Modern paper-making techniques use paper machines at paper mills to produce rolls of paper that can, in turn, be used by board makers to produce board products (i.e., corrugated board). As a result, rolls of paper may be produced from machines that operate continuously. Modern paper machines typically produce paper from a number of substances including wood pulp that comprise wood fibers (although other fibers may also be used). These fibers tend to be elongated and suitable to be aligned next to one another. The fiber starts as a slurry that can be fed onto a moving screen from a head box of the paper machine. In modern paper machines, the fibers tend to align with each other and align with a direction in which the screen is moving. This alignment direction of underlying fibers is called the major direction of the paper and is in line with the machine direction. Thus, the major direction is often simply called the machine direction (MD) and the paper that is produced has an associated MD value.
Therefore, when paper is wound at the end of the papermaking process, the roll is paper wound up in the machine direction. Because of the alignment of underlying fibers in the machine direction of the paper, the paper itself exhibits greater strength in the machine direction when compared to a cross direction (CD) that is perpendicular to the machine direction. That is, the paper may bend, fold, or deform more easily in a cross direction as compared to the machine direction because the CD value is less than the MD value.
When paper is used to make a board product, portions of the paper used for the board product may be corrugated. Traditional corrugating machines will corrugate the underlying paper product in the cross direction of the paper thereby failing to take advantage of the natural strength bias of the paper in the machine direction. In an effort to increase the cross direction strength (at the expense of strength in the machine direction), paper makers have sought solutions that attempt to disrupt the natural alignment of fibers when fed to the initial screen at the head box of a paper machine. Such solutions, however, lead to slower paper machine operating speeds and a decrease in paper machine efficiency. As a result, papermaking efficiency is sacrificed for greater paper strength in the cross direction because of traditional corrugating techniques. Further, the greater natural strength qualities of paper in the machine direction is left unharnessed by cross corrugation techniques in board making solutions.
Aspects and many of the attendant advantages of the claims will become more readily appreciated as the same become better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following discussion is presented to enable a person skilled in the art to make and use the subject matter disclosed herein. The general principles described herein may be applied to embodiments and applications other than those detailed above without departing from the spirit and scope of the present detailed description. The present disclosure is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed or suggested herein.
By way of overview, the subject matter disclosed herein may be directed to a system and method for inducing fluting in paper in a machine direction of the paper. In a conventional board-making manufacturing setting, rolls of paper may be unwound in a machine direction and then corrugated in the cross-direction. Corrugating in the cross direction fails to take advantage of the MD value of the paper. Inducing fluting through embossing or scoring in the same direction as the underlying fibers (e.g., the machine direction) of the paper employs the natural strength in the machine direction of the paper used to create the fluted medium in a board product.
In one embodiment, a method of producing the fluting for a board product includes unwinding paper from a paper roll in a machine direction. Then, an embossing or scoring stage embosses or scores the paper to induce fluting. The induced fluting is also aligned with the machine direction of the paper thereby having the fluting aligned with higher MD value (as compared to the CD value). Further, linear embossing or scoring paper for fluting greatly reduces take-up compared with conventional corrugating. These and other aspects will become apparent in the detailed description of the embodiments as discussed below with respect to
The paper 120 in
One problem with corrugating paper for use in corrugated board making is that the paper needed for the fluted medium is much greater than the paper needed for the facing. This is obvious in so much as the overall length of the paper run, when formed and folded around corrugating ribs becomes a longer path than simply the flat facing portion of the corrugated board product. This lineal difference is often referred to as “take-up factor”. Depending on the size of the fluting, the take-up factor may be rather high (for example, 43% for a common C-flute profile). The fluted paper 150 is manufactured on corrugating machines 100 of
Paper is produced at paper mills dedicated solely to producing paper on rolls. Then, the paper rolls are shipped to a board-making plants where a machine (portions of which are shown as machine 100 in
One example of misaligned interests includes the method and machine at a paper mill that produce the underlying paper 120. As shown in the exploded section of
As has been discussed, the machine direction of the paper 120 exhibits greater strength characteristics (MD value) as well as greater resistance to bending when compared to the cross direction of the paper (CD value). This is mostly due to the nature of papermaking causing the underlying fibers to align in the machine direction. Of course, when the paper roll 110 is then unwound at a next manufacturing stage, as is shown in
In the machine 100 of
In an effort to increase CD values in paper (for the specific purposes of board making), paper-makers may be required to intentionally try to misalign underlying fibers in an effort to make the paper product stronger in the cross direction. This may result in less strength in the machine direction, but eventually leads to greater strength in the finished board product or box product as the paper product is corrugated in the cross direction. Intentionally misaligned the underlying fibers are, many times, achieved through agitation at head box on paper machines but at the expense of paper machine speed.
Thus, board-makers have an interest in a paper product that has a greater CD value because corrugators will corrugate in the cross direction. However, paper makers have an interest in producing paper with underlying fibers aligned in the machine direction (e.g., a greater MD value) as such an alignment requires less complex equipment and allows paper machines to operate at greater speeds. This misaligned interest then leads to compromising the efficiency of the paper maker or the products of the board maker; this is all because of cross corrugation. The remainder of the disclosure discusses linear embossing or linear scoring techniques that realign this interest.
Embossing is a process that stretches and deforms the paper going through the embossing rolls 230a and 230b. As the paper 120 is squeezed through an embossing roll 230a that is closely aligned with a counterpart embossing roll 230b, the paper 120 tends to stretch away from the contact points between the embossing rolls 230a and 230b. The resultant embossed paper 250 now has a width that is greater due to the stretching of the paper in the lateral direction. But, the embossed paper 250 now includes fluting such the original width of the pre-embossed paper 120 is almost equivalent to the width of the resultant fluted medium. Further, the length of the paper 120 (as defined by the machine direction of the paper 120) also remains unaffected by the embossing process.
As will be discussed further in
In the embodiment of
Such a linear embossing system and method leads to efficiencies on several levels and succeeds in realigning the interests of paper makers and board/box makers. First, linear embossing allows the paper maker to disregard any need to carefully control the alignment (or rather non-alignment) of the pulp fibers when first poured onto a screen on a paper machine. Recall that in order to improve strength in the cross direction, paper machines may include a head box that attempted to combat the natural alignment of underlying long fibers in the machine direction. With linear embossing, the need for improved strength in the cross direction is reduced or eliminated. Therefore, the paper-maker can focus on improving the speed of the paper machine.
Second, board makers can produce board products with less paper material. The linear embossing systems and methods discussed herein lead to a fluted medium that requires less material for production. That is, in conventional corrugating machines, the paper needed for the fluted medium is greater than the paper needed for a facing portion (in linear terms). Thus, the efficiency gain is two-fold: less overall paper used in making corrugated board and greater strength in the resultant board by aligning the MD value in both fluting and facings.
The embodiments as discussed with respect to
Similar to embossing, scoring is a process that stretches or deforms the paper going through the scoring rolls 330a and 330b. As a portion of the paper 120 is squeezed through a scoring roll 330a that is closely aligned with a counterpart scoring roll 330b, the paper 120 tends to stretch out away from the scoring point.
The resultant scored paper 350 now has a width that is greater due to the stretching of the paper in a lateral direction. But, the scored paper 350 now includes fluting such the original width of the pre-scored paper 120 is almost equivalent to the width of the resultant fluted medium. Further, the length of the paper 120 (as defined by the machine direction of the paper 120) also remains unaffected by the scoring process. As before, with respect to embossing, the scoring process results in almost no take-up factor. This is because the flutes are not simply formed around corrugating ribs, but are actually stretched to result in a desired pattern. The scored pattern then yields a fluted pattern similar to corrugating. Therefore, inducing fluting through scoring leads to an increase in efficiency while also taking advantage of the MD value of the paper that makes up the fluted medium 350.
While the subject matter discussed herein is susceptible to various modifications and alternative constructions, certain illustrated embodiments thereof are shown in the drawings and have been described above in detail. It should be understood, however, that there is no intention to limit the claims to the specific forms disclosed, but on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, alternative constructions, and equivalents falling within the spirit and scope of the claims.