CA1259153A - Production of paper and paperboard - Google Patents
Production of paper and paperboardInfo
- Publication number
- CA1259153A CA1259153A CA000528070A CA528070A CA1259153A CA 1259153 A CA1259153 A CA 1259153A CA 000528070 A CA000528070 A CA 000528070A CA 528070 A CA528070 A CA 528070A CA 1259153 A CA1259153 A CA 1259153A
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- suspension
- polymer
- added
- bentonite
- cationic
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired
Links
Classifications
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D21—PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
- D21H—PULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- D21H17/00—Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its constitution; Paper-impregnating material characterised by its constitution
- D21H17/20—Macromolecular organic compounds
- D21H17/33—Synthetic macromolecular compounds
- D21H17/34—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds
- D21H17/41—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds containing ionic groups
- D21H17/44—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds containing ionic groups cationic
- D21H17/45—Nitrogen-containing groups
- D21H17/455—Nitrogen-containing groups comprising tertiary amine or being at least partially quaternised
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D21—PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
- D21H—PULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- D21H17/00—Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its constitution; Paper-impregnating material characterised by its constitution
- D21H17/20—Macromolecular organic compounds
- D21H17/33—Synthetic macromolecular compounds
- D21H17/34—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds
- D21H17/41—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds containing ionic groups
- D21H17/44—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds containing ionic groups cationic
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D21—PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
- D21H—PULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- D21H17/00—Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its constitution; Paper-impregnating material characterised by its constitution
- D21H17/20—Macromolecular organic compounds
- D21H17/33—Synthetic macromolecular compounds
- D21H17/46—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained otherwise than by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds
- D21H17/54—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained otherwise than by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds obtained by reactions forming in the main chain of the macromolecule a linkage containing nitrogen
- D21H17/55—Polyamides; Polyaminoamides; Polyester-amides
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D21—PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
- D21H—PULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- D21H17/00—Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its constitution; Paper-impregnating material characterised by its constitution
- D21H17/20—Macromolecular organic compounds
- D21H17/33—Synthetic macromolecular compounds
- D21H17/46—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained otherwise than by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds
- D21H17/54—Synthetic macromolecular compounds obtained otherwise than by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds obtained by reactions forming in the main chain of the macromolecule a linkage containing nitrogen
- D21H17/56—Polyamines; Polyimines; Polyester-imides
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D21—PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
- D21H—PULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- D21H17/00—Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its constitution; Paper-impregnating material characterised by its constitution
- D21H17/63—Inorganic compounds
- D21H17/67—Water-insoluble compounds, e.g. fillers, pigments
- D21H17/68—Water-insoluble compounds, e.g. fillers, pigments siliceous, e.g. clays
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D21—PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
- D21H—PULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- D21H23/00—Processes or apparatus for adding material to the pulp or to the paper
- D21H23/02—Processes or apparatus for adding material to the pulp or to the paper characterised by the manner in which substances are added
- D21H23/04—Addition to the pulp; After-treatment of added substances in the pulp
- D21H23/06—Controlling the addition
- D21H23/14—Controlling the addition by selecting point of addition or time of contact between components
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D21—PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
- D21H—PULP COMPOSITIONS; PREPARATION THEREOF NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES D21C OR D21D; IMPREGNATING OR COATING OF PAPER; TREATMENT OF FINISHED PAPER NOT COVERED BY CLASS B31 OR SUBCLASS D21G; PAPER NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- D21H21/00—Non-fibrous material added to the pulp, characterised by its function, form or properties; Paper-impregnating or coating material, characterised by its function, form or properties
- D21H21/06—Paper forming aids
- D21H21/10—Retention agents or drainage improvers
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Production of Paper and Paper Board Paper or paper board is made by passing an aqueous cellulosic suspension through a centriscreen or other shear device and then draining the purified suspension, and an improved combination of retention, drainage, drying and formation is achieved by adding to the suspension an excess of high molecular weight linear synthetic cationic polymer before shearing the suspension and adding bentonite after shearing.
Production of Paper and Paper Board Paper or paper board is made by passing an aqueous cellulosic suspension through a centriscreen or other shear device and then draining the purified suspension, and an improved combination of retention, drainage, drying and formation is achieved by adding to the suspension an excess of high molecular weight linear synthetic cationic polymer before shearing the suspension and adding bentonite after shearing.
Description
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... .
Allied Colloids T.imited 60/2553/02 Production of Paper and Paper Board This i~vention.r~lat~s to ~he production ~f paper and paper board from a thin stock (a dilute aqueous suspension) of cellulose fibres and optionally filler on paper making apparatus in which the thin stock is pass~d through one or more shear stages such as cleaning, mixing and pumping stages and the resultant suspension is drained through a wire to form a sheet, which is then dried. The thin stock is generally made by dilution of a thick stock that is formed earlier in the process.
The drainage to form the sheet may be downwards under gravity or may be upwards, and the screen through which drainage occurs may be flat or curved, e.g., cylindrical.
The stock is inevitably subjected to agitation throughout its flow along the apparatus. Some of the agitation is gentle but some is strong as a result of passage through one or more of the shear stages. In particular, passage of the stock through a centriscreen inevitably subjects the stock to very high shear. The centriscreen is the name given to various centrifugal cleaner devices that are used on paper machines to remove coarse solid impurities, such as large fibre bundles, from the stock prior to sheet formation. It i5 sometimes known as the selectifier. Other stages that apply shear include centrifugal pumping and mixing apparatus such as conventional mixing pumps and fan pumps (i.e., centrifugal pumps).
It is common to include various inorganic materials, such as bentonite and alum, and/or organic materials, such as various natural or modified natural or synthetic polymers, in the thin stock for the purpose of improvinq the process. Such materials can be added for diverse purposes such as pitch control, decolouration of the drainage water (JP 598291) or for facilitating release t~
~s~
from drying rolls (JP 7559505). Starch is often included to improve strength.
P~ocess -imp~Qvemen~ is particularly d~siEed in retention, drainage and drying ~or dewatering) and in the formation (or structure) properties of the final paper sheet. Some of these parameters are in conflict with each other. For instance if the fibres are flocculated effectively into conventional, relatively large, flocs then this may trap the fibre fines and filler very successfully, so as to give good retention, and may result in a porous structure so as to give good drainage.
However the porosity and large floc size may result in rather poor formation, and the large fibre flocs may tend to hold water during the later stages of drying such that the drying properties are poor. This will necessitate the use of excessive amounts of thermal energy to dry the final sheet. If the fibres are flocculated into smaller and tighter flocs then drainage will be less satisfactory and retention usually will be less satisfactory, but drying and formation will be improved.
Conventional practice therefore has resulted in the paper maker selecting his additives according to the parameters that he judges to be the most important. If, for example, increased filler retention is more important to the papermaker than increased production he is more likely to use a polyacrylamide or other very high molecular weight flocculant. If increased production is more important than increased retention then a coagulant such as aluminium sulphate is more likely to be chosen.
Impurities in the stock create additional problems and necessitate the use of particular adclitives.
It is known to include in the stock both an inorganic additive and an organic polymeric material, for the purpose of improving retention, drainage, drying and/or formation.
~l25~15~
In DE 2262906~1 to 10% ber.tonite and/or 0.5 to 3~
aluminium sulphate is added to the stock, followed by 0.02 ~o Q~2~ o a ca io~i~ polyme~ ~uch a$ ~lyethyle~e imine, so as to improve dewatering even in the presence of impurities in the stock. (In this specification all percentages are dry weight based on the dry ~eight of the stock, unless otherwise stated.3 In U.S. 2,368,635j bentonite is added to the stock and may be followed by aluminium sulphate or other acidifying substance. In U.S. 3,433,70~, attapulgite is added and alum and/or auxiliary filler retention material can be incorporated. In Gs 1,265,496, a stock containing alum and pigmentary clay is formed and cationic polymer is added.
In U.S. 3,0S2,595Jmineral filler, polyacrylamide and 1 to 20% bentonite, by weight based on the weight of filler, are incorporated in the stock. It is stated that the polymer could be added to the stock either before or after the addition of fillers but the preferred process involves adding the bentonite to a stock containing the remainder of the fillers and the fibres, and then adding the polymer. In each instance the polymer used in this process is substantially non-ionic polyacrylamide. In EP 173~ unfilled paper is made from crude pulp by adding bentonite to the stock followed by substantially non-ionic polyacrylamide.
FI 67735 describes a process in which a cationic polymer and an anionic component are included in the stock to improve retention and the resultant sheet is sized. It is stated that the cationic and anionic - components can be pre-mixed but preferably the anionic component is first added to the stock followed by the cationic, or they are added separately at the same place.
The stock is agitated during the addition. ~t is stated that the amount of cationic is 0.01 to 2%,preferably 0.2 - - ~. .. .. .
to O.9~ and the amount of anionic is O.Ol to 0.6~
preferahly O.l to 0.5%. The cationic retention aid is said to be selected from cationic starch and cationic polyacrylamide or certain other synthetic polymers while the anionic component is said to be polysilicic acid, bentonite, carboxymethyl cellulose or anionic synthetic polymer. In the examples the anionic component is colloidal silicic acid in an amount of 0.15% and the cationic component is cationic starch in an amount of 0.3 or 0.35~ and is added after the colloidal siliclc acid.
FI 67736 describes a process in which the same chemical types of materials are used as in FI 67735 but the size is added to the stock. It is again stated to ~e preferred to add the anionic component before the ca~ionic component or to add both components at the same place (while maintaining the stock adequately agitated).
However it is also stated that when synthetic polymer alone is used as the retention aid (i.e., presumably meaning a combination of synthetic cationic polymer and synthetlc anionic polymer), it is advantageous to add the cationic be~ore the anionic. Most of the examples are laboratory examples and show adding 0~15~ colloidal silica sol to relatively thick stock, followed by 1 to ~%
cationic starch ~ollowed by a further 0.15% colloidal silica sol. Tn one example the 1-2~ cationic starch is replaced by 0.0~5% cationic polyacr~lamide and is added after part of the colloidal silica. Tn the only example of an actual production process, the cationlc starch, filler and some anionic silica sol are all mixed into thick stock at the same place and the remainder of the silica sol is added later, but the precise points of addi-tion, and the intervening process steps, are not stated.
Arlecter in Papier, Volume ~9, number l~a, October 19~, pages 3 to 43, especially page 36, examined possible synergistic combinations of additives for i:
~59153 cellulosic suspensions. He showed that when using a combination of 0.005~ polyethylene oxide of very high ~olecul~r wçight a~ ~.12~ ~lamine ~maldehyde resinr retention was improved only slightly if they were both added at the chest (early in the process), retention was improved if the melamine formaldehyde was added at the head box (near the end of the process) whilst the other polymer was still add~d at the chest, but best results were achieved when both polymers were added at the head box. Thus best results were obtained when no shear was applied after flocculation.
Auhorn in Wochenblatt Fur Papierfabrikation, Volume 13, 1979, pages 493 to 502, especially page 500, showed the use of bentonite in combination with 0.3~ cationic polyelectrolyte. It appears that the bentonite absorbed impurities from the suspension prior to the addition of the polyelectrolyte. Chalk was said to behave in a similar manner. In a paper presented by ~uhorn to the Wet End Paper Technology Symposium, Munich, 17th to l9th March 1981 he showed that applying shear to the aqueous suspension after the addition of polymeric retention aid gave a serious decrease in retention properties. He also examined the effect of adding bentonite to the suspension and then adding 0.04~ cationic polymer before or after the selectifier (a form of centriscreen). He demonstrated that greatly improved retention was obtained when the polymer was added after the selectifier (i.e., after the shearing) than before.
Tanaka in Tappi, April 1982, Volume 65, No.4, pages 95 to 99, especially page 98, indicated that when making paper filled with clay there was slightly better retention o~ clay when the clay was added after the polymer than before but warned that the system is highly shear sensitive.
.. ... . . . ... . . . . .. . . ..
I~
, ' ~9~53 ~ aech in Tappi Journal, March 1983, pages 137 to 139 showed that when making paper filled with kaolin clay usi~ a synt~e ic cationic pol~mexic ~et~ntion aid, retention is significantly improved if all the kaolin is added after the retention aid instead of before. Waech also showed that retention is improved less if the retention aid is added before the fan pump.
Luner in Tappi Proceedings, 1984 Paper Makers Conference, pages 95 to 106, confirmed these results and suggested that they were due to the pulp being positively charged by the cationic polymer before the addition of anionic clay, and clearly demonstrated that although the process gave improved retention,it gave markedly reduced burst strength, compared to a process in which the clay is added before the retention aid.
The late addition of all the clay filler incurs other disadvantages.It would be very difficult in practice to operate this in a controlled manner because of the variable filler content of the recycled pulp that is used in many mills to supply part at least of the initial fibre pulp. It would be difficult or impossible to adapt paper mills to allow for the uniform addition of large amounts of filler at a late stage.
Finally, these processes are of course inappropriate when no significant amount of filler is to be incorporated into the suspension, e.g./ for unfilled papers.
In practice therefore,whenever a synthetic polymeric retention aid is included in the stock it is always added after th~ last point of high shear so as to avoid the dramatic loss of retention that is accepted as inevitable if the flocculated system is sheared and that is shown, as mentioned above, by Auhorn. In particular, the synthetic polymeric retention aid is always added after the centriscreen.
.. . ... . .. ... ..... ,, . . , .. . .. . . .. . .. .. , .. ... , . .. .. ~ . . .. ... , ,,; ,. .. . .. .. . . . . .. . .. . .
~,, S~i3 In many of these processes a starch, often a cationic starch, is also included in the suspension in . . ,.. , ord.er..~o improve. the,burs.t.stre.ngth..,....,~ereas.,..cationic .. .
synthetic polymeric retention aids are substan~ially linear molecules of relatively high charge density, cationic starch is a globular molecule having relatively low charge density.
A process that is apparently intended to obtain both good strength properties and sa~isfactory retention properties is described in U.S. 4,388,150 and uses . colloidal silicic acid and cationic starch.... I~ ,is said, that the components may be pre-mixed and then added to the stock but that preferably the mixing is conducted in the presence of the stock. It is said that the best results are obtained if the colloidal silicic acid is mixed into the stock and the cationic st~rch is then added. It appears that a binder complex is formed between the colloidal silicic acid and the cationic starch and it is said that results improve as the Zeta potential in the initial anionic stock moves towards zero. This suggests that the binder complex is intended to have some coagulation effect upon the stock.
A process has been commercialised by the assignees of U.S. 4,388,150 undex the trade name Compozil. The trade literature on this states that the system is an advantage over "two component systems containing long-chain linear polymers" and further states that the anionic colloidal silica is "the unique part of the system", is "not a silica pigment", and "acts to agglomerate the fines, filler and fibre already treated with the cationic starch". The system is also described in Paper, 9th Septem~er 1985 pages 18 to 20 and again it is stated that the anionic silica acid is a colloidal solution that gives the system its unique properties.
. . .
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Although the system can, in some processes, give a good combination of strength and process performance it suffers ,frQm,a ~umbe,r of d,isadv,antages. The ,~c~lloidal silica, that is essential, is very expensive. The cationic starch has to be used in very large quantities.
For instance the examples in U.S0 4,388,150 show that the amount of cationic starch and colloidal silica that are added to the stock can be as high as 15% combined dry solids based on the weight of clay (clay is usually present in an amount of about 20% by weight of the total solids in the stock). Further, the system is only successful at a very narrow range of pH values, and so cannot be used in many paper making processes.
W086/05826 was published after the priority date of the present application and recognises the existence of some of these problems, and in particular modified the silica sol in an attempt to make the system satisfactory at a wider range of pH values. Whereas FI 67736 describes, inter alia, the use of bentonite or colloidal silica in combination with, e.g., cationic polyacrylamide and exemplified adding the cationic polyacrylamide with agitation followed by addition of some of the colloidal silica sol, in W086/05826 the colloidal silica sol is modified. In particular,cationic polyacrylamide is used in combination with a sol of colloidal particles having at least one surface layer of aluminium silicate or aluminium-modified silicic acid such that the surface groups of the particles contain silicon atoms and aluminium atoms in a ratio of from 9.5:0.5 to 7.5:2.5.
The ratio of 7.5:2.5 is achieved by making aluminium silicate by precipitation of water glass with sodium aluminate. It is stated that the colloidal sol particles should have a size of less than 20nm and is obtained by precipitation of water glass with sodium aluminate or by modifying the surface of a silicic acid . . .
.. , .. . .... , . ,,, .. ,.. ..... .. .. . ................ .. . -. .. --.. ~ .. . ., .; ......... --g ~ LS3 sol with aluminate ions. We believe that the resultant sol is, like the starting silicic acid sol, a relatively lo~ .Yiscosit~ id i~.~.contras~..to . the .relati~ely thixotropic and pasty consistency generated by the use of bentonite as proposed in FI 67736.
No detailed description is given as to the process conditions that should be used for adding the polymer and the sol and so presumably any of the orders of addition described in U.S. 4,388,150 are suitable. Improved retention compared to, for instance, the use of a system comprising bentonite sold under the. trade .name "Organosorb'7 in ~086/05826 is demonstrated, as are improved results at a range of pH values, but the necessity to start with ~olloidal silica and then modify it is a serious cost disadvantage.
The use of cationic polymer in the presence o~
synthetic sodium aluminium silicate has been described by Pummer in Dac Papier, 27, volume 10, 1973 pages ~17 to 422, especially 421.
20It would be desirable to be able to devise a dewatering process for the manufacture of both filled and unfilled papers that can have good burst strength and, in particular, to devise such a process that has dewatering performance (retention, drainage and~or drying) and formation properties as good as or preferably better than the Compozil system or the system of U.S. 4,388,150 whilst avoiding the need to use expensive materials such as colloidal silicic acid or large amounts of cationic . starch, and which does not suffer from the pH
30 restrictions inherent in the Compozil process.
According to the invention, paper or paper board is made by forming an a~ueous cellulosic suspension, passing the suspension through one or more shear stages selected from cleaning, mixing and pumping stages, draining the suspension to form a sheet and ~rying the sheet, and the . .
~, ..
10 ~X9~j3 suspension that is drained includes organic polymeric material and inorganic material, characterised in that the inorganic material comprises bentonite which is add~d to the suspen~ion after one of the said shear stages, and the organic polymeric material comprises a substantially llnear, synthetic, cationic polymer having molecular weight above 500,000 which is added to the suspension before that shear stage in a su~ficient excess. This is explained in more detail below but is generally an amount of at least about 0.03%, based on the dry weight of the suspension. This is usually a sufficient amount ~hen the suspension contains at least about 0.5~ cationic binder buc the amount preferably is at least about 0.06~
when the suspension is free of cationic binder or contains cationic binder in an amount of less than 0.5~.
The process of the invention can give an improved combination of drainage, retention, arying and formation properties, and it can be used to make a wide range o~
papers of good formation and strength at high rates of drainage and with good retention. ~he process can be operated to give a surprisingly good combination of high retention with good formation. Because of the good combination of drainage and drying, it is possi~le to operate the process at high rates of production and with lower vacuum and/or drving energy than is normally required for papers having good tormation. The process can be operated successfully at a wide range of pH values and with a wide variety of cellulosic stocks and pigments. Although it is essential in the invention to use more synthetic polymer than has conventionally been used as a polymeric retention aid, the amounts of additives are very much less than the amounts used in, for instance, the Compozil process and the process does not necessitate the use o~ expensive anionic components such as colloidal silica or modified colloida1 silica.
Whereas it is stated in the Compo~il literature to be essential to use anionic colloidal silica, and whereas "~ , .
9~S3 we confirm below that the replacement of colloidal silica by bentonite when using cationic starch does give inferior results, in the invention the use of bentonite gives improved results. Whereas the Compozil literature says that there is an advantage in that process over processes using long chain linear polymers, in the invention such polymers must be used and give improved results.
Conventional practice, for instance as mentioned by Auhorn, has established that retention is worse if the flocculated stock is subjected to shear before dewatering. In the invention however, we subject the flocculatcd stoc~ to shear and preferably we subject it to the very high shear that prevails in the centriscreen.
Whereas Waech and Luner did suggest adding polymer before pigment they did not suggest this high degree of shear nor the use of bentonite and their process led to an inevitable reduction in burst strength and other practice disadvantages, all of which are avoided in the inventionO
Whereas FI 67736 did mention the possibility of using bentonite, silica sol, or anionic organic polymer and did mention cationic polyacrvlamide, in the only example in which cationic polyacrylamide was added, colloidal silica was added before and after the polymer ad~ition. The amount of cationic polyacrylamide would have been too low for the purposes o~ the present invention because of, inter alia, the prior addition of colloidal silica. Also there was no suggestion that the polymer should be added to cause flocculation, the flocs should be sheared to stable microflocs, and bentonite should then be added.
Whereas W086/058~6 exemplifies a range of processes in which cationic polymer is stirred into pulp and synthetically modified silica sol is then added, that process presumably differs rrom the process of FI
67736 by the use of the special silica sol rather than colloidal silica or bentonite, whereas in the invention ~' "
~5~3~L5;3 bentonite is essential and gives better results than the special sol. W086/05826 does not suggest adding the cationic poly~er before the centriscreen and the anionic~
component after the centriscreen.
The process of the invention can be carried out on any conventional paper making apparatus~ The thin stock that is drained to form the sheet is often made by diluting a thick stock which typically has been made in a mixing chest by blending pigment, appropriate fibre, any desired strengthening agent or other a~ditives, and water. Dilution Qf the thick stock can be by means of recycled white water. The stock may be cleaned in a vortex cleaner. Usually the thin stock is cleaned by passage through a centriscreen. The thin stock is usually pumped along the apparatus by one or more centrifugal pumps known as fan pumps. For instance the stock may be pumped to the centriscreen by a first fan -~ pump. The thick stock can be diluted by white water to the thin stock at the point of entry to this fan pump or prior to the fan pump, e.g., by passing the thick stock and dilution water through a mixing pump. The thin stock may be cleaned further, by passage through a further centriscreen. The stock that leaves the final centriscreen may be passed through a second fan pump and/or a head box prior to the sheet forming process.
This may be by any conventional paper or paper board forming process, for example flat wire fourdrinier, twin wire former or vat former or any combination of these.
In the invention it is essential to add the specified synthetic polymer before the stock reaches the last point of high shear and to shear the resultant stock before adding the bentonite. It is possible to insert in the apparatus a shear mixer or other shear stage for the purpose of shearing the suspension in between adding the polymer and the bentonite but it is greatly preferred .. . .. , .. . - .. . . ...... . . .... .... .. .. .. . ... .. ... . . .. .. . ... . . . . .
13 ~ 2 ~ 9~ S3 to use a shearing device that is in the apparatus for other reasons. This device is usually one that acts centrifugally. It can ~ a ~ixing pump but is ~s~lally a fan pump or, preferably, a centriscreen. The polymer may be added just before the shear stage that precedes the bentonite addition or it may be added earlier and may be carried by the stock through one or more stages to the final shear stage, prior to the addition of the bentonite. If there are two centriscreens, then the polymer can be added after the first but before the secopd. When there is a ~an pump prior to the centriscreen, the polymer can be added between the fan pump and the centriscreen or into or ahead of the fan pump. If thick stock is being diluted in the fan pump then the polymer may be added with the dilution water or it may be added direct into the fan pump.
Best results are achieved when the polymer is added to thin stock (i.e., having a solids content of not more than 2% or, at the most, 3%~ rather than to thick stock.
Thus the polymer may be added direct to the thin stock or it may be added to the dilution water that is used to convert thick stock to thin stockO
The addition of the large amounts of synthetic polymer causes the formation of large flocs and these are immediately or subsequently broken down by the high shear (usually in the fan pump and/or centriscreen to very small flocs that can be termed stable microflocs.
The resultant stock is a suspension of these stable microflocs and bentonite is then added to it. The stock must be stirred sufficiently to distribute the bentonite throughout the stock. If the stock that has been treated with bentonite is subse~uently subjected to substantial agitation or high shear, this will tend to reduce the retention properties but improve still further the formation. For instance the stock containing ~, . .... ...
~' ~59~L53 bentonite could be passed through a centriscreen prior to drainage and the product will then have very good fprmation prope~ties but ~possibly reduce~ retention compared to the results if the bentonite was added after that cPntriscreen. Because formation in the final sheet is usually good, in the invention, if the bentonite is added just before sheet formation, and because it is generally desired to optimise retention, it is usually preferred to add the bentonite after the last point of - 10 high shear. Preferably the polymer is added just before - the final fan pu~p and/or final centriscreen and the stock is led, without applying shear, from the final centriscreen or fan pump to a headbox, the bentonite is added either to the headbox or between the centriscreen and the headbox, and the stock is then dewatered to form the sheet.
In some processes it is desirable to add some of the bentonite at one point and the remainder of the bentonite at a later point (e.g., part immediately after the centriscreen and part immediately before drainage, or part before the centriscreen or other device for applying ~ the shear and part after).
The thin s~ock is usually brought to its desired final solids concentration, by dilution with water, before the addition of the bentonite and generally before (or simultaneously with) the addition of the polymer but in some instances it is convenient to add further dilution water to the thin stock after the addition oE
the polymer or even after the addition of the bentonite.
The initial stock can be made from any conventional paper making stock such as traditional chemical pulps, for instance bleached and unbleached sulphate or sulphite pulp~ mechanical pumps such as groundwood, thermomechanical or chemi-thermomechanical pulp or ~25~L5i3 recycled pulp such as deinked waste, and any mixtures thereof.
~ The ~tock~ and the final ~aper, ca~ be substan~irally unfilled (e.g., containing less than lO~ and generally less than 5% by weight filler in the final paper~ or filler can be provided in an amount of up to 50% based on the dry weight of the stock or up to 40% based on the dry weight of paper. When filler is used any conventional filler such as calcium carbonate, clay, titanium dioxide or talc or a combination may be present. The filler (if present) is preerably incorporated i.~o the stock in conventional manner, before addition of the synthetic polymer.
The stock may include other additives such as rosin, alum, neutral sizes or optical brightening agents. It may include a strengthening agent and this can be a starch, often a cationic starch. The pH of the stock is generally in the range 4 to 9 and a particular advantage of the process is that it functions effectively at low pH
values, for ins~ance below pH 7, whereas in practice the Compo~il process requires pH values of above 7 to perform i.i well.
The amounts of fibre, filler, and other additives such as strengthening agents or alum can all be conventional. Typically the thin stock has a solids content of 0.2 to 3% or a fibre content of 0.1 to 2%.
The stock preferably has a solids content of 0.3 to 1.5 or 2~.
The organic, substantially linear, synthetic polymer must have a molecular weight above about 500,000 as we believe it functions, at least in part, by a bridging mechanism. Preferably the molecular weight is above about l million and often above about 5 million, for instance in the range lO to 30 million or more.
` ~5~53 The polymer must be cationic and preferably is made by copolymerising one or more ethylenically unsaturated .monomers, ~enerally ~crylic monomers, ~at con~ist of or include cationic monomer.
Suitable cationic monomers are dialkyl amino alkyl -(meth) acrylates or -(meth) acrylamides, either as acid salts or, preferably, quaternary ammonium salts. The alkyl groups may each contain 1 to 4 carbon atoms and the aminoalkyl group may contain 1 to 8 carbon atoms.
Particularly preferred are dialkylaminoethyl (meth) acry~ates, dialkylaminomethyl (meth) acrylamides and dialkylamino-1,3-propyl (meth) acrylamides. These cationic monomers are preferably copolymerised with a non-ionic monomer, preferably acrylamide and preferably have an intrinsic viscosity above 4 dl/g. Other suitable cationic polymers are polyethylene imines, polyamine epichlorhydrin polymers, and homopolymers or copolymers, generally with acrylamide, of monomers such as diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride. Any conventional cationic synthetic linear polymeric flocculant suitable for use as a retention aid on paper can be used.
~.1 ` The polymer can be wholly linear or it can be slightly cross linked, as described in EP 202780, provided it still has a structure that is subs antially linear in comparison with the globular structure of cationic starch.
For best results the cationic polymer should have a relatively high charge density, for instance above 0.2 preferably at least 0.35, most preferably 0.4 to 2.5 or more, equivalents of nitrogen per kilogram of polymer.
These values are higher than the values obtainable with cationic starch having a conventional relatively high degree of substitution, since typically this has a charge density of below 0.15 equivalents nitrogen per kg starch.
When the polymer is formed by polymerisation of cationic, .
17 ~9~S3 ethylenically unsaturated, monomer optionally with other monomers the amount o~ cationic monomer will normally be a~ove 2~ and usually above 5% and preferably at least about 10% molar based on the total amount of monomers used for ~orming the polymer.
The amount of synthetic linear cationic polymer use~
in conventional processes as retention aid, in the substantial absence of cationic binder, is ~depending on the particular stock being used) typically between 0.01 and 0.05~ (dry polymer based on dry weight of paper), often around 0.02~ ii.e., 0.2 k/t). Lower amounts can be used. Tn these processes no significant shear is applied to the ~u~pension after adding the polymer. If the retention and formation of the final paper is observed at increasing polymer dosage it is seen that retentio~
improves rapidly as the dosage is increased up to, typically, 0.02~ and that ~urther increase in the dosage gives little or no improvement in retention and starts to cause deterioration in formation and drying, because the overdosing of the flocculant results in the production of flocs of increased size. The optimum amount of polymeric flocculant in conventional processes is therefore at or just below the level that gives optimum retention and this amount can easily be determined by routine experimentation by the skilled mill operator.
In the invention we use an excess amount Oc cationic synthetic polymer, generally l.l to lO times, usually 3 to 6 times, the amount that would have been regarded as optimum in conventional processes Inamelv the above quoted tvpical figure of 0.01 to 0.05~). Thus the amount is generally above O.Ol~ and generally it is above 0.03%
(0.3 k/t). Adequate results can usually be achieved with dosages as low as this if the stock to which the polvmer is added already contains a substantial amount, e.g., 0.5~, cationic binder. However if the stock is free of cationic binder or onlv contains a small amount then the ,,~', dosage of polymer will normally have to be more, usually at least 0.06~ (0.6 k/t~. This is a convenient minimum .. .. .. .. even.. fo~...stocks...that .do, co~ain ,a. lar~e, ~mo~n~ f, cationic binder. Often the amount is at least 0.08~.
The amount will usually be below 0.5% and generally below 0.2~ with amounts of below 0.15% usually being preferred.
Best results are generally obtained with 0.06 to 0.12 or 0.15%.
If cationic binder is present, it will be present primarily to serve as a strengthening aid and its amount will usually be below 1%, preferably below 0.5~. .T,he binder may be starch, urea formaldehyde resin or other cationic strengthening aid.
The use of the excess amount of synthetic polymeric flocculant is thought to be necessary to ensure that the shearing that occurs in the centriscreen or other shear stage results in the formation of microflocs which contain or carry sufficient cationic polymer to render parts at least of their surfaces sufficiently cationically charged. Surprisingly it is not essential - to add sufficient cationic polymer to render the whole suspension cationic. Thus the Zeta potential of the stock can, prior to addition of the bentonite, be cationic or anionic, including for instance -25mv. It would normally be expected that the addition of anionic bentonite to a suspension having a significant negative - Zeta potential (e.g., below -10 mv~ would not give - satisfactory results and U.S. 4,388,150 suggests that best results are achieved when the Zeta potential following the addition of the starch and the anionic silica approaches zero. The article by Luner also proposed neutralisation of the charges in the suspension by the polymer.
Whether or not a sufficient excess of cationic polymer has been added ~and presumably whether or not the resultant microflocs do have a sufficient cationic charge) can easily be determired experimentally by ~,~
~L25~:~5~
plotting the performance properties in the process, with a ~ixed amount of bentonite and a ~ixed degree o~ shear, at various levels of polymeric addition. When the amount of polymer is insufficient (e.g., being the amount that gives optimum properties when added without bentonite, after the last shear stage as in the normal prior art~
the retention and other properties are relatively poor ! and may be worse than those optimum properties. As the ' amount of polymer is gradually increased, in the invention, a significant increase in retention and other performan~e properties is observed, and this corresponds with the excess that is desired in the invention. Further increase in the amount of flocculant, far beyond the level at which the significant improvement in performance lS occurs, is unnecessary and, for cost reasons, undesir-able. Naturally this test with the bentonite must be conducted after subjectin~ the flocculated suspension to very high shear so as to break it down to microflocs. As a result o~ having sufficient flocculant these flocs are sufficiently stable to resist further degradation during the shearing in the centriscreen or other shear stage.
It is essential in the invention to use a cationic polymer as the first component, rather than a non-ionic or anlonic polvmer and, as the second component, it is essential to use bentonite rather than any other anionic particulate materialO Thus colloidal silica or modlfied colloidal silica gives inferior results and the use of other very small anlonic particles or the use of anionic soluhle polymers also gives very inferior results.
The amount of bentonite that has to be added lS
generally in the range 0.03 to 0.5~, preferably 0.05 to 0.3% and most preferahly 0.08 or 0.1 to 0.2%.
The bentonite can be any o F the materials commerciallv referred to as bentonltes or as bentonite-type clays, i.e., anionic swelling clays such as sepialite, attapulgite or, preferablv, montmorillinite. The montmorillinites are pre~erred.
,~
~f~f~lS3 Bentonites broadly as described in U.S. 4,305,781 are suitable.
Suitable mont~orillonite clays . include WyOmlp5f ....
bentonite or Fullers Earth. The clays may or may not be chemically modified, e.g., by alkali treatment to convert calcium bentonite to alkali metal bentonite.
The swelling clays are usually metal silicates wherein the metal comprises a metal selected from aluminium and magnesium, and optionally other metals, and the ratio silicon atoms:metal atoms in the surface of the clay partiçles, and generally ~hrousfhout their s~ucture, is from 5:1 to 1:1. For most montmorillonites the ratio is relatively low, with most or all of the metal being aluminium but with some magnesium and sometimes with, for instance a little iron. In other swelling clays however, some or all of the aluminium is replaced by magnesium and the ratio may be very low, for instance about 1.5 in sepialite. The use of silicates in which some of the aluminium has been replaced by iron seems to be particularly desirable.
The dry particle size of the bentonite is preferably at least 90% below 100 microns, and most preferably at least 60% below 50 microns (dry size). The surface area of the bentonite before swelling is preferably at least 25 30 and generally at least 50, typically 60 to 90, m2/gm and the surface area after swelling is preferably 400-800 m2/g. The bentonite preferably swells by at least 15 or 20 times. The particle size after swelling is preferably at least 90% below 2 microns.
The bentonite is generally added to the aqueous suspension as a hydrated suspension in water, typically at a concentration between 1% and 10% by weight. The hydrated suspension is usually made by dispersing powdered bentonite in water.
'~.,:
., ~915;~
;,~
The choice of the cellulosic suspension and its components and the paper making conditions may all be -...... ~.vaxied.. in~,c.onve~tional man~ r.to.,.obtai~,paper.. ranging from unfilled papers such as tissue, newsprint, groundwood specialities, supercalendered magazine, highly filled high quality writing papers, fluting m~dium, liner board, light weight board to heavy weight multiply boards or sack kxaft paper.
The paper may be sized by conventional rosin/alum size at pH values ranging between 4 and 6 or by the ; ... ~ .inc.o~poxati~n.. of a reactiYe ~.ize su,ch as,.~e.tene,~,dimer or alkenyl succinic anhydride where the pH conditions are typically between 6 and 9.
The reactive size when used can be supplied as an aqueous emulsion or can be emulsified in situ at the mill with suitable emulsifiers and stabili~ers such as cationic starch.
Preferably the reactive size is supplied in combination with a polyelectrolyte in known manner. The size and the polyelectrolyte can be supplied to the user in the form of an anhydrous dispersion of the polyelectrolyte in a non-aqueous liquid comprising the size, as desçribed in EP 141641 and 200504. Preferably the polyelectrolyte for application with the size is also suitable as the synthetic polymeric retention aid in the invention in which event the size and all the synthetic polymer can be provided in a single anhydrous composition of the polymer dispersed in the anhydrous liquid phase comprising the size.
Suitable methods of making the anhydrous compositions, and suitable sizes, are described in those European specifications . The anhydrous dispersions may be made by formation of an emulsion of aqueous polymer in oil followed by dehydration by azeotroping in conventional manner and then dissolution of the size in 33Lrj3 the oil phase, with optional removal of the oil phase if appropriate. The emulsion can be made by emulsification of,an a,queous solutio~ of the polymer,into the oil phase but is preferably made by reverse phase polymerisation.
The oil phase will gener~lly need to include a stabiliser, preferably an amphipathic oil stabiliser in order to stabilise the composition.
In the following examples the following polymers are used:-A: a copolymer formed of 70% by weight acrylamide and ,,, 30,~,dimethyl am,,inoethyl,,acry~ate "q~aternised with m,~thy~chloride and having intrinsic viscosity (IV) 7 to lOo B: a copolymer of 9O weight ~ acrylamide and lO weight %
dimethyl aminoethyl methacrylate having IV 7 to lO.
C: polyethyleneimine (Polymin SK B.A.S~F~) D: polydiallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride 7 a medium molecular weight copolymer of diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride, acrylamide 70:30 IV of 1.5 F: a quaternised dimethylaminomethyl acrylamide copolymer with 50% acrylamide and having IV l.O
G: a copolymer of 70~ by weight acrylamide and 30 ' sodium acrylate, IV 12 S: high molecular weight potato starch with high degree of cationic substitution CSA: colloidal silicic acid AMCSA: aluminium modified silicic acid The bentonite in each example was a sodium carbonate activated calcium montmorillonite. Examples 1 to 3 are examples of actual paper processes. The other examples are laboratory tests that we have found to give a reliable indication of the results that will be obtained when the same materials are used on a mill with the polymer being added before the centriscreen (or the final centriscreen if there is more than one) and with the bentonite beiny added after the last point of high shear.
~25~
Example 1 Three retention aid systems were compared on an experimental machine designed to slmulate full ~cale modern papermaking machine conditions. In this, thick sized stock was mixed with white water from a wire pit and was passed through a mixing pump. The resultant thin stock was passed through a dearator and was then fed by a fan pump to a flow box, fr~m which it was flowed on to the wire to form a sheet, the drained water being collected in the wire pit and recycled.
~ - System (I) inyolved the addition of 0.~03~PoLyme~ A
added just after the fan pump, i.e., after last point of high shear.
System (II) involved the addition of 1.5~ cationic starch just before mixing the stock with the white water, and 0.2% colloidal silica ~the optimised Compozil System) just after the fan pump.
System (III) involved the addition of 0.15~ Polymer A to the white water just before mixing with the stock, followed by 0.2~ bentonite just after the fan pump, as a hydrated slurry.
The performance of these systems was evaluated on stock consisting of 50% bleached birch and 50% bleached pine, with 20% CaC03, at 0.7% consistency and pH 8.0 sized with an alkylketene dimer.
The first pass retention values and the web dryness after the wet presses on machine were recorded in Table 1.
.
9~53 Table 1 .. -. .- . .System . ~- -Retention % - Dryness ~ - . . ~ -I 35 42.75 II 74 44.6 III 92 45.75 This clearly demonstrates the significant advantage of the invention (system III) compared to the two prior processes (systems I and Il) both as regards retention and dryness. Although the increase in dryness is numerically relatively small, commercially this difference is very significant and allows either an increase in machine speed and or decreased steam demand in the drying section.
Example 2 The process of Example 1 was repeated using a stock and retention aid systems II and III as described in Example 1 but under acid sizing conditions using rosin alum and filled with china clay instead of CaC03. The pH of the stock was 5Ø Addition points were as described in Example 1.
Table 2 25 System Retention ~ Dryness II 84.0 45.75 III 88.0 46.60 This clearly demonstrates the significant advantage of System III over the prior process (System II), both with regard to retention and weh dryness after the presses.
: Example 3 A full scale machine trial was carried out on a fourdrinier machine producing 19 t/hour of unbleached :
~5~53 sac~ kraft. In this process, thick stock was diluted with white water fro~ a silo and the stock passed throuah a mixing p~np a~d dear~tor to a second dilution pvint at which further white water was added to make the final thin stock. This stock was fed to four centriscreens in parallel, all discharging into a loop that lead to the headbox that supplied the screen. The thin stock contained O.lS~ cationic starch as a strengthening aid and l~ cationic urea formaldehyde wet strength resin.
Machine speed was 620 m/min.
Polymer A dosage was 0.~3% added to the white water at the second dilution point. The bentonite dosage was 0.2% added to the thin stock either just before ~he centriscreens or in the loop after the centriscreens.
The resu]ts are in Table 3.
Table 3 .
Additive % Retention Nil 8~.2 A + Bentonite before centriscreens 86.8 A + Bentonite after centriscreens 92.7 _ Under equilibrium running conditions using the retention aid system where the bentonite was added after the centriscreens,the couch vacuum was reduced by 30% and the drying steam demand by lO~ compared to the system when the bentonite was added before the centriscreens.
The mill reported no change in formation during the trial.
These results clearly demonstrated the benefit of adding the bentonite ater shear Example 4 Britt jar tests were carried out on a neutral sized stock consisting of birch (15~), spruce (30~), and 55%
,. . .
~5~3~53 broke with 25% added calcium carbonate filler (the percentages for the initial solids in the stock in this . and other.examples are by weigh~. o fi~re). The stock had pH 8.0 and contained a conventional ketene dimer sizing ayent and 0.5 cationic starch S as a strengthening aid.
The shear condition of the Britt jar was adjusted to give a first pass retention in the region of 55-60% in the absence of the additive. Cationic polyacrylamide A
~if used) was added to 500ml of thin stock (0.6%
;. .. .. .consistepcy) in.a measurin~...cylinder. The cylLnde~.was inverted four times to achieve mixing and the flocculated stock was transferred to the Britt jar tester. The flocs at this stage were very large and were clearly unsuitable for production of paper having good formation or drying properties. The stock was sheared for one minute and then bentonite ~if used) was added.
Retention performance was observed.
Laboratory drainage evaluations were also carried out on the same stock using â standard Schopper Reigler freeness tester. The machine orifice was plugged and time was measured for 500ml of white water to drain from 1 litre of the same stock treated as above. The results are shown in ~able 4 below.
Table 4 Test Polymer % Bentonite % % Retention Drainage (secs) 1 OA O S6.9 56
... .
Allied Colloids T.imited 60/2553/02 Production of Paper and Paper Board This i~vention.r~lat~s to ~he production ~f paper and paper board from a thin stock (a dilute aqueous suspension) of cellulose fibres and optionally filler on paper making apparatus in which the thin stock is pass~d through one or more shear stages such as cleaning, mixing and pumping stages and the resultant suspension is drained through a wire to form a sheet, which is then dried. The thin stock is generally made by dilution of a thick stock that is formed earlier in the process.
The drainage to form the sheet may be downwards under gravity or may be upwards, and the screen through which drainage occurs may be flat or curved, e.g., cylindrical.
The stock is inevitably subjected to agitation throughout its flow along the apparatus. Some of the agitation is gentle but some is strong as a result of passage through one or more of the shear stages. In particular, passage of the stock through a centriscreen inevitably subjects the stock to very high shear. The centriscreen is the name given to various centrifugal cleaner devices that are used on paper machines to remove coarse solid impurities, such as large fibre bundles, from the stock prior to sheet formation. It i5 sometimes known as the selectifier. Other stages that apply shear include centrifugal pumping and mixing apparatus such as conventional mixing pumps and fan pumps (i.e., centrifugal pumps).
It is common to include various inorganic materials, such as bentonite and alum, and/or organic materials, such as various natural or modified natural or synthetic polymers, in the thin stock for the purpose of improvinq the process. Such materials can be added for diverse purposes such as pitch control, decolouration of the drainage water (JP 598291) or for facilitating release t~
~s~
from drying rolls (JP 7559505). Starch is often included to improve strength.
P~ocess -imp~Qvemen~ is particularly d~siEed in retention, drainage and drying ~or dewatering) and in the formation (or structure) properties of the final paper sheet. Some of these parameters are in conflict with each other. For instance if the fibres are flocculated effectively into conventional, relatively large, flocs then this may trap the fibre fines and filler very successfully, so as to give good retention, and may result in a porous structure so as to give good drainage.
However the porosity and large floc size may result in rather poor formation, and the large fibre flocs may tend to hold water during the later stages of drying such that the drying properties are poor. This will necessitate the use of excessive amounts of thermal energy to dry the final sheet. If the fibres are flocculated into smaller and tighter flocs then drainage will be less satisfactory and retention usually will be less satisfactory, but drying and formation will be improved.
Conventional practice therefore has resulted in the paper maker selecting his additives according to the parameters that he judges to be the most important. If, for example, increased filler retention is more important to the papermaker than increased production he is more likely to use a polyacrylamide or other very high molecular weight flocculant. If increased production is more important than increased retention then a coagulant such as aluminium sulphate is more likely to be chosen.
Impurities in the stock create additional problems and necessitate the use of particular adclitives.
It is known to include in the stock both an inorganic additive and an organic polymeric material, for the purpose of improving retention, drainage, drying and/or formation.
~l25~15~
In DE 2262906~1 to 10% ber.tonite and/or 0.5 to 3~
aluminium sulphate is added to the stock, followed by 0.02 ~o Q~2~ o a ca io~i~ polyme~ ~uch a$ ~lyethyle~e imine, so as to improve dewatering even in the presence of impurities in the stock. (In this specification all percentages are dry weight based on the dry ~eight of the stock, unless otherwise stated.3 In U.S. 2,368,635j bentonite is added to the stock and may be followed by aluminium sulphate or other acidifying substance. In U.S. 3,433,70~, attapulgite is added and alum and/or auxiliary filler retention material can be incorporated. In Gs 1,265,496, a stock containing alum and pigmentary clay is formed and cationic polymer is added.
In U.S. 3,0S2,595Jmineral filler, polyacrylamide and 1 to 20% bentonite, by weight based on the weight of filler, are incorporated in the stock. It is stated that the polymer could be added to the stock either before or after the addition of fillers but the preferred process involves adding the bentonite to a stock containing the remainder of the fillers and the fibres, and then adding the polymer. In each instance the polymer used in this process is substantially non-ionic polyacrylamide. In EP 173~ unfilled paper is made from crude pulp by adding bentonite to the stock followed by substantially non-ionic polyacrylamide.
FI 67735 describes a process in which a cationic polymer and an anionic component are included in the stock to improve retention and the resultant sheet is sized. It is stated that the cationic and anionic - components can be pre-mixed but preferably the anionic component is first added to the stock followed by the cationic, or they are added separately at the same place.
The stock is agitated during the addition. ~t is stated that the amount of cationic is 0.01 to 2%,preferably 0.2 - - ~. .. .. .
to O.9~ and the amount of anionic is O.Ol to 0.6~
preferahly O.l to 0.5%. The cationic retention aid is said to be selected from cationic starch and cationic polyacrylamide or certain other synthetic polymers while the anionic component is said to be polysilicic acid, bentonite, carboxymethyl cellulose or anionic synthetic polymer. In the examples the anionic component is colloidal silicic acid in an amount of 0.15% and the cationic component is cationic starch in an amount of 0.3 or 0.35~ and is added after the colloidal siliclc acid.
FI 67736 describes a process in which the same chemical types of materials are used as in FI 67735 but the size is added to the stock. It is again stated to ~e preferred to add the anionic component before the ca~ionic component or to add both components at the same place (while maintaining the stock adequately agitated).
However it is also stated that when synthetic polymer alone is used as the retention aid (i.e., presumably meaning a combination of synthetic cationic polymer and synthetlc anionic polymer), it is advantageous to add the cationic be~ore the anionic. Most of the examples are laboratory examples and show adding 0~15~ colloidal silica sol to relatively thick stock, followed by 1 to ~%
cationic starch ~ollowed by a further 0.15% colloidal silica sol. Tn one example the 1-2~ cationic starch is replaced by 0.0~5% cationic polyacr~lamide and is added after part of the colloidal silica. Tn the only example of an actual production process, the cationlc starch, filler and some anionic silica sol are all mixed into thick stock at the same place and the remainder of the silica sol is added later, but the precise points of addi-tion, and the intervening process steps, are not stated.
Arlecter in Papier, Volume ~9, number l~a, October 19~, pages 3 to 43, especially page 36, examined possible synergistic combinations of additives for i:
~59153 cellulosic suspensions. He showed that when using a combination of 0.005~ polyethylene oxide of very high ~olecul~r wçight a~ ~.12~ ~lamine ~maldehyde resinr retention was improved only slightly if they were both added at the chest (early in the process), retention was improved if the melamine formaldehyde was added at the head box (near the end of the process) whilst the other polymer was still add~d at the chest, but best results were achieved when both polymers were added at the head box. Thus best results were obtained when no shear was applied after flocculation.
Auhorn in Wochenblatt Fur Papierfabrikation, Volume 13, 1979, pages 493 to 502, especially page 500, showed the use of bentonite in combination with 0.3~ cationic polyelectrolyte. It appears that the bentonite absorbed impurities from the suspension prior to the addition of the polyelectrolyte. Chalk was said to behave in a similar manner. In a paper presented by ~uhorn to the Wet End Paper Technology Symposium, Munich, 17th to l9th March 1981 he showed that applying shear to the aqueous suspension after the addition of polymeric retention aid gave a serious decrease in retention properties. He also examined the effect of adding bentonite to the suspension and then adding 0.04~ cationic polymer before or after the selectifier (a form of centriscreen). He demonstrated that greatly improved retention was obtained when the polymer was added after the selectifier (i.e., after the shearing) than before.
Tanaka in Tappi, April 1982, Volume 65, No.4, pages 95 to 99, especially page 98, indicated that when making paper filled with clay there was slightly better retention o~ clay when the clay was added after the polymer than before but warned that the system is highly shear sensitive.
.. ... . . . ... . . . . .. . . ..
I~
, ' ~9~53 ~ aech in Tappi Journal, March 1983, pages 137 to 139 showed that when making paper filled with kaolin clay usi~ a synt~e ic cationic pol~mexic ~et~ntion aid, retention is significantly improved if all the kaolin is added after the retention aid instead of before. Waech also showed that retention is improved less if the retention aid is added before the fan pump.
Luner in Tappi Proceedings, 1984 Paper Makers Conference, pages 95 to 106, confirmed these results and suggested that they were due to the pulp being positively charged by the cationic polymer before the addition of anionic clay, and clearly demonstrated that although the process gave improved retention,it gave markedly reduced burst strength, compared to a process in which the clay is added before the retention aid.
The late addition of all the clay filler incurs other disadvantages.It would be very difficult in practice to operate this in a controlled manner because of the variable filler content of the recycled pulp that is used in many mills to supply part at least of the initial fibre pulp. It would be difficult or impossible to adapt paper mills to allow for the uniform addition of large amounts of filler at a late stage.
Finally, these processes are of course inappropriate when no significant amount of filler is to be incorporated into the suspension, e.g./ for unfilled papers.
In practice therefore,whenever a synthetic polymeric retention aid is included in the stock it is always added after th~ last point of high shear so as to avoid the dramatic loss of retention that is accepted as inevitable if the flocculated system is sheared and that is shown, as mentioned above, by Auhorn. In particular, the synthetic polymeric retention aid is always added after the centriscreen.
.. . ... . .. ... ..... ,, . . , .. . .. . . .. . .. .. , .. ... , . .. .. ~ . . .. ... , ,,; ,. .. . .. .. . . . . .. . .. . .
~,, S~i3 In many of these processes a starch, often a cationic starch, is also included in the suspension in . . ,.. , ord.er..~o improve. the,burs.t.stre.ngth..,....,~ereas.,..cationic .. .
synthetic polymeric retention aids are substan~ially linear molecules of relatively high charge density, cationic starch is a globular molecule having relatively low charge density.
A process that is apparently intended to obtain both good strength properties and sa~isfactory retention properties is described in U.S. 4,388,150 and uses . colloidal silicic acid and cationic starch.... I~ ,is said, that the components may be pre-mixed and then added to the stock but that preferably the mixing is conducted in the presence of the stock. It is said that the best results are obtained if the colloidal silicic acid is mixed into the stock and the cationic st~rch is then added. It appears that a binder complex is formed between the colloidal silicic acid and the cationic starch and it is said that results improve as the Zeta potential in the initial anionic stock moves towards zero. This suggests that the binder complex is intended to have some coagulation effect upon the stock.
A process has been commercialised by the assignees of U.S. 4,388,150 undex the trade name Compozil. The trade literature on this states that the system is an advantage over "two component systems containing long-chain linear polymers" and further states that the anionic colloidal silica is "the unique part of the system", is "not a silica pigment", and "acts to agglomerate the fines, filler and fibre already treated with the cationic starch". The system is also described in Paper, 9th Septem~er 1985 pages 18 to 20 and again it is stated that the anionic silica acid is a colloidal solution that gives the system its unique properties.
. . .
12~ 5~
Although the system can, in some processes, give a good combination of strength and process performance it suffers ,frQm,a ~umbe,r of d,isadv,antages. The ,~c~lloidal silica, that is essential, is very expensive. The cationic starch has to be used in very large quantities.
For instance the examples in U.S0 4,388,150 show that the amount of cationic starch and colloidal silica that are added to the stock can be as high as 15% combined dry solids based on the weight of clay (clay is usually present in an amount of about 20% by weight of the total solids in the stock). Further, the system is only successful at a very narrow range of pH values, and so cannot be used in many paper making processes.
W086/05826 was published after the priority date of the present application and recognises the existence of some of these problems, and in particular modified the silica sol in an attempt to make the system satisfactory at a wider range of pH values. Whereas FI 67736 describes, inter alia, the use of bentonite or colloidal silica in combination with, e.g., cationic polyacrylamide and exemplified adding the cationic polyacrylamide with agitation followed by addition of some of the colloidal silica sol, in W086/05826 the colloidal silica sol is modified. In particular,cationic polyacrylamide is used in combination with a sol of colloidal particles having at least one surface layer of aluminium silicate or aluminium-modified silicic acid such that the surface groups of the particles contain silicon atoms and aluminium atoms in a ratio of from 9.5:0.5 to 7.5:2.5.
The ratio of 7.5:2.5 is achieved by making aluminium silicate by precipitation of water glass with sodium aluminate. It is stated that the colloidal sol particles should have a size of less than 20nm and is obtained by precipitation of water glass with sodium aluminate or by modifying the surface of a silicic acid . . .
.. , .. . .... , . ,,, .. ,.. ..... .. .. . ................ .. . -. .. --.. ~ .. . ., .; ......... --g ~ LS3 sol with aluminate ions. We believe that the resultant sol is, like the starting silicic acid sol, a relatively lo~ .Yiscosit~ id i~.~.contras~..to . the .relati~ely thixotropic and pasty consistency generated by the use of bentonite as proposed in FI 67736.
No detailed description is given as to the process conditions that should be used for adding the polymer and the sol and so presumably any of the orders of addition described in U.S. 4,388,150 are suitable. Improved retention compared to, for instance, the use of a system comprising bentonite sold under the. trade .name "Organosorb'7 in ~086/05826 is demonstrated, as are improved results at a range of pH values, but the necessity to start with ~olloidal silica and then modify it is a serious cost disadvantage.
The use of cationic polymer in the presence o~
synthetic sodium aluminium silicate has been described by Pummer in Dac Papier, 27, volume 10, 1973 pages ~17 to 422, especially 421.
20It would be desirable to be able to devise a dewatering process for the manufacture of both filled and unfilled papers that can have good burst strength and, in particular, to devise such a process that has dewatering performance (retention, drainage and~or drying) and formation properties as good as or preferably better than the Compozil system or the system of U.S. 4,388,150 whilst avoiding the need to use expensive materials such as colloidal silicic acid or large amounts of cationic . starch, and which does not suffer from the pH
30 restrictions inherent in the Compozil process.
According to the invention, paper or paper board is made by forming an a~ueous cellulosic suspension, passing the suspension through one or more shear stages selected from cleaning, mixing and pumping stages, draining the suspension to form a sheet and ~rying the sheet, and the . .
~, ..
10 ~X9~j3 suspension that is drained includes organic polymeric material and inorganic material, characterised in that the inorganic material comprises bentonite which is add~d to the suspen~ion after one of the said shear stages, and the organic polymeric material comprises a substantially llnear, synthetic, cationic polymer having molecular weight above 500,000 which is added to the suspension before that shear stage in a su~ficient excess. This is explained in more detail below but is generally an amount of at least about 0.03%, based on the dry weight of the suspension. This is usually a sufficient amount ~hen the suspension contains at least about 0.5~ cationic binder buc the amount preferably is at least about 0.06~
when the suspension is free of cationic binder or contains cationic binder in an amount of less than 0.5~.
The process of the invention can give an improved combination of drainage, retention, arying and formation properties, and it can be used to make a wide range o~
papers of good formation and strength at high rates of drainage and with good retention. ~he process can be operated to give a surprisingly good combination of high retention with good formation. Because of the good combination of drainage and drying, it is possi~le to operate the process at high rates of production and with lower vacuum and/or drving energy than is normally required for papers having good tormation. The process can be operated successfully at a wide range of pH values and with a wide variety of cellulosic stocks and pigments. Although it is essential in the invention to use more synthetic polymer than has conventionally been used as a polymeric retention aid, the amounts of additives are very much less than the amounts used in, for instance, the Compozil process and the process does not necessitate the use o~ expensive anionic components such as colloidal silica or modified colloida1 silica.
Whereas it is stated in the Compo~il literature to be essential to use anionic colloidal silica, and whereas "~ , .
9~S3 we confirm below that the replacement of colloidal silica by bentonite when using cationic starch does give inferior results, in the invention the use of bentonite gives improved results. Whereas the Compozil literature says that there is an advantage in that process over processes using long chain linear polymers, in the invention such polymers must be used and give improved results.
Conventional practice, for instance as mentioned by Auhorn, has established that retention is worse if the flocculated stock is subjected to shear before dewatering. In the invention however, we subject the flocculatcd stoc~ to shear and preferably we subject it to the very high shear that prevails in the centriscreen.
Whereas Waech and Luner did suggest adding polymer before pigment they did not suggest this high degree of shear nor the use of bentonite and their process led to an inevitable reduction in burst strength and other practice disadvantages, all of which are avoided in the inventionO
Whereas FI 67736 did mention the possibility of using bentonite, silica sol, or anionic organic polymer and did mention cationic polyacrvlamide, in the only example in which cationic polyacrylamide was added, colloidal silica was added before and after the polymer ad~ition. The amount of cationic polyacrylamide would have been too low for the purposes o~ the present invention because of, inter alia, the prior addition of colloidal silica. Also there was no suggestion that the polymer should be added to cause flocculation, the flocs should be sheared to stable microflocs, and bentonite should then be added.
Whereas W086/058~6 exemplifies a range of processes in which cationic polymer is stirred into pulp and synthetically modified silica sol is then added, that process presumably differs rrom the process of FI
67736 by the use of the special silica sol rather than colloidal silica or bentonite, whereas in the invention ~' "
~5~3~L5;3 bentonite is essential and gives better results than the special sol. W086/05826 does not suggest adding the cationic poly~er before the centriscreen and the anionic~
component after the centriscreen.
The process of the invention can be carried out on any conventional paper making apparatus~ The thin stock that is drained to form the sheet is often made by diluting a thick stock which typically has been made in a mixing chest by blending pigment, appropriate fibre, any desired strengthening agent or other a~ditives, and water. Dilution Qf the thick stock can be by means of recycled white water. The stock may be cleaned in a vortex cleaner. Usually the thin stock is cleaned by passage through a centriscreen. The thin stock is usually pumped along the apparatus by one or more centrifugal pumps known as fan pumps. For instance the stock may be pumped to the centriscreen by a first fan -~ pump. The thick stock can be diluted by white water to the thin stock at the point of entry to this fan pump or prior to the fan pump, e.g., by passing the thick stock and dilution water through a mixing pump. The thin stock may be cleaned further, by passage through a further centriscreen. The stock that leaves the final centriscreen may be passed through a second fan pump and/or a head box prior to the sheet forming process.
This may be by any conventional paper or paper board forming process, for example flat wire fourdrinier, twin wire former or vat former or any combination of these.
In the invention it is essential to add the specified synthetic polymer before the stock reaches the last point of high shear and to shear the resultant stock before adding the bentonite. It is possible to insert in the apparatus a shear mixer or other shear stage for the purpose of shearing the suspension in between adding the polymer and the bentonite but it is greatly preferred .. . .. , .. . - .. . . ...... . . .... .... .. .. .. . ... .. ... . . .. .. . ... . . . . .
13 ~ 2 ~ 9~ S3 to use a shearing device that is in the apparatus for other reasons. This device is usually one that acts centrifugally. It can ~ a ~ixing pump but is ~s~lally a fan pump or, preferably, a centriscreen. The polymer may be added just before the shear stage that precedes the bentonite addition or it may be added earlier and may be carried by the stock through one or more stages to the final shear stage, prior to the addition of the bentonite. If there are two centriscreens, then the polymer can be added after the first but before the secopd. When there is a ~an pump prior to the centriscreen, the polymer can be added between the fan pump and the centriscreen or into or ahead of the fan pump. If thick stock is being diluted in the fan pump then the polymer may be added with the dilution water or it may be added direct into the fan pump.
Best results are achieved when the polymer is added to thin stock (i.e., having a solids content of not more than 2% or, at the most, 3%~ rather than to thick stock.
Thus the polymer may be added direct to the thin stock or it may be added to the dilution water that is used to convert thick stock to thin stockO
The addition of the large amounts of synthetic polymer causes the formation of large flocs and these are immediately or subsequently broken down by the high shear (usually in the fan pump and/or centriscreen to very small flocs that can be termed stable microflocs.
The resultant stock is a suspension of these stable microflocs and bentonite is then added to it. The stock must be stirred sufficiently to distribute the bentonite throughout the stock. If the stock that has been treated with bentonite is subse~uently subjected to substantial agitation or high shear, this will tend to reduce the retention properties but improve still further the formation. For instance the stock containing ~, . .... ...
~' ~59~L53 bentonite could be passed through a centriscreen prior to drainage and the product will then have very good fprmation prope~ties but ~possibly reduce~ retention compared to the results if the bentonite was added after that cPntriscreen. Because formation in the final sheet is usually good, in the invention, if the bentonite is added just before sheet formation, and because it is generally desired to optimise retention, it is usually preferred to add the bentonite after the last point of - 10 high shear. Preferably the polymer is added just before - the final fan pu~p and/or final centriscreen and the stock is led, without applying shear, from the final centriscreen or fan pump to a headbox, the bentonite is added either to the headbox or between the centriscreen and the headbox, and the stock is then dewatered to form the sheet.
In some processes it is desirable to add some of the bentonite at one point and the remainder of the bentonite at a later point (e.g., part immediately after the centriscreen and part immediately before drainage, or part before the centriscreen or other device for applying ~ the shear and part after).
The thin s~ock is usually brought to its desired final solids concentration, by dilution with water, before the addition of the bentonite and generally before (or simultaneously with) the addition of the polymer but in some instances it is convenient to add further dilution water to the thin stock after the addition oE
the polymer or even after the addition of the bentonite.
The initial stock can be made from any conventional paper making stock such as traditional chemical pulps, for instance bleached and unbleached sulphate or sulphite pulp~ mechanical pumps such as groundwood, thermomechanical or chemi-thermomechanical pulp or ~25~L5i3 recycled pulp such as deinked waste, and any mixtures thereof.
~ The ~tock~ and the final ~aper, ca~ be substan~irally unfilled (e.g., containing less than lO~ and generally less than 5% by weight filler in the final paper~ or filler can be provided in an amount of up to 50% based on the dry weight of the stock or up to 40% based on the dry weight of paper. When filler is used any conventional filler such as calcium carbonate, clay, titanium dioxide or talc or a combination may be present. The filler (if present) is preerably incorporated i.~o the stock in conventional manner, before addition of the synthetic polymer.
The stock may include other additives such as rosin, alum, neutral sizes or optical brightening agents. It may include a strengthening agent and this can be a starch, often a cationic starch. The pH of the stock is generally in the range 4 to 9 and a particular advantage of the process is that it functions effectively at low pH
values, for ins~ance below pH 7, whereas in practice the Compo~il process requires pH values of above 7 to perform i.i well.
The amounts of fibre, filler, and other additives such as strengthening agents or alum can all be conventional. Typically the thin stock has a solids content of 0.2 to 3% or a fibre content of 0.1 to 2%.
The stock preferably has a solids content of 0.3 to 1.5 or 2~.
The organic, substantially linear, synthetic polymer must have a molecular weight above about 500,000 as we believe it functions, at least in part, by a bridging mechanism. Preferably the molecular weight is above about l million and often above about 5 million, for instance in the range lO to 30 million or more.
` ~5~53 The polymer must be cationic and preferably is made by copolymerising one or more ethylenically unsaturated .monomers, ~enerally ~crylic monomers, ~at con~ist of or include cationic monomer.
Suitable cationic monomers are dialkyl amino alkyl -(meth) acrylates or -(meth) acrylamides, either as acid salts or, preferably, quaternary ammonium salts. The alkyl groups may each contain 1 to 4 carbon atoms and the aminoalkyl group may contain 1 to 8 carbon atoms.
Particularly preferred are dialkylaminoethyl (meth) acry~ates, dialkylaminomethyl (meth) acrylamides and dialkylamino-1,3-propyl (meth) acrylamides. These cationic monomers are preferably copolymerised with a non-ionic monomer, preferably acrylamide and preferably have an intrinsic viscosity above 4 dl/g. Other suitable cationic polymers are polyethylene imines, polyamine epichlorhydrin polymers, and homopolymers or copolymers, generally with acrylamide, of monomers such as diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride. Any conventional cationic synthetic linear polymeric flocculant suitable for use as a retention aid on paper can be used.
~.1 ` The polymer can be wholly linear or it can be slightly cross linked, as described in EP 202780, provided it still has a structure that is subs antially linear in comparison with the globular structure of cationic starch.
For best results the cationic polymer should have a relatively high charge density, for instance above 0.2 preferably at least 0.35, most preferably 0.4 to 2.5 or more, equivalents of nitrogen per kilogram of polymer.
These values are higher than the values obtainable with cationic starch having a conventional relatively high degree of substitution, since typically this has a charge density of below 0.15 equivalents nitrogen per kg starch.
When the polymer is formed by polymerisation of cationic, .
17 ~9~S3 ethylenically unsaturated, monomer optionally with other monomers the amount o~ cationic monomer will normally be a~ove 2~ and usually above 5% and preferably at least about 10% molar based on the total amount of monomers used for ~orming the polymer.
The amount of synthetic linear cationic polymer use~
in conventional processes as retention aid, in the substantial absence of cationic binder, is ~depending on the particular stock being used) typically between 0.01 and 0.05~ (dry polymer based on dry weight of paper), often around 0.02~ ii.e., 0.2 k/t). Lower amounts can be used. Tn these processes no significant shear is applied to the ~u~pension after adding the polymer. If the retention and formation of the final paper is observed at increasing polymer dosage it is seen that retentio~
improves rapidly as the dosage is increased up to, typically, 0.02~ and that ~urther increase in the dosage gives little or no improvement in retention and starts to cause deterioration in formation and drying, because the overdosing of the flocculant results in the production of flocs of increased size. The optimum amount of polymeric flocculant in conventional processes is therefore at or just below the level that gives optimum retention and this amount can easily be determined by routine experimentation by the skilled mill operator.
In the invention we use an excess amount Oc cationic synthetic polymer, generally l.l to lO times, usually 3 to 6 times, the amount that would have been regarded as optimum in conventional processes Inamelv the above quoted tvpical figure of 0.01 to 0.05~). Thus the amount is generally above O.Ol~ and generally it is above 0.03%
(0.3 k/t). Adequate results can usually be achieved with dosages as low as this if the stock to which the polvmer is added already contains a substantial amount, e.g., 0.5~, cationic binder. However if the stock is free of cationic binder or onlv contains a small amount then the ,,~', dosage of polymer will normally have to be more, usually at least 0.06~ (0.6 k/t~. This is a convenient minimum .. .. .. .. even.. fo~...stocks...that .do, co~ain ,a. lar~e, ~mo~n~ f, cationic binder. Often the amount is at least 0.08~.
The amount will usually be below 0.5% and generally below 0.2~ with amounts of below 0.15% usually being preferred.
Best results are generally obtained with 0.06 to 0.12 or 0.15%.
If cationic binder is present, it will be present primarily to serve as a strengthening aid and its amount will usually be below 1%, preferably below 0.5~. .T,he binder may be starch, urea formaldehyde resin or other cationic strengthening aid.
The use of the excess amount of synthetic polymeric flocculant is thought to be necessary to ensure that the shearing that occurs in the centriscreen or other shear stage results in the formation of microflocs which contain or carry sufficient cationic polymer to render parts at least of their surfaces sufficiently cationically charged. Surprisingly it is not essential - to add sufficient cationic polymer to render the whole suspension cationic. Thus the Zeta potential of the stock can, prior to addition of the bentonite, be cationic or anionic, including for instance -25mv. It would normally be expected that the addition of anionic bentonite to a suspension having a significant negative - Zeta potential (e.g., below -10 mv~ would not give - satisfactory results and U.S. 4,388,150 suggests that best results are achieved when the Zeta potential following the addition of the starch and the anionic silica approaches zero. The article by Luner also proposed neutralisation of the charges in the suspension by the polymer.
Whether or not a sufficient excess of cationic polymer has been added ~and presumably whether or not the resultant microflocs do have a sufficient cationic charge) can easily be determired experimentally by ~,~
~L25~:~5~
plotting the performance properties in the process, with a ~ixed amount of bentonite and a ~ixed degree o~ shear, at various levels of polymeric addition. When the amount of polymer is insufficient (e.g., being the amount that gives optimum properties when added without bentonite, after the last shear stage as in the normal prior art~
the retention and other properties are relatively poor ! and may be worse than those optimum properties. As the ' amount of polymer is gradually increased, in the invention, a significant increase in retention and other performan~e properties is observed, and this corresponds with the excess that is desired in the invention. Further increase in the amount of flocculant, far beyond the level at which the significant improvement in performance lS occurs, is unnecessary and, for cost reasons, undesir-able. Naturally this test with the bentonite must be conducted after subjectin~ the flocculated suspension to very high shear so as to break it down to microflocs. As a result o~ having sufficient flocculant these flocs are sufficiently stable to resist further degradation during the shearing in the centriscreen or other shear stage.
It is essential in the invention to use a cationic polymer as the first component, rather than a non-ionic or anlonic polvmer and, as the second component, it is essential to use bentonite rather than any other anionic particulate materialO Thus colloidal silica or modlfied colloidal silica gives inferior results and the use of other very small anlonic particles or the use of anionic soluhle polymers also gives very inferior results.
The amount of bentonite that has to be added lS
generally in the range 0.03 to 0.5~, preferably 0.05 to 0.3% and most preferahly 0.08 or 0.1 to 0.2%.
The bentonite can be any o F the materials commerciallv referred to as bentonltes or as bentonite-type clays, i.e., anionic swelling clays such as sepialite, attapulgite or, preferablv, montmorillinite. The montmorillinites are pre~erred.
,~
~f~f~lS3 Bentonites broadly as described in U.S. 4,305,781 are suitable.
Suitable mont~orillonite clays . include WyOmlp5f ....
bentonite or Fullers Earth. The clays may or may not be chemically modified, e.g., by alkali treatment to convert calcium bentonite to alkali metal bentonite.
The swelling clays are usually metal silicates wherein the metal comprises a metal selected from aluminium and magnesium, and optionally other metals, and the ratio silicon atoms:metal atoms in the surface of the clay partiçles, and generally ~hrousfhout their s~ucture, is from 5:1 to 1:1. For most montmorillonites the ratio is relatively low, with most or all of the metal being aluminium but with some magnesium and sometimes with, for instance a little iron. In other swelling clays however, some or all of the aluminium is replaced by magnesium and the ratio may be very low, for instance about 1.5 in sepialite. The use of silicates in which some of the aluminium has been replaced by iron seems to be particularly desirable.
The dry particle size of the bentonite is preferably at least 90% below 100 microns, and most preferably at least 60% below 50 microns (dry size). The surface area of the bentonite before swelling is preferably at least 25 30 and generally at least 50, typically 60 to 90, m2/gm and the surface area after swelling is preferably 400-800 m2/g. The bentonite preferably swells by at least 15 or 20 times. The particle size after swelling is preferably at least 90% below 2 microns.
The bentonite is generally added to the aqueous suspension as a hydrated suspension in water, typically at a concentration between 1% and 10% by weight. The hydrated suspension is usually made by dispersing powdered bentonite in water.
'~.,:
., ~915;~
;,~
The choice of the cellulosic suspension and its components and the paper making conditions may all be -...... ~.vaxied.. in~,c.onve~tional man~ r.to.,.obtai~,paper.. ranging from unfilled papers such as tissue, newsprint, groundwood specialities, supercalendered magazine, highly filled high quality writing papers, fluting m~dium, liner board, light weight board to heavy weight multiply boards or sack kxaft paper.
The paper may be sized by conventional rosin/alum size at pH values ranging between 4 and 6 or by the ; ... ~ .inc.o~poxati~n.. of a reactiYe ~.ize su,ch as,.~e.tene,~,dimer or alkenyl succinic anhydride where the pH conditions are typically between 6 and 9.
The reactive size when used can be supplied as an aqueous emulsion or can be emulsified in situ at the mill with suitable emulsifiers and stabili~ers such as cationic starch.
Preferably the reactive size is supplied in combination with a polyelectrolyte in known manner. The size and the polyelectrolyte can be supplied to the user in the form of an anhydrous dispersion of the polyelectrolyte in a non-aqueous liquid comprising the size, as desçribed in EP 141641 and 200504. Preferably the polyelectrolyte for application with the size is also suitable as the synthetic polymeric retention aid in the invention in which event the size and all the synthetic polymer can be provided in a single anhydrous composition of the polymer dispersed in the anhydrous liquid phase comprising the size.
Suitable methods of making the anhydrous compositions, and suitable sizes, are described in those European specifications . The anhydrous dispersions may be made by formation of an emulsion of aqueous polymer in oil followed by dehydration by azeotroping in conventional manner and then dissolution of the size in 33Lrj3 the oil phase, with optional removal of the oil phase if appropriate. The emulsion can be made by emulsification of,an a,queous solutio~ of the polymer,into the oil phase but is preferably made by reverse phase polymerisation.
The oil phase will gener~lly need to include a stabiliser, preferably an amphipathic oil stabiliser in order to stabilise the composition.
In the following examples the following polymers are used:-A: a copolymer formed of 70% by weight acrylamide and ,,, 30,~,dimethyl am,,inoethyl,,acry~ate "q~aternised with m,~thy~chloride and having intrinsic viscosity (IV) 7 to lOo B: a copolymer of 9O weight ~ acrylamide and lO weight %
dimethyl aminoethyl methacrylate having IV 7 to lO.
C: polyethyleneimine (Polymin SK B.A.S~F~) D: polydiallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride 7 a medium molecular weight copolymer of diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride, acrylamide 70:30 IV of 1.5 F: a quaternised dimethylaminomethyl acrylamide copolymer with 50% acrylamide and having IV l.O
G: a copolymer of 70~ by weight acrylamide and 30 ' sodium acrylate, IV 12 S: high molecular weight potato starch with high degree of cationic substitution CSA: colloidal silicic acid AMCSA: aluminium modified silicic acid The bentonite in each example was a sodium carbonate activated calcium montmorillonite. Examples 1 to 3 are examples of actual paper processes. The other examples are laboratory tests that we have found to give a reliable indication of the results that will be obtained when the same materials are used on a mill with the polymer being added before the centriscreen (or the final centriscreen if there is more than one) and with the bentonite beiny added after the last point of high shear.
~25~
Example 1 Three retention aid systems were compared on an experimental machine designed to slmulate full ~cale modern papermaking machine conditions. In this, thick sized stock was mixed with white water from a wire pit and was passed through a mixing pump. The resultant thin stock was passed through a dearator and was then fed by a fan pump to a flow box, fr~m which it was flowed on to the wire to form a sheet, the drained water being collected in the wire pit and recycled.
~ - System (I) inyolved the addition of 0.~03~PoLyme~ A
added just after the fan pump, i.e., after last point of high shear.
System (II) involved the addition of 1.5~ cationic starch just before mixing the stock with the white water, and 0.2% colloidal silica ~the optimised Compozil System) just after the fan pump.
System (III) involved the addition of 0.15~ Polymer A to the white water just before mixing with the stock, followed by 0.2~ bentonite just after the fan pump, as a hydrated slurry.
The performance of these systems was evaluated on stock consisting of 50% bleached birch and 50% bleached pine, with 20% CaC03, at 0.7% consistency and pH 8.0 sized with an alkylketene dimer.
The first pass retention values and the web dryness after the wet presses on machine were recorded in Table 1.
.
9~53 Table 1 .. -. .- . .System . ~- -Retention % - Dryness ~ - . . ~ -I 35 42.75 II 74 44.6 III 92 45.75 This clearly demonstrates the significant advantage of the invention (system III) compared to the two prior processes (systems I and Il) both as regards retention and dryness. Although the increase in dryness is numerically relatively small, commercially this difference is very significant and allows either an increase in machine speed and or decreased steam demand in the drying section.
Example 2 The process of Example 1 was repeated using a stock and retention aid systems II and III as described in Example 1 but under acid sizing conditions using rosin alum and filled with china clay instead of CaC03. The pH of the stock was 5Ø Addition points were as described in Example 1.
Table 2 25 System Retention ~ Dryness II 84.0 45.75 III 88.0 46.60 This clearly demonstrates the significant advantage of System III over the prior process (System II), both with regard to retention and weh dryness after the presses.
: Example 3 A full scale machine trial was carried out on a fourdrinier machine producing 19 t/hour of unbleached :
~5~53 sac~ kraft. In this process, thick stock was diluted with white water fro~ a silo and the stock passed throuah a mixing p~np a~d dear~tor to a second dilution pvint at which further white water was added to make the final thin stock. This stock was fed to four centriscreens in parallel, all discharging into a loop that lead to the headbox that supplied the screen. The thin stock contained O.lS~ cationic starch as a strengthening aid and l~ cationic urea formaldehyde wet strength resin.
Machine speed was 620 m/min.
Polymer A dosage was 0.~3% added to the white water at the second dilution point. The bentonite dosage was 0.2% added to the thin stock either just before ~he centriscreens or in the loop after the centriscreens.
The resu]ts are in Table 3.
Table 3 .
Additive % Retention Nil 8~.2 A + Bentonite before centriscreens 86.8 A + Bentonite after centriscreens 92.7 _ Under equilibrium running conditions using the retention aid system where the bentonite was added after the centriscreens,the couch vacuum was reduced by 30% and the drying steam demand by lO~ compared to the system when the bentonite was added before the centriscreens.
The mill reported no change in formation during the trial.
These results clearly demonstrated the benefit of adding the bentonite ater shear Example 4 Britt jar tests were carried out on a neutral sized stock consisting of birch (15~), spruce (30~), and 55%
,. . .
~5~3~53 broke with 25% added calcium carbonate filler (the percentages for the initial solids in the stock in this . and other.examples are by weigh~. o fi~re). The stock had pH 8.0 and contained a conventional ketene dimer sizing ayent and 0.5 cationic starch S as a strengthening aid.
The shear condition of the Britt jar was adjusted to give a first pass retention in the region of 55-60% in the absence of the additive. Cationic polyacrylamide A
~if used) was added to 500ml of thin stock (0.6%
;. .. .. .consistepcy) in.a measurin~...cylinder. The cylLnde~.was inverted four times to achieve mixing and the flocculated stock was transferred to the Britt jar tester. The flocs at this stage were very large and were clearly unsuitable for production of paper having good formation or drying properties. The stock was sheared for one minute and then bentonite ~if used) was added.
Retention performance was observed.
Laboratory drainage evaluations were also carried out on the same stock using â standard Schopper Reigler freeness tester. The machine orifice was plugged and time was measured for 500ml of white water to drain from 1 litre of the same stock treated as above. The results are shown in ~able 4 below.
Table 4 Test Polymer % Bentonite % % Retention Drainage (secs) 1 OA O S6.9 56
2 0.05A O 61.0 41
3 O.lA O 61.4 28
4 0.15A O 61.7 25 O.lA 0.2 63.7 14 6 0.15A 0.2 81.7 7 ; Comparison of tests 4 and 6 demonstrates the : 35 " ~5~3~5~3 significant advantage from adding bentonite and ~omparison of tests 5 and 6 shows the benefit of .increasing the.amount vf polymex A to 0~15k/t ~or this particular stock. The sheared suspension in test 6 had a stable microfloc structure. The amount of polymeric in test 5 was not quite siufficient for a good structure using this particular stock.
Example 5 The process of example 4 wasi repeated excep~ that the stoc~ was a conventional rosin alum sized stock . - having pH 5.5 and did not contain the ca~ionic starch.
The results are shown in Table 5.
Table 5 Polymer ~Bentonite ~iDrainage ~secs) o o 117 O.lA 0 70 0.15A 0 77 O.lA 4 31 0.15A 4 23 Example 6 A stock was formed as in Example 4 but did not contain the starch and was tested as in Example 4. The results are shown in Table 6.
~ ~259~53 Table 6 Test Polymer ~ Inorganic % Retention . - - Additive-% ~ -2 lS 0 58.4 3 0.5S 0.2CSA 77.8 - 4 lS 0.2CSA 79.2 lS 0.4 Bentonite 66.6 6 lS 0.6 Bentonite 69.5 7 0.15B 0.2CSA 70 '~ 8 0.15B 0.4 Bentonite 83.0 9 0.15A 0.2CSA 70.8 0.15A 0 62.3 11 0.15A 0.4 Bentonite 84.2 12 0.05B ~ 0.5S 0.4 Bentonite 70.5 13 O.lB + 0.5S 0.4 Bentonite 82.2 Tests 3 and 4 are similar to the Compozil system and show the use of cationic starch followed by anionic colloidal silica. Comparison of test 4 with tests 5 and 6 demonstrates that replacing the anionic colloidal silica with bentonite gives worse results. Similarly comparison of tests 3 or 4 with tests 7 or 9 shows that replacing the cationic starch with a synthetic flocculant gives worse results.
Comparison of tests 12 and 13 indicates that the amount of synthetic flocculant in test 12 is inadequate.
Tests 8, 11 and 13 demonstrate the excellent results obtainable in the invention. The advantage of the processes of the invention using bentonite Itests 8, 11, 13) over the use of colloidal silica (tests 7, 9) is apparent.
Example 7 A stock was formed as in Example 4 but with no filler and was treated with polymer A before the shearing .
~.25~1~3 and with bentonite or specified filler after the shearingO The results are shown in Table 7.
- Table 7 ~- `-Test Polymer % Inorganic % Retention Drainage B/W SolidsTime (secs) 2 O.lA 0 705 24 3 O.lA O.OS Bentonite 315 10 4 O.lA 0.1 Bentonite 205 5 O.lA 0.2 Bentonite 180 5 - 6 . . O.lA 0.1 Clay 710 25 7 O.lA 0.1 CaC03 700 25 8 O.lA 0.1 TiO2 740 25 This clearly demonstrat~s the superiority of the use 15 of bentonite over other pigmentary fillers. Much better drainage values can be obtained by increasing the amount of clayr CaC03 or TiO2 filler that is added after the polymer, but this is impractible and the sheet strength is reduced.
20 Example 8 Laboratory drainage evaluations were carried out as in Example 4 on a 0.5% stock comprised of bleached kraft (60%) bleached birch (30%) and broke (10%). The stock was sized with an alkenyl succinic anhydride size at p~
25 7.5.
The treated stocks were prepared by adding the desired quantity of dilute polymer solution (0.05%) to 1 litre of stock in a measuring cylinder. The cylinder was inverted four times to effect mixing and transferred 30 to a beaker and sheared mechanically with a conventional propellor stirrer ~1,500 rpm) for 1 minute.
After shearing, the stock was transferred bacl~ to the measuring cylinder and bentonite as a 1% hydrated slurry was added as required to give the appropriate 35 dose. The cylinder was again inverted four times to 315~3 effect mixing and transferred to the modified Schopper Reigler apparatus for drainage evaluation.
. .In the cases where only p~ly~er wa~ -~dde~, ~he polymer treated stock was transferred to the Schopper Reigler apparatus immediately after cylinder inversion and was not subjected to shear.
A range of cationic polymers was evaluated at a constant dose level of 0.1% dry polymer on dry weight of paper. Table 8 shows the results achieved with and without further addition of bentonite.
; -- Table 8 . -.
Dxainage Time ~secs) Additive No BentoniteBentonite Addition 0.2 Blank 71 68 Polymer C 35 19 Polymer D 53 32 20 Polymèr E 46 22 Polymer F 30 12 Clearly all the polymers gave advantageous drainage benefits to the stock when added alone as single additions, but all show substantial further improvemènt when the polymer was added before shearing and b~ntonite is added after shearing.
The size was provided initially as an anhydrous dispersion as described in EP 141641. For instance polymer E could be formulated into a dispersion as in examples 1 to 5 of that specification and the resultant dispersion in oil could be dispersed into water t thereby dissolving the polymer and emulsifying the size, by use of an oil in water emulsifying agent, so as to form an 315~
aqueous concentrate that is then added to the cellulosic suspension.
, Ex~mple 9 P~etention evaluations were carried out on a stock consisting of 60% Bleached Kraft, 40% ~leached Birch and 10~ Broke with 20% added calcium carbonate. The stock consistency was 0.7% and a pH of 8Ø
The retention evaluation was carried out using the Britt Dynamic Drainage Jar using the following procedure:-Th~ first ~omponent, (cationic starch or rationicpolyacrylamide) was added to a 1 litre measuring cylinder containing starch. The cylinder was inverted four times to effect mixing and transferred to the ~ritt Jar. The treated stock was sheared for 1 minute at a stirrer speed of 1500 rpm. The second component was then added (bentonite or polysilicic acid), the stirrer speed was immediately reduced to 900 rpm and mixing continued for seconds. Drainage was allowed to start and the drained white water was collected, filtered and weighed dry. The total first pass retention was calculated from the data.
The results are shown in Table 9.
315;~
. .
Table 9 Test ~olymer ~ Inorganic % % ketention 1 Nil Nil 65 2 O.lA Nil 81 3 O.lA 0.15 CSA 85~4 4 O.lA 0.2 CSA 85.9
Example 5 The process of example 4 wasi repeated excep~ that the stoc~ was a conventional rosin alum sized stock . - having pH 5.5 and did not contain the ca~ionic starch.
The results are shown in Table 5.
Table 5 Polymer ~Bentonite ~iDrainage ~secs) o o 117 O.lA 0 70 0.15A 0 77 O.lA 4 31 0.15A 4 23 Example 6 A stock was formed as in Example 4 but did not contain the starch and was tested as in Example 4. The results are shown in Table 6.
~ ~259~53 Table 6 Test Polymer ~ Inorganic % Retention . - - Additive-% ~ -2 lS 0 58.4 3 0.5S 0.2CSA 77.8 - 4 lS 0.2CSA 79.2 lS 0.4 Bentonite 66.6 6 lS 0.6 Bentonite 69.5 7 0.15B 0.2CSA 70 '~ 8 0.15B 0.4 Bentonite 83.0 9 0.15A 0.2CSA 70.8 0.15A 0 62.3 11 0.15A 0.4 Bentonite 84.2 12 0.05B ~ 0.5S 0.4 Bentonite 70.5 13 O.lB + 0.5S 0.4 Bentonite 82.2 Tests 3 and 4 are similar to the Compozil system and show the use of cationic starch followed by anionic colloidal silica. Comparison of test 4 with tests 5 and 6 demonstrates that replacing the anionic colloidal silica with bentonite gives worse results. Similarly comparison of tests 3 or 4 with tests 7 or 9 shows that replacing the cationic starch with a synthetic flocculant gives worse results.
Comparison of tests 12 and 13 indicates that the amount of synthetic flocculant in test 12 is inadequate.
Tests 8, 11 and 13 demonstrate the excellent results obtainable in the invention. The advantage of the processes of the invention using bentonite Itests 8, 11, 13) over the use of colloidal silica (tests 7, 9) is apparent.
Example 7 A stock was formed as in Example 4 but with no filler and was treated with polymer A before the shearing .
~.25~1~3 and with bentonite or specified filler after the shearingO The results are shown in Table 7.
- Table 7 ~- `-Test Polymer % Inorganic % Retention Drainage B/W SolidsTime (secs) 2 O.lA 0 705 24 3 O.lA O.OS Bentonite 315 10 4 O.lA 0.1 Bentonite 205 5 O.lA 0.2 Bentonite 180 5 - 6 . . O.lA 0.1 Clay 710 25 7 O.lA 0.1 CaC03 700 25 8 O.lA 0.1 TiO2 740 25 This clearly demonstrat~s the superiority of the use 15 of bentonite over other pigmentary fillers. Much better drainage values can be obtained by increasing the amount of clayr CaC03 or TiO2 filler that is added after the polymer, but this is impractible and the sheet strength is reduced.
20 Example 8 Laboratory drainage evaluations were carried out as in Example 4 on a 0.5% stock comprised of bleached kraft (60%) bleached birch (30%) and broke (10%). The stock was sized with an alkenyl succinic anhydride size at p~
25 7.5.
The treated stocks were prepared by adding the desired quantity of dilute polymer solution (0.05%) to 1 litre of stock in a measuring cylinder. The cylinder was inverted four times to effect mixing and transferred 30 to a beaker and sheared mechanically with a conventional propellor stirrer ~1,500 rpm) for 1 minute.
After shearing, the stock was transferred bacl~ to the measuring cylinder and bentonite as a 1% hydrated slurry was added as required to give the appropriate 35 dose. The cylinder was again inverted four times to 315~3 effect mixing and transferred to the modified Schopper Reigler apparatus for drainage evaluation.
. .In the cases where only p~ly~er wa~ -~dde~, ~he polymer treated stock was transferred to the Schopper Reigler apparatus immediately after cylinder inversion and was not subjected to shear.
A range of cationic polymers was evaluated at a constant dose level of 0.1% dry polymer on dry weight of paper. Table 8 shows the results achieved with and without further addition of bentonite.
; -- Table 8 . -.
Dxainage Time ~secs) Additive No BentoniteBentonite Addition 0.2 Blank 71 68 Polymer C 35 19 Polymer D 53 32 20 Polymèr E 46 22 Polymer F 30 12 Clearly all the polymers gave advantageous drainage benefits to the stock when added alone as single additions, but all show substantial further improvemènt when the polymer was added before shearing and b~ntonite is added after shearing.
The size was provided initially as an anhydrous dispersion as described in EP 141641. For instance polymer E could be formulated into a dispersion as in examples 1 to 5 of that specification and the resultant dispersion in oil could be dispersed into water t thereby dissolving the polymer and emulsifying the size, by use of an oil in water emulsifying agent, so as to form an 315~
aqueous concentrate that is then added to the cellulosic suspension.
, Ex~mple 9 P~etention evaluations were carried out on a stock consisting of 60% Bleached Kraft, 40% ~leached Birch and 10~ Broke with 20% added calcium carbonate. The stock consistency was 0.7% and a pH of 8Ø
The retention evaluation was carried out using the Britt Dynamic Drainage Jar using the following procedure:-Th~ first ~omponent, (cationic starch or rationicpolyacrylamide) was added to a 1 litre measuring cylinder containing starch. The cylinder was inverted four times to effect mixing and transferred to the ~ritt Jar. The treated stock was sheared for 1 minute at a stirrer speed of 1500 rpm. The second component was then added (bentonite or polysilicic acid), the stirrer speed was immediately reduced to 900 rpm and mixing continued for seconds. Drainage was allowed to start and the drained white water was collected, filtered and weighed dry. The total first pass retention was calculated from the data.
The results are shown in Table 9.
315;~
. .
Table 9 Test ~olymer ~ Inorganic % % ketention 1 Nil Nil 65 2 O.lA Nil 81 3 O.lA 0.15 CSA 85~4 4 O.lA 0.2 CSA 85.9
5 O.lA 0.3 CSA 86.2
6 O.lA G.2 Bentonite 93.3
7 0.5S 0.15 CSA 86.2
8 , O.lS 0.15 CSA- ~ 88~2-
9 0.5S 0.2 Bentonite 79.S
O.lS 0.2 Bentonite 81.2 Comparison of tests 3 to 5 with test 2 shows that the late addition of colloidal silica does improve the retention and so, as indicated in W086/05826, some bene~it does follow from the addition of colloidal silica after synthetic linear polymer. However comparison of test 6 with tests 3 to 5 shows that bentonite gives very much better results than colloidal silica in these circumstances.
Comparison of tests 7 and 8 with tests 9 and 10 shows that when using cationic starch instead of a synthetic polymer colloidal silica gives better results.
These results confirm the requirement in th~ Compozil process for using colloidal silica and suggest that a synergic effect exists between the cationic polymer and bentonite, but not between cationic starch and bentonite.
- Example 10 Drainage times were recorded as in Example 4 on a stock formed of 50~ bleached birch, 50% bleached kraft with 20% added calcium carbonate and having pH 7.5. In - test 1, neither polymer nor particulate additive was added. In tests 2 to 15, 0.1~ of Polymer A was added before the shearing. In tests 3 to 16, the specified ~ - . . . . . . .
33 ~ 5~3~53 amounts of various anionic additives were added. In tests 14,0.2~ bentol-lite was added but, instea~ of using -. . . . . Polymer A, 0.1% non-ionic ~Glymer wa~s used in test ~4 ~nd - -0.1~ anionic polymer was used in test 15. In test 16 polymer A and bentonite were added simultaneously before the shearing. The results are in Table 10.
Table 8 Drainage Test Anionic Additive Time (secs) . , . . . 1 NIL ~ . 56 3 0.2~ Bentonite 6 4 0.2% CSA 12 15 5 10% China Clay 9 6 10% Kieselguhr 21 7 0.5~ alkali-swellable polyacrylic aqueous emulsion 30 8 0.1% alkali-swellable polyacrylic aqueous emulsion 42 9 1% water-swellable polyacrylamide dispersion in oil 20 0.5% water-swellable polyacrylamide dispersion in oil 25 11 0.2% water-swellable polyacrylamide dispersion in oil 23 12 1% sodium polyacrylate crosslinked ; fines 27 13 1% polyacxylamide crosslinked fines 40 3014 0.2% bentonite (after non-ionic)52 0.2% bentonite (after anionic) 54 16 0.2~ bentonite (simultaneous) 30 This confirms that bentonite has unique properties compared to other organic and inorc3anic anionic materials or colloidal silicic acid, provided it is added after the ~ ' ~` ` ` `
` ~LZ5i9~S~
flocculated system has been sheared before the addition of bentonite.
Example ll Retention tests were carried out using the Britt jar tester. Thin stock containing 20~ china clay was placed in the Britt jar and 0.1% Polymer A was added/
This was then sheared at 1000 rpm for 30 seconds. 0.2%
bentonite was added and after allowing 5 seconds for mixing the test was carried out~
10The procedure was repeated except 20~ clay was added ~ at the end instead of the 0.~ bentonite..
Standard 100 gsm sheets were prepared using the - above two systems. Retention and Burst strength were recorded and results are shown in Table 11.
15Table 11 Additives % Retention Burst Strength KPA
20~ china clay ~ 0.1%
Polymer A + 0.2% bentonite79.0 197 0.1% Polymer A ~ 20%
china clay 76.0 99 This shows that although the late addition of high levels of china clay can give reasonable retention results compared to the bentonite, it has a dramatic bad effect on sheet strength.
Example 12 Laboratory evaluations were carried out to compare different modes of addition of the polymer when using retention aid System III of Example 2.
Samples of thick stock and whitewater were obtained from a mill producing publishing grade papers from bleached chemical pulps filled with calcium ~arbonate and sized with alkylketene dimer size.
f~ 53 Thick stocX consistency was 3.5% and the white water was 0.2%. The thick stock and white water were combined proportionately to give a thin stoek consistency of O.7~.
Laboratory retention evaluation were earried out using a Britt Dynamic Jar Tester as follows:-For the control without any retention aid, thiekstock and white water were combined in the Britt Jar and sheared for 30 seconds at 1000 rpm. When the polymer was added to thick stock, the flocculated thiek stock was sheared for 30 seconds at 1000 rpm. After addition of the white water, ~urther mixing was carried out for 5 seconds at 1000 rpm followed by the bentonite additions which was mixed for a further 5 seconds before testing.
When the polymer was added to the white water,this was lS sheared for 30 seconds at 1000 rpm followed by addition of thick stock, this was then mixed for a further 5 seconds beore bentonite addition which as before was mixed for 5 seconds before testing. The results obtained are shown in Table 12.
Polymer A dosage used was 0.2% and bentonite dosage was 0.2%.
Table 12 Order of Addition ~ Retention 25 Thick stock + White water 50.9 Thick stock + White water ~ Polymer A
+ Bentonite 70 5 Thick stock + Polymer A + White water ; + Bentonite 56.5 30 White water ~ Polymer A -~ Thick stock + Bentonite 71.4 This shows the benefit of adding the polymer to the thin stock, or to the dilution water for the thin stock, in preferenee to adding the polymer to thick stock.
Example 13 ~5~3~.5~
Aluminium modified silicic acid sol AMCSA was prepared by treatment of colloidal silicic acid with sodium aluminate according to W086/~526 ~AMCSA~. It was compared at two pH values with CSA an~ bentonite, after Polymer AJ as follows.
The paper making stock was prepared from bleached kraft (50~, bleached birch (50~) and beaten to 45SR, and diluted to 0.5% consistency. The thin stock was split into two portions. The pH of one portion was 6.8, and hydrochloric acid was added to the other portion to ~ adjust the pH tQ 4.0~ . -600 mls of stock was added to a Beritt jar and 0.5~solution of polymer A added to give a dose level of 0.1%
dry polymer on dry paper. The flocculated thin stock was sheared for 60 seconds at 1500 rpm in the Britt jar after which the contents were transferred to a 1 litre measuring cylinder and the anionic componen~ was added.
The cylinder was inverted four times to achieve mixing and the contents were transferred to a Schopper Riegler apparatus where the machined orifice had been blocked.
; The time for 400 mls to drain was recorded.
The results are shown in Tables 13 and 14.
!, 631~
Table 13 Stock pH 6 . 8 . .
Polymer A Anionic Anionic Time Dose % Dose ~r ~s~conds) _ 0.1 - -- 47 0.1 A~CSA 0.1 19 0.1. ,A~CSA . 01. 2 .. . 18 0.1 AMCSA 0.4 23 0.1 CSA 0.1 20 0~1 CSA 002 18 O r 1 CSA 0. 4 23 .
3 0.1 Bentonite 0. 2 7 .
.
~L259~LS3 Table 14 Stock pH 4.0 Polymer A Anionic Anionic Time 5 Dose ~ Dose %(seconds) O.l - - 47
O.lS 0.2 Bentonite 81.2 Comparison of tests 3 to 5 with test 2 shows that the late addition of colloidal silica does improve the retention and so, as indicated in W086/05826, some bene~it does follow from the addition of colloidal silica after synthetic linear polymer. However comparison of test 6 with tests 3 to 5 shows that bentonite gives very much better results than colloidal silica in these circumstances.
Comparison of tests 7 and 8 with tests 9 and 10 shows that when using cationic starch instead of a synthetic polymer colloidal silica gives better results.
These results confirm the requirement in th~ Compozil process for using colloidal silica and suggest that a synergic effect exists between the cationic polymer and bentonite, but not between cationic starch and bentonite.
- Example 10 Drainage times were recorded as in Example 4 on a stock formed of 50~ bleached birch, 50% bleached kraft with 20% added calcium carbonate and having pH 7.5. In - test 1, neither polymer nor particulate additive was added. In tests 2 to 15, 0.1~ of Polymer A was added before the shearing. In tests 3 to 16, the specified ~ - . . . . . . .
33 ~ 5~3~53 amounts of various anionic additives were added. In tests 14,0.2~ bentol-lite was added but, instea~ of using -. . . . . Polymer A, 0.1% non-ionic ~Glymer wa~s used in test ~4 ~nd - -0.1~ anionic polymer was used in test 15. In test 16 polymer A and bentonite were added simultaneously before the shearing. The results are in Table 10.
Table 8 Drainage Test Anionic Additive Time (secs) . , . . . 1 NIL ~ . 56 3 0.2~ Bentonite 6 4 0.2% CSA 12 15 5 10% China Clay 9 6 10% Kieselguhr 21 7 0.5~ alkali-swellable polyacrylic aqueous emulsion 30 8 0.1% alkali-swellable polyacrylic aqueous emulsion 42 9 1% water-swellable polyacrylamide dispersion in oil 20 0.5% water-swellable polyacrylamide dispersion in oil 25 11 0.2% water-swellable polyacrylamide dispersion in oil 23 12 1% sodium polyacrylate crosslinked ; fines 27 13 1% polyacxylamide crosslinked fines 40 3014 0.2% bentonite (after non-ionic)52 0.2% bentonite (after anionic) 54 16 0.2~ bentonite (simultaneous) 30 This confirms that bentonite has unique properties compared to other organic and inorc3anic anionic materials or colloidal silicic acid, provided it is added after the ~ ' ~` ` ` `
` ~LZ5i9~S~
flocculated system has been sheared before the addition of bentonite.
Example ll Retention tests were carried out using the Britt jar tester. Thin stock containing 20~ china clay was placed in the Britt jar and 0.1% Polymer A was added/
This was then sheared at 1000 rpm for 30 seconds. 0.2%
bentonite was added and after allowing 5 seconds for mixing the test was carried out~
10The procedure was repeated except 20~ clay was added ~ at the end instead of the 0.~ bentonite..
Standard 100 gsm sheets were prepared using the - above two systems. Retention and Burst strength were recorded and results are shown in Table 11.
15Table 11 Additives % Retention Burst Strength KPA
20~ china clay ~ 0.1%
Polymer A + 0.2% bentonite79.0 197 0.1% Polymer A ~ 20%
china clay 76.0 99 This shows that although the late addition of high levels of china clay can give reasonable retention results compared to the bentonite, it has a dramatic bad effect on sheet strength.
Example 12 Laboratory evaluations were carried out to compare different modes of addition of the polymer when using retention aid System III of Example 2.
Samples of thick stock and whitewater were obtained from a mill producing publishing grade papers from bleached chemical pulps filled with calcium ~arbonate and sized with alkylketene dimer size.
f~ 53 Thick stocX consistency was 3.5% and the white water was 0.2%. The thick stock and white water were combined proportionately to give a thin stoek consistency of O.7~.
Laboratory retention evaluation were earried out using a Britt Dynamic Jar Tester as follows:-For the control without any retention aid, thiekstock and white water were combined in the Britt Jar and sheared for 30 seconds at 1000 rpm. When the polymer was added to thick stock, the flocculated thiek stock was sheared for 30 seconds at 1000 rpm. After addition of the white water, ~urther mixing was carried out for 5 seconds at 1000 rpm followed by the bentonite additions which was mixed for a further 5 seconds before testing.
When the polymer was added to the white water,this was lS sheared for 30 seconds at 1000 rpm followed by addition of thick stock, this was then mixed for a further 5 seconds beore bentonite addition which as before was mixed for 5 seconds before testing. The results obtained are shown in Table 12.
Polymer A dosage used was 0.2% and bentonite dosage was 0.2%.
Table 12 Order of Addition ~ Retention 25 Thick stock + White water 50.9 Thick stock + White water ~ Polymer A
+ Bentonite 70 5 Thick stock + Polymer A + White water ; + Bentonite 56.5 30 White water ~ Polymer A -~ Thick stock + Bentonite 71.4 This shows the benefit of adding the polymer to the thin stock, or to the dilution water for the thin stock, in preferenee to adding the polymer to thick stock.
Example 13 ~5~3~.5~
Aluminium modified silicic acid sol AMCSA was prepared by treatment of colloidal silicic acid with sodium aluminate according to W086/~526 ~AMCSA~. It was compared at two pH values with CSA an~ bentonite, after Polymer AJ as follows.
The paper making stock was prepared from bleached kraft (50~, bleached birch (50~) and beaten to 45SR, and diluted to 0.5% consistency. The thin stock was split into two portions. The pH of one portion was 6.8, and hydrochloric acid was added to the other portion to ~ adjust the pH tQ 4.0~ . -600 mls of stock was added to a Beritt jar and 0.5~solution of polymer A added to give a dose level of 0.1%
dry polymer on dry paper. The flocculated thin stock was sheared for 60 seconds at 1500 rpm in the Britt jar after which the contents were transferred to a 1 litre measuring cylinder and the anionic componen~ was added.
The cylinder was inverted four times to achieve mixing and the contents were transferred to a Schopper Riegler apparatus where the machined orifice had been blocked.
; The time for 400 mls to drain was recorded.
The results are shown in Tables 13 and 14.
!, 631~
Table 13 Stock pH 6 . 8 . .
Polymer A Anionic Anionic Time Dose % Dose ~r ~s~conds) _ 0.1 - -- 47 0.1 A~CSA 0.1 19 0.1. ,A~CSA . 01. 2 .. . 18 0.1 AMCSA 0.4 23 0.1 CSA 0.1 20 0~1 CSA 002 18 O r 1 CSA 0. 4 23 .
3 0.1 Bentonite 0. 2 7 .
.
~L259~LS3 Table 14 Stock pH 4.0 Polymer A Anionic Anionic Time 5 Dose ~ Dose %(seconds) O.l - - 47
10 0.1 AMCSA O.l 22 - .~ .0,.1 . . .AMCSA .. ~ 17 ..
O.l AMCSA 0.4 l9 O.l CSA O.l 33 15 O.l CSA 0.2 27 O.l CSA 0.4 23 3 0.1 Bentonite 0.2 7 This shows that aluminium modified colloidal silicic acid (AMCSA) prepared according to W086/05826, performs as well as colloidal silicic acid (CSA) described in V.S.
4,388,150 at pH 6.8, but performs better than colloidal silicic acid (CSA) at pH 4Ø The results show that ~entonite performs significantly better than either CSA
or AMCSA at both pH values. The results demonstrate the synergism that exists specifically between cationic synthetic polymers and bentonite when the stock is sheared after the polymer addition.
Example 14 The effect of addition of soluble anionic polymer G
instead of bentonite in the rete.ntion aid system was evaluated in the laboratory on a stock consisting of bleached chemical pulps, calcium carbonate and . ...., ~
~59~S-~
alkylketene dimer size. Both retention and drainage tests were carried out.
Retention ,tests were Garried out using a Britt Dynamic Jar. The required amount of Polymer A was added to 500 mls of thin stock and sheared in the Britt Jar at 1000 rpm for 30 seconds. This was followed by the addition of bentonite or Polymer G at the appropriate dose level and after allowing 5 seconds for mixing the test was carried out.
Vacuum drainage tests were carried out by taking g , ,thick,,,stoc~ and,,~reating it a~ above,"~ut,~after mixing in the bentonite or polymer the stock was transferred into a Hartley Funnel fitted with a filter paper. The Hartley Funnel was attached to a conical flask fitted with a constant vacuum source. The time was then recorded for the stock to drain under vacuum until the pad formed on the filter paper assumed a uniform matt appearance corresponding to removal of excess water.
Results are as shown in Table 15.
Table 15 Additive ~ RetentionVacuum Drainage Time (seconds) r _ 25 Nil 70.8 80 0.1% Polymer A +
~0.2% Bentonite 95.8 6 0.1% Polymer A +
0.1~ Polymer G 88.4 26 0.1~ Polymex A +
0.2% Polymer G 88.4 30 0.1% Polymer A ~ Zero 84.8 14 The addition of the anionic Polymer G only slightly improves the retention and has an adverse effect on drainage compad to Polymer A on its ownO Polymer A
- ~59~5~i followed by bentonite was significantly more effective with regard to bo~h retention and drainage.
.
j~i . , , , . , ~ .. , . . . . - . . .
O.l AMCSA 0.4 l9 O.l CSA O.l 33 15 O.l CSA 0.2 27 O.l CSA 0.4 23 3 0.1 Bentonite 0.2 7 This shows that aluminium modified colloidal silicic acid (AMCSA) prepared according to W086/05826, performs as well as colloidal silicic acid (CSA) described in V.S.
4,388,150 at pH 6.8, but performs better than colloidal silicic acid (CSA) at pH 4Ø The results show that ~entonite performs significantly better than either CSA
or AMCSA at both pH values. The results demonstrate the synergism that exists specifically between cationic synthetic polymers and bentonite when the stock is sheared after the polymer addition.
Example 14 The effect of addition of soluble anionic polymer G
instead of bentonite in the rete.ntion aid system was evaluated in the laboratory on a stock consisting of bleached chemical pulps, calcium carbonate and . ...., ~
~59~S-~
alkylketene dimer size. Both retention and drainage tests were carried out.
Retention ,tests were Garried out using a Britt Dynamic Jar. The required amount of Polymer A was added to 500 mls of thin stock and sheared in the Britt Jar at 1000 rpm for 30 seconds. This was followed by the addition of bentonite or Polymer G at the appropriate dose level and after allowing 5 seconds for mixing the test was carried out.
Vacuum drainage tests were carried out by taking g , ,thick,,,stoc~ and,,~reating it a~ above,"~ut,~after mixing in the bentonite or polymer the stock was transferred into a Hartley Funnel fitted with a filter paper. The Hartley Funnel was attached to a conical flask fitted with a constant vacuum source. The time was then recorded for the stock to drain under vacuum until the pad formed on the filter paper assumed a uniform matt appearance corresponding to removal of excess water.
Results are as shown in Table 15.
Table 15 Additive ~ RetentionVacuum Drainage Time (seconds) r _ 25 Nil 70.8 80 0.1% Polymer A +
~0.2% Bentonite 95.8 6 0.1% Polymer A +
0.1~ Polymer G 88.4 26 0.1~ Polymex A +
0.2% Polymer G 88.4 30 0.1% Polymer A ~ Zero 84.8 14 The addition of the anionic Polymer G only slightly improves the retention and has an adverse effect on drainage compad to Polymer A on its ownO Polymer A
- ~59~5~i followed by bentonite was significantly more effective with regard to bo~h retention and drainage.
.
j~i . , , , . , ~ .. , . . . . - . . .
Claims (22)
PRIVILEGE IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
1. A process in which paper or paper board is made by forming an aqueous cellulosic suspension, passing the suspension through one or more shear stages selected from cleaning, mixing and pumping stages, draining the suspension to form a sheet and drying the sheet and in which the suspension that is drained includes organic polymeric material and inorganic material, characterised in that the inorganic material comprises bentonite which is added to the suspension after one of the said shear stages, and the organic polymeric material comprises a substantially linear synthetic cationic polymer having molecular weight above 500,000 which is added to the suspension before that shear stage in an amount such that flocs are formed by the said addition of the polymer and the said flocs are broken by the shearing to form microflocs that resist further degradation by the shearing and that carry sufficient cationic charge to interact with the bentonite to give better retention than is obtainable when adding the polymer alone after the last point of high shear.
2. A process according to claim 1 in which the said amount of the substantially linear synthetic cationic polymer is above 0.01% based on the dry weight of the suspension.
3. A process according to claim 1 in which the said amount of the substantially linear synthetic cationic polymer is above 0.03% by weight based on the dry weight of the suspension.
4. A process according to claim 1 in which the said amount of the substantially linear synthetic cationic polymer is above 0.03%, based on the dry weight of the suspension, when the suspension contains at least 0.5%
cationic binder or above 0.06% when the suspension is free of cationic binder or contains cationic binder in an amount o not more than 0.05%.
cationic binder or above 0.06% when the suspension is free of cationic binder or contains cationic binder in an amount o not more than 0.05%.
5. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the said high molecular weight polymer is added before the last point of high shear and the said bentonite is added after the last point of high shear.
6. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the one or more shear stages are selected from centriscreens, fan pumps and mixing pumps.
7. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the one or more shear stages comprises a centriscreen, the synthetic polymer is added to the suspension before the centriscreen and the bentonite is added after the centriscreen.
8. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the synthetic polymer is a cationic polymer selected from polyethylene imine, polyamine epichlorhydrin products, polymers of diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride, and polymers of acrylic monomers comprising a cationic acrylic monomer.
9. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the synthetic polymer is added in an amount of from 0.06 to 0.2%.
10. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the bentonite is added as a hydrated suspension obtained by dispersing powdered bentonite in water.
11. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the bentonite is added in an amount of from 0.03 to 0.5%.
12. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the suspension that is dewatered is substantially free of filler or includes filler substantially all of which was added before the synthetic polymeric material.
13. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the synthetic polymer is a cationic polymer having intrinsic viscosity above 4 dl/g and formed from acrylic monomers comprising dialkylaminoalkyl (meth) -acrylate or -acrylamide (as acid or quaternary salt).
14. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the cationic polymer has a cationic charge density of 0.35 to 2.5 equivalents of nitrogen per kilogram polymer.
15. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which a reactive size is incorporated in the aqueous suspension.
16. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which a reactive size is incorporated in the aqueous suspension and the synthetic polymer and the reactive size are provided as a dispersion of substantially anhydrous particles of the polymer in a substantially anhydrous oil phase comprising the size and this dispersion is mixed into water.
17. A process according to claim 4 comprising forming an aqueous cellulosic suspension selected from suspensions that are substantially unfilled or that contain filler, cleaning the suspension by passage through a centriscreen, draining the suspension to form a sheet and drying the sheet, and in which 0.03 to 0.2% synthetic, substantially linear synthetic cationic polymer is added to the suspension before the centriscreen and 0.03 to 0.5% bentonite is added after the centriscreen, and in which the synthetic polymer is selected from polyethylene imine, polyamine epichlorhydrin products, polymers of diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride, and polymers of acrylic monomers comprising a cationic acrylic monomer.
18. A process according to claim 1 or claim 4 in which the suspension has a solids content of below about 2% at the time the polymer is added to the suspension.
19. A process according to claim 1 comprising forming an aqueous cellulosic suspension selected from suspensions that are substantially unfilled or that contain filler, cleaning the suspension by passage through a centriscreen, draining the suspension to form a sheet and drying the sheet, and in which synthetic, substantially linear synthetic cationic polymer is added to the suspension before the centriscreen in an amount of from about 0.03% to 0.2%, based on the dry weight of the suspension, when the suspension contains at least about 0.5 cationic binder or from about 0.06% to about 0.2% when the suspension is free of cationic binder or contains cationic binder in an amount of not more than about 0.5%, and 0.03 to 0.5%
bentonite is added after the centriscreen, and in which the synthetic polymer is selected from polyethylene imine, polyamine epichlorhydrin products, polymers of diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride, and polymers of acrylic monomers comprising a cationic acrylic monomer.
bentonite is added after the centriscreen, and in which the synthetic polymer is selected from polyethylene imine, polyamine epichlorhydrin products, polymers of diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride, and polymers of acrylic monomers comprising a cationic acrylic monomer.
20. A process according to claim 1, 17 or 19 in which the polymer molecular weight is at least about one million.
21. A process in which paper or paper board is made by forming an aqueous cellulosic suspension, passing the suspension through one or more shear stages selected from cleaning, mixing and pumping stages, to form a sheared suspension suitable for addition thereto of inorganic material comprising bentonite, draining the suspension to form a sheet and drying the sheet characterised in that an organic polymeric material is added to the suspension before one of the said shear stages, said organic polymeric material comprising a substantially linear synthetic cationic polymer having molecular weight above 500,000 which is added to the suspension before that shear stage in an amount such that flocs are formed by the said addition of the polymer and the said flocs are broken by the shearing to form microflocs that resist further degradation by the shearing and that carry sufficient cationic charge to interact with the bentonite to give better retention than is obtainable when adding the polymer alone after the last point of high shear.
22. A process in which paper or paper board is made by forming an aqueous cellulosic suspension, passing the suspension through one or more shear stages selected from cleaning, mixing and pumping stages, draining the suspension to form a sheet and drying the sheet and in which the suspension that is drained includes organic polymeric material added to the suspension before one of the said shear stages and comprising a substantially linear synthetic cationic polymer having molecular weight above 500,000 which is added to the suspension in an amount such that flocs are formed by the said addition of the polymer and the said flocs are broken by the shearing to form microflocs that resist further degradation by the shearing, said process characterized by the addition of inorganic material comprising bentonite after the aforesaid shear stage, said bentonite interacting with cationic charge carried by said microflocs to give better retention than is obtainable when the polymer is added alone after the last point of high shear.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB8602121 | 1986-01-29 | ||
GB868602121A GB8602121D0 (en) | 1986-01-29 | 1986-01-29 | Paper & paper board |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
CA1259153A true CA1259153A (en) | 1989-09-12 |
Family
ID=10592123
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA000528070A Expired CA1259153A (en) | 1986-01-29 | 1987-01-23 | Production of paper and paperboard |
Country Status (13)
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US (1) | US4753710A (en) |
EP (1) | EP0235893B2 (en) |
JP (1) | JPH0615755B2 (en) |
KR (1) | KR950007186B1 (en) |
AT (1) | ATE52558T1 (en) |
AU (1) | AU578857B2 (en) |
CA (1) | CA1259153A (en) |
DE (1) | DE3762638D1 (en) |
ES (1) | ES2015048T5 (en) |
FI (1) | FI83349C (en) |
GB (1) | GB8602121D0 (en) |
NO (1) | NO168959C (en) |
ZA (1) | ZA87558B (en) |
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- 1986-01-29 GB GB868602121A patent/GB8602121D0/en active Pending
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- 1987-01-20 EP EP87300471A patent/EP0235893B2/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1987-01-20 ES ES87300471T patent/ES2015048T5/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1987-01-23 CA CA000528070A patent/CA1259153A/en not_active Expired
- 1987-01-26 ZA ZA87558A patent/ZA87558B/en unknown
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- 1987-01-28 FI FI870367A patent/FI83349C/en not_active IP Right Cessation
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- 1987-01-29 AU AU68118/87A patent/AU578857B2/en not_active Expired
- 1987-01-30 KR KR1019870000743A patent/KR950007186B1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
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AU578857B2 (en) | 1988-11-03 |
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NO168959B (en) | 1992-01-13 |
FI83349C (en) | 1996-08-22 |
KR870007327A (en) | 1987-08-18 |
JPS62191598A (en) | 1987-08-21 |
NO168959C (en) | 1992-04-29 |
ATE52558T1 (en) | 1990-05-15 |
FI870367A (en) | 1987-07-30 |
EP0235893B2 (en) | 1998-03-25 |
KR950007186B1 (en) | 1995-07-03 |
ES2015048B3 (en) | 1990-08-01 |
FI83349B (en) | 1991-03-15 |
JPH0615755B2 (en) | 1994-03-02 |
FI870367A0 (en) | 1987-01-28 |
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