degrees in the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator relative to the rotation direction of the rotor. The value of the blade bar angle makes it possible to affect the refining result in order to provide desired pulp quality.
Some embodiments of the invention will be discussed in greater detail with reference to the accompanying figures, in which
For the sake of clarity, some embodiments of the invention are simplified in the Figures. Like parts are indicated with like reference numerals.
The flat portion 7 of the stator 2 comprises a refining surface 11 and the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 comprises a refining surface 12. The flat portion 9 of the rotor 4 comprises a refining surface 13 and the conical portion 10 of the rotor 4 comprises a refining surface 14. The rotor 4 is arranged at a distance from the stator 2 in such a way that a blade gap 15 is left between the refining surfaces of the rotor 4 and the refining surfaces of the stator 2. The size of the blade gap 15 may typically be adjusted separately on the flat portion and the conical portion. The fibrous material to be refined is fed by means of a feed screw 16, for example, through the centre of the flat portions 7 of the refining surfaces 11 of the stator 2 to the blade gap 15, where the fibrous material is refined and, at the same time, it moves between the flat portion 7 of the refining surface 11 of the stator 2 and the flat portion 9 of the refining surface 13 of the rotor 4 towards a portion between the conical portions 8, 10 in the blade gap 15 and finally away from the blade gap 15. A person skilled in the art is familiar with the general structure and operating principle of refiners and therefore they are not discussed further in this context.
The blade segment 19 of
All the blade bars 20 of the blade segment 19 according to
This effect is provided by configuring the blade bars 20 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 such that the blade bars 20 of the refining surface 12 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 are directed into the opposite direction relative to the rotation direction RD of the rotor 4. This kind of configuration means that there is a specific blade bar angle α between the blade bars 20 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 and a line B (partly shown in
The retentive effect on the material to be refined means, in practice, that the blade bars 20 of the refining surface 12 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 slow down the movement of the fibrous material to be refined from the first end 17 of smaller diameter of the conical portion towards the second end 18 of greater diameter of the conical portion and finally away from the blade gap 15. Because the residence time, i.e. the time the material to be refined stays between the refining surfaces of the conical portions of the stator 2 and the rotor 4 increases, the degree of grinding increases. This means that the refining effect on the material to be refined increases, thus improving pulp quality and making pulp to be refined more uniformly. Because all the blade bars 20 in the outer zone 23 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 are arranged to have a retentive effect on the material to be refined, the outer zone 23 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 provides shearing force having a parallel effect on the material to be refined on the whole refining surface area of the outer zone 23, this resulting in the flow of field of the material to be refined being more uniform than before. This provides a uniform degree of grinding on the material to be refined, thus providing a uniform and high quality of the refined material.
The refining surface 12 of the blade segment 19 is also provided with dams 26 arranged between two blade bars 20 to break the blade groove 21 between the two blade bars 20. The task of the dam 26 is to lift or transfer the material to be refined and moving in the blade grooves 21 between the blade bars 20 of the stator 2 and the rotor 4 so that the refining effect on the material to be refined will increase.
The blade bars 20 in
According to the solution, a portion of the length of the blade bars 20 in the outer zone 23 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 are arranged relative to the rotation direction RD of the rotor 4 such that they have a retentive effect on the material to be refined, this portion of the corresponding to at least 10%, and in some cases, at least 30% of the total length D between the first end 17 and the second end 18 of the conical portion of the stator 2. These retentive blade bar portions may be at any location in the area of the outer zone 23 in the length direction of the conical portion of the stator. So, they do not necessarily need to be located in the outer zone 23 such that they are immediately at the second end 18 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2. The retentive effect of the retentive blade bar portions is the higher the closer the retentive blade bar portions are of the second end of the conical portion of the stator having greater diameter.
All the blade bars 20 are configured on the inner zone 22 of the blade segment 19 such that all the blade bars 20 on the inner zone 22 of the blade segment 19 are feeding blade bars. By feeding blade bars of the stator it is referred to the blade bars of a stator arranged relative to the rotation direction RD of the rotor 4 such that they have a feeding effect on the material to be refined. A blade bar having a feeding effect on the material to be refined generally refers to a blade bar that produces in the mass particle to be refined a velocity component toward the second end of greater diameter, i.e. away from the centre of the refiner. Because in this case the feeding blade bar portions are arranged in the stator, in practice the blade bars on the inner zone 22 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 produce no specific velocity component to the mass particle, but they allow or enhance the movement of the fibrous material to be refined from the first end 17 of smaller diameter towards the second end 18 of greater diameter.
The blade bar portions of the blade bars 20 on the inner zone 22 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 are directed in the corresponding direction relative to the rotation direction RD of the rotor 4. This kind of configuration means that there is a specific positive blade bar angle α between the blade bars 20 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 and the rotation direction RD of the rotor 4, as schematically shown in
The line C shown schematically in
The feeding effect on the material to be refined means, in practice, that the blade bars 20 on the inner zone 22 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 enhance the movement of the fibrous material to be refined from the inner zone 22 of the blade segment 19 towards the outer zone 23 of the blade segment 19. This means that the refining effect on the material to be refined may be reduced on the inner zone 22 of the refining surface 12. The feeding blade bar portions in the inner zone 22 provide a shorter residence time of the material to be refined in the blade gap. They also create more turbulence in the material to be refined. These both phenomena save the energy used in the refining. The energy saving originates form the fact that the blade gap is smaller in the outer zone of the conical portion of stator than in the inner zone of the conical portion of the stator. This means that the refining is more efficient in the area of the outer zone than in the area of the inner zone. When the refining takes place mainly in the outer zone, the energy used in the refining can be reduced. Therefore the intensifying of the feeding of the material to be refined from the inner zone towards the outer zone can result in energy saving without any effect on the pulp quality.
The refining surface 12 of the blade segment 19 according to
According to an embodiment the length of the inner zone 22 may correspond to at least one-quarter of the total length between the first end 17 and the second end 18 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 such that the inner zone 22 is located at some portion of the conical portion (8) of the stator 2 between the first end 17 of the conical portion 8 having a smaller diameter D1 and the outer zone 23 and that the blade bars 20 are feeding blade bars in the inner zone 22. According to an embodiment the length of the inner zone 22 corresponds to half of the total length between the first end 17 and the second end 18 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 such that there is no special transition zone 24 at all and that the blade bars 20 are feeding blade bars in the inner zone 22. The feeding effect of the feeding blade bar portions is the higher the closer the feeding blade bar portions are of the first end of the conical portion of the stator having smaller diameter.
The above-described refining surfaces may be used in the cortical portion of the stator both in the high-consistency refiners and low-consistency refiners. High-consistency refiners may be used both as a first-phase refiner for refining wood chips and as a second-phase refiner or other refiner for further refining wood chips already refined or fibre pulp or another fibre containing material. In high-consistency refiners the consistency of the material to be refined is typically over 25% or 30%. Because of the high consistency the flow of to the material to be refined and the flow of the material refined take place in steam or vapour phase in high-consistency refiners. Because the blade gap on the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator in high-consistency refiners is full of steam, steam will flow away from the blade gap out of the refiner very easily and at a high speed, carrying a lot of fibres out of the blade gap at the same time. Due to the retentive effect of the blade bars at least in the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator the fibres will stay a longer time in the blade gap, thus increasing the grinding effect on the material to be refined. Therefore, the improvement in the functionality of the refining, i.e. high production capacity, a remarkable increase in the degree of grinding and better pulp characteristic of fibre pulp are significant in high-consistency refiners.
As already mentioned, the above-described refining surfaces may also be used in the conical portion of the stator in low-consistency refiners. In low-consistency refiners the consistency of the material to be refined is typically less than 8% and often less than 5%. Because of the low consistency the flow of the material to be refined and the flow of the material refined in low-consistency refiners takes place mainly in liquid phase comprising water and fibres, the amount of steam being minimal. Typically there is no steam at all.
The size of the blade gap in the high-consistency refiners is bigger than in the low-consistency refiners. Because of the bigger blade gap and the high consistency the amount of material to be refined is bigger in the high-consistency refiners than in the low-consistency refiners. This means that the treatment of fibres takes place in high-consistency refiners more due to fibre-fibre contact than in low-consistency refiners, the fibre-fibre contact increasing the degree of grinding. Because of these characteristics the amount of energy used for refining is higher in the high-consistency refiners than in the low-consistency refiners, which means that a lot of steam is created during refining in the high-consistency refiners. Because of this steam the grinding in high-consistency refiners requires a larger flow volume than in the low-consistency refiners, wherein the grinding takes place in liquid phase comprising water and fibres. Due to the preventive blade bar portions the present solution provides a substantially same flow volume for the steam as in the prior art solution comprising V-shaped blade bars and blade grooves such that the steam flows in the blade gap of the present solution substantially at a same speed as in the prior art solution. However, the retentive blade bar portions prevent the flow of material to be refined more effectively and more even than the V-shaped blade bars. This means that more fibres remain in the blade gap, the load capacity of the refiner increases and fibre material having homogeneous quality can be obtained. The effect of the present solution has the same advantages in the low-consistency refiners. However, the advantages of the use of the present solution of a refining surface are emphasized in the high-consistency refiners, wherein the grinding takes place in the steam phase. The retentive blade bar portions prevent the flow of fibres such that more fibres remain in the blade gap for refining when the steam exits from the blade gap. In low-consistency refiners fibres flow with water and the present solution prevents the flow of both fibres and water out of the blade gap. Therefore more fibres remain in the blade gap for refining in the low-consistency refiners too, but the separation of fibre material and water does not happen in low-consistency refiners, as happens the separation of fibre material and steam in the high-consistency refiners.
The rotation speed of the rotor in the high-consistency refiners is also much higher than in the low-consistency refiners. The higher circumferential speed of the rotor in high-consistency refiners affect the grinding in high-consistency refiners such that the number of the impacts to the material to be refined by the blade bars is much higher in the high-consistency refiners than in the low-consistency refiners. Partly because of this the high-consistency refiner may be loaded more than the low-consistency refiners. The high loading means that a lot of energy may be used for refining, this, however, resulting in high steam amount and need for large flow volume for steam. The retentive blade bar portions slow down the movement of the material to be refined in the blade gap, thus increasing the load capacity of the refiner. The retentive blade bar portions prevent the flow of fibres but allow the flow of steam out of the blade gap, because the flow of steam is mainly affected by the open flow area. Also in this case, the advantages of the use of the present solution of a refining surface are emphasized in the high-consistency refiners, wherein the grinding takes place in the steam phase. The retentive blade bar portions prevent the flow of fibres such that more fibres remain in the blade gap for further refining when the steam exits from the blade gap. In low-consistency refiners fibres flow with water and the present solution prevents the flow of both fibres and water out of the blade gap such that more fibres remain in the blade gap. Therefore more fibres remain in the blade gap for further refining than in prior art solution.
The above-described refining surfaces may also be similarly used in the conical portion of the stator of medium-consistency refiners where the consistency of the material to be refined is typically between 8% and 25%.
In some cases the features disclosed in the present application may be used as such, irrespective of the other features. On the other hand, the features disclosed in this application may be combined to produce different combinations, when necessary.
The drawings and the related specification are only intended to illustrate the inventive idea. The details of the invention may vary within the scope of the claims. In all the presented embodiments the blade bars are running continuously from the inner zone of the blade segment to the outer zone of the blade segment such that the blade bar angle between the portion of the blade bar in the outer zone and the rotation direction of the rotor is negative. It is also possible, however, that there are blade bars separate of each other on the inner zone and the outer zone. It is also possible that the inner zone 22 of the refining surface 12 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2 comprises blade bars 20 and blade grooves 21 having a V-shaped form.
Further, as the outer zone of the conical portion of the stator comprises blade bars such that a portion of the length of the blade bars on the outer zone have a retentive effect on the material to be refined, the rest of the refining surface can comprise several refining surface zones comprising retentive, feeding or even V-shaped blade bars.
On the inner part of the refining surface, i.e. outside of the area of the outer zone 23 of the refining surface of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2, the blade bars and blade grooves may be arranged to form several refining zones for example such that, when seeing towards the second end of the conical portion of the stator, after the transition zone the blade bars may be arranged to have a feeding effect on the material to be refined. After this kind of feeding zone it is possible to provide a refining zone comprising straight blade bars and blade grooves having a retentive effect. After this kind of retentive zone it is still possible to provide another refining zone having a feeding effect on the material to be refined before the material to be refined proceeds to the outer zone 23 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2. With this kind of refining surface solution it is possible to provide on the inner part of the refining surface of the conical portion of the stator a flow of material to be refined containing a strong turbulence effect on the material to be refined and, at the same time, to provide on the material to be refined a strong feeding effect towards the outer zone 23 of the conical portion 8 of the stator 2.
As seen in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20075684 | Sep 2007 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI2008/050536 | 9/25/2008 | WO | 00 | 6/18/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/040476 | 4/2/2009 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4023737 | Leider et al. | May 1977 | A |
4253613 | Reinhall | Mar 1981 | A |
5425508 | Chaney | Jun 1995 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 611 599 | Aug 1994 | EP |
0 958 058 | Nov 1999 | EP |
WO 9718037 | May 1997 | WO |
WO 2007085703 | Aug 2007 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100270411 A1 | Oct 2010 | US |