USRE36424E - Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper - Google Patents

Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper Download PDF

Info

Publication number
USRE36424E
USRE36424E US09/012,245 US1224598A USRE36424E US RE36424 E USRE36424 E US RE36424E US 1224598 A US1224598 A US 1224598A US RE36424 E USRE36424 E US RE36424E
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
ink
fibrous suspension
contaminants
pulp
softening
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 - Lifetime
Application number
US09/012,245
Inventor
Jean-Marie Clement
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Family has litigation
First worldwide family litigation filed litigation Critical https://patents.darts-ip.com/?family=11303060&utm_source=google_patent&utm_medium=platform_link&utm_campaign=public_patent_search&patent=USRE36424(E) "Global patent litigation dataset” by Darts-ip is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US09/012,245 priority Critical patent/USRE36424E/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of USRE36424E publication Critical patent/USRE36424E/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21BFIBROUS RAW MATERIALS OR THEIR MECHANICAL TREATMENT
    • D21B1/00Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment
    • D21B1/04Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment by dividing raw materials into small particles, e.g. fibres
    • D21B1/12Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment by dividing raw materials into small particles, e.g. fibres by wet methods, by the use of steam
    • D21B1/30Defibrating by other means
    • D21B1/32Defibrating by other means of waste paper
    • D21B1/325Defibrating by other means of waste paper de-inking devices
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21BFIBROUS RAW MATERIALS OR THEIR MECHANICAL TREATMENT
    • D21B1/00Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment
    • D21B1/04Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment by dividing raw materials into small particles, e.g. fibres
    • D21B1/12Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment by dividing raw materials into small particles, e.g. fibres by wet methods, by the use of steam
    • D21B1/30Defibrating by other means
    • D21B1/32Defibrating by other means of waste paper
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21CPRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE BY REMOVING NON-CELLULOSE SUBSTANCES FROM CELLULOSE-CONTAINING MATERIALS; REGENERATION OF PULPING LIQUORS; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • D21C5/00Other processes for obtaining cellulose, e.g. cooking cotton linters ; Processes characterised by the choice of cellulose-containing starting materials
    • D21C5/02Working-up waste paper
    • D21C5/025De-inking
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02WCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO WASTEWATER TREATMENT OR WASTE MANAGEMENT
    • Y02W30/00Technologies for solid waste management
    • Y02W30/50Reuse, recycling or recovery technologies
    • Y02W30/64Paper recycling

Definitions

  • waste paper is possible only after most of the non cellulosic contaminants have been removed from the fiber mass. These contaminants may have been introduced during the printing steps (carbon black, pigments, ink vehicles, ink fixating polymers, etc. . . ), during converting, (varnishes, coats, binders, wrapping, etc. . . ) and later during the collecting phase (metallic pieces, plastics, soils and dirt of any kind).
  • Removing of the contraries generally occurs based on chronological dimensional sequences, through screening, magnetic separation, first in dry conditions and later in aqueous suspension.
  • the fiber mass is then screened through perforated plates and finer contraries are removed by centrifugal and centripetal cleaners.
  • the ink particles are not substantially removed during the preceding steps, and this operation is achieved in two steps: (a) detaching the ink particles from the fiber surface, through the combined action of chemicals, temperature and mechanical shear forces and (b) removing these particles from the pulp slurry.
  • the contraries including the ink particles are released from the fibers during the defibering phase.
  • the waste paper is treated in a pulper, under alkaline conditions at 50°-60° C. temperature, in order to be well defibered and transformed into a pumpable slurry.
  • An alternative to this process is to operate the pulper in cold conditions, then thicken the pulp above 15% consistency, then heat the pulp with steam at 60° C. introducing at that point the de-inking and bleaching chemicals. The pulp then remains in a reaction tower during 2-3 hours without any mechanical action.
  • the first drawback of these techniques is that all contaminants are submitted to the thermal treatment, including the ones which have low melting points, such as binders, hot melts, plastics and other "stickies". By this way, they become dispersed and cannot be removed any more by the conventional means, and will precipitate again on paper machine elements such as doctor blades, wires, felts, pipe walls, etc. . . , creating operating problems and loss of efficiency.
  • a second drawback is that these ink-releasing techniques have a weak action on the modern inks such as the rotooffset inks, where ink vehicles are made of synthetic resins which form an insoluble polymer on the surface of the fibers.
  • ink vehicles are made of synthetic resins which form an insoluble polymer on the surface of the fibers.
  • xerocopy printed paper and varnished papers where temperatures in the range of 60° C. will provide neither any softening of the ink vehicles nor any weakening of the bondings between the fibers and these vehicles.
  • Ink removing techniques in use to-day are essentially two: floatation and washing.
  • the diluted fiber slurry is intensively mixed with air after a hydrophobe ink collector has been added. Then stock is naturally deaereted and air bubbles collect the ink particles during the upwards travel to the surface. The resulting black foam is then collected and treated separately through centrifuges, then disposed of;
  • the finest dispersed particles are removed through several dilutions and squeezing cycles, generally arranged as a counter-current cascade configuration.
  • the effluent of the first squeezing sequence contains all the free fine ink particles, but also a great quantity of fine cellulosic fibers and most of the mineral fillers, and are sewered and treated according to the local pollution regulations.
  • the flotation is a low consistency process (between 1% and 2%) and thus involves high volumes of pulp, with consequent high investment cost. Also, the nature of this process is essentially physico-chemical and thus its stability is greatly related to the sability of the composition of the waste paper, the type of fibers (chemical or mechanical), the type and content of mineral filler, the calcium ion concentration. Consequently, the brightness of the de-inked pulp shows undesired high fluctuations. These brightness variations are also accompanied by all composition variations coming together with the raw material (waste paper), without any possibility of control or continuous measurement and monitoring.
  • the washing process involves simpler, cleaner, and easier to control equipment, in particular when washing occurs at consistencies between 3% and 15%.
  • M. Calmanti recalls the same principle, where the effluents at a concentration of 0,14% would be selectively floated with the only addition of air, and then totally recycled ahead of the process together with their suspended solids. M. Calmanti nevertheless suggests to install a "quick" flotation, a third flotation, installed ahead of the washing process.
  • the present invention aims to provide a practical and integral industrial process which allows to produce, in a continuous way and starting from a mixture of unselected waste papers, three separate products, namely:
  • a further aim of this invention is to provide a practical and advantageous improved method for de-inking these grades of printed papers and boards which cannot be correctly de-inked by conventional methods.
  • An other aim of this invention is to provide a practical and advantageous method which allows high quality paper and board at high speeds using the low quality waste grades which could not be used for such noble purpose when treated by conventional methods.
  • the invention is also directed to the application of modified and purposely adapted ink removal processes, such as washing, selective separation, flotation, coagulation, filtration, onto the high ink-content slurry produced by the primary ink removal process.
  • modified and purposely adapted ink removal processes such as washing, selective separation, flotation, coagulation, filtration, onto the high ink-content slurry produced by the primary ink removal process.
  • the invention also aims to allow for the use in paper making of the by-products of a washing de-inking process, either on the paper machine which will use the primary pulp, or on a different paper machine.
  • An object of this invention is to provide a to create a constant and controlled composition of the pulp used for paper making, which can be different from the composition of the incoming waste paper mixture. This object is achieved by pumping controlled flows of each one of the two components and mixing them ahead of the paper machine(s) in the desired percentage; the capacities of the chests act as buffers between waste paper and paper machine stock compositions.
  • An other object of this invention is to increase the value of the by-product (the secondary pulp) by the fact that good long fibers can be extracted from the main line in order to optimize the operation both of the selective separation of the ink and of the filtration on fiber mat.
  • a further object of this invention is to accomplish the selective separation of the ink at a stage where this ink is highly concentrated (approximately three times more than in the main pulp), thus increasing the efficiency of the chemicals.
  • An ulterior object of this invention is to achieve the selective separation of the ink (which is the more delicate operation of the whole recycling process), in a satellite circuit of reduced capacity (approximately one third of the flow through the main line), thus being easier to operate and requiring lower investment cost.
  • This invention aims to insure the highest possible constancy of quality of the primary pulp, by the fact that the variations of fines and fillers contents will instantaneously reverberate on the fraction produced by the satellite circuit, which in turn can also be stabilized by mean of a thorough mixing and high retention time in the final buffer chest.
  • the bales of waste paper (1) are loaded into a pulper (2) by means of a loading mechanism, together with the recycled water and eventual caustics in order to bring the pH at values above 7. It is possible but not mandatory to introduce part or all of the quantity of dispersing chemicals required by the ink-releasing action, during the pulping operation.
  • the pulp is then diluted using recycled water and pumped through one or several stages of screens and cleaners (3) in order to release contraries and contaminants from the paper surface, and further remove them from the pulp slurry.
  • this operation has been made in a kneader, also called triturator, which permits the temperature to be brought to the desired value (i.e. above the melting point of the ink vehicles) within few seconds and simultaneously applies very strong shear forces at high consistency and in presence of de-inking agents.
  • a kneader also called triturator
  • the principle of the operation is that at first, the combined actions of ink-releasing chemicals and temperature (90°-130° C.) will soften the ink vehicles and weaken the bondings between the same and the fibers, and then the combined actions of ink-dispersing chemicals and intense shear forces will detach and finely disperse these particles inside the fiber suspension.
  • the high consistency (20-30%) allows to treat very low volumes of pulp in small machines during a very short time (2-3 minutes), .Iadd.for example 1 to 5 minutes or 2 to 10 minutes, .Iaddend.thus avoiding the yellowing of the pulp and increasing the efficiency of the chemicals.
  • This pulp then remains 5 to 20 minutes in a latency chest (6), at a consistency between 2% and 5%. It may then be deflaked (7) in order to thoroughly separate the fibers bundles one from the other, and thus facilitate the ink removal from the slurry.
  • the fibrous suspension finally goes through the ink removal process (8) which can be advantageously composed of multi-stage, counter-current, high consistency washing.
  • the number of stages is choosen according to the quantity of ink to be removed and to the desired final brightness.
  • the extraction of the water is conducted through strains of perforated plates, the dimensions of the openings of which will be selected in order to allow for a given quantity of fibers to be carried away together with the effluent, thus ensuring the optimum operation of both the following ink selective separation process, and the final filtration of the recovered satellite secondary pulp.
  • the effluents from the washing step (8) can advantageously be strained again on one or several fine mesh filters (9).
  • the finest fraction must be sent to a conventional alkaline clarifier (10) and then be disposed of.
  • the clarified fraction is then returned ahead or after the following ink selective separation step (11), according to the operating parameters of this last process (consistency, temperature), and according to the required brightness.
  • ink collectors such as fatty acids or their sodium or calcium soaps can be added, taking care to insure a mixing time of about 5 minutes at a temperature of about 35° to 45° C.
  • the dispersing agent used during the washing step has a negative effect both on the coagulation produced by the collecting agents during the flotation step, and on the drainability (freeness) of the fibrous suspension during the filtration step. It will be good to inactivate or neutralize these agents for example by precipitation with calcium chloride or calcium hydroxide.
  • the precipitation of the sodium silicate will also contribute to increase the brightness of the secondary pulp through the formation of a precipitated mineral filler. It has also been observed that the quantity of mineral fillers removed together with the foam during the flotation step may vary from 30% up to 70% according to the operating parameters of the process: flotation time, temperature, pulp consistency, dosing and type of chemicals.
  • the rejected foam containing the ink is then pumped to centrifuges or filter-presses and disposed of.
  • the loss of solid particles has been observed to be between 10% and 20% of the flow of secondary pulp, which means about 3% to 6% of the total quantity of pulp feeding the washing step (8).
  • the requested concentration for the ink selective separation process is higher (say 0,5% or more) than the maximum concentration which can be given to the effluent of the washing step, some heavy stock can be advantageously extracted from the latency chest (6).
  • the small quantity of long fibers added to the secondary pulp will help in forming the filtering mat in the final filtration step (12).
  • the selective separation of the ink (11) can also be a process based on adsorption of the ink upon the surface of non-soap solids, as recommended by Ira Puddington et Al. in the U.S. Pat. No. 4,076,578.
  • the de-inked slurry leaving the process (11) is then filtered on fibrous mat up to at least 4% consistency, possibly above 10% in order to remove from the final secondary pulp the maximum possible quantity of dissolved salts.
  • this pulp contains a very high quantity of ground-wood fines and fillers (such as mixtures of newsprint and magazine paper)
  • the pH ahead of the filtration step has to be dropped down to values below 8, by addition of sulfuric acid (preferably to aluminum sulfate), under intense mechanical agitation (as could be the suction side of a centrifugal pump), and after some long fibers extracted from the washed final primary pulp has been added to the the satellite slurry to be filtered.
  • the final thickened secondary pulp leaving (12) must then be brought to a pH compatible with the following use by addition of sulfuric acid or aluminum sulfate, always under intense mechanical agitation, and can be stored in a buffer chest according to the final use.
  • the raw material is a mixture of over-issued newspapers and telephone books (white and yellow pages) in a ratio approximately 50/50.
  • the de-inked pulps are used for the production of newsprint and telephone directory papers (white and yellow), on only one high speed paper machine.
  • the pulper has a capacity of 46 m 3 containing 2.700 kg of waste paper. Each batch takes 30 min. Dilution water is coming from the effluent of the thickening process (4) and make-up is made using clear filtrate from the Polydisk filter (12). One percent of sodium hydroxide is added in the pulper together with 1% of a de-inking agent such as Removink L 8001 supplied by Chemicarta SPA, Milano. .Iadd.This pulping step typically is performed at ambient or room temperature. .Iaddend.When this cold pulping operation is finished, the stock is pumped through turboseparator, screens and cleaners, at consistencies starting around 4% and ending at about 0,6%.
  • a de-inking agent such as Removink L 8001 supplied by Chemicarta SPA, Milano. .Iadd.
  • the turboseparator is equipped with a perforated plate having 3 mm. diameter holes and the rejected stock is then sent to a vibrating flat screen also having 3 mm. holes, the rejects of which are disposed of.
  • the accepted stock from the turboseparator is then diluted from 3% down to 1% before it passes through pressurized slotted screens fitted with 0,30 mm. slot width.
  • the rejected stock is processed through a second stage screen having the same slot size, and rejects of the same go to a vibrating flat screen, rejects of which are disposed of.
  • the accepted stock from the first stage of screens is then diluted down to 0,6% consistency and processed through a conventional battery of 4 stages of Triclean cleaners.
  • the light and the heavy rejects of the 4th stage are disposed of.
  • the total loss of both high and low consistency turboseparating, screening and cleaning is varies between 6% and 9% by weight, depending upon the
  • the brightness of the pulp at the end of the treatment is 50°-55° ISO, and freeness is 60°-65° SR.
  • the pulp is then diluted using all the flow of effluents coming from the second stage of washers, then squeezed up to 12% in the first washing stage.
  • These washers are composed of inclined screws (better known as Rice-Barton or Baker's screws), where the pulp is drained under continuous and vigorous agitation through perforated plates having 1,4 mm. diameter holes, in order to produce an effluent having approximately 0,8-1% consistency.
  • the mixture is then processed through one single stage conventional flotation cell, Voith open type, during 15 min..
  • the loss of weight through the cell is 15-20%, which means only 3-4,5% respect to the total quantity of pulp entering the washers.
  • addition of 0,5% to 1% of calcium chloride or calcium hydroxide together with the collector, ahead of the flotation, helps controlling the foam and the ink coagulation when low ash content pulps are processed.
  • the clear filtrate from the Polydisk filter is then totally recycled in order to dilute the stock ahead of the third washing stage and make-up is provided by fresh industrial water which does not contain aluminium ions.
  • the raw material is a mixture of printed continuous stationary , old books and office file, in a ratio 50/50.
  • the de-inked pulp is used to produce, on three distinct paper machines: (a) light weight machine-glazed wrapping papers, (b) fine papers for writing and printing, including wood containing printing grades, (c) stationary and continuous print-out papers.
  • the operation is similar to example (1) up to the thickening step (4), although it is not necessary to add any chemical agent--caustics or de-inking agent--during the pulping step (2).
  • the flotation cell used in this application is a high consistency Swemac type, and heavy stock has been pumped from chest (6) and mixed together with the effluent before the flotation, in order to raise the consistency up to 1,5%.
  • the two lines primary by washing and secondary by flotation
  • This extraction also procures long fibers which will help the final filtration (12).
  • the flotation is then conducted with only 2% of the same collector (Removink F) and the retention time through the cell is only 10 min., thus producing a loss of weight of 10% (which means 5% of the total pulp).
  • the other steps of this application are similar to the ones described in example (1).
  • the raw material is a mixture of low quality printed waste, containing old books, office waste and stationary, and some newspapers and magazines, in variables proportions.
  • the mill has one multiply board machine, and produces high quality folding box board, which can be on-machine coated and must show an excellent multicolour offset printing aptitude.
  • the white top liner is composed of 100% de-inked primary pulp and the underliner uses the secondary pulp, mixed with other pulp.
  • Pulping is conducted in a continuous way with the same parameters as for example 1.
  • the cleaning and screening treatment (3) is simplified and composed of centrifugal high-density cleaners, followed by a turboseparator, working at 3% consistency.
  • the following thickening stage is also simplified and composed of inclined screws producing pulp at 15% consistency, followed by a screw press. The finest contaminants will be detached and better dispersed during the ink-releasing step (5) and then carried away with the effluent during the washing stage. They will remain in the secondary pulp thus contributing to add weight and volume to the board, as the underliner does not need to be particularly cleaned.
  • the operating parameters are the same as for example (1), but the brightness drops down to 46°-48° ISO.
  • the following washing step has only two stages, which are fed at 2,5% consistency.
  • the perforated plates of the inclined screws have 1,6 mm. diameter holes, and it has been found that the characteristics of the effluent are very similar to the one of example 1.
  • the fine cleaning of the primary pulp is achieved with the cleaners and the screens installed ahead of the board machine, which is sufficient to reach the desired quality. It must be said that the contaminants have been thoroughly dispersed in the kneader (5) and most of them have left this primary pulp during the washing step.
  • the satellite circuit is also simplified because the brightness of the underliner has only a third-order influence on the final brightness of the coated board.
  • a brightness of the underliner secondary pulp in the 50° ISO range was sufficient to insure the required brightness 80° ISO of the coated board, providing that the top liner primary pulp has 70° ISO.
  • the flotation time has been reduced below 10 min. and the dosing of the collector has been kept below 2%.

Abstract

A waste paper recycling process relates to the treatment of a mixture of waste paper containing non-cellulosic contraries and printing inks, in order to release the contraries from the fibers and further to separate them from the stock in order to produce re-usable pulp for the production of paper and board.
The invention has to do with new and useful improvements in methods for first removing the non-ink contraries from the fibrous mass and second releasing and then removing the ink particles from the said fibrous mass.
The invention is directed to the treatment of the fiber slurry produced during the ink separation stage, after the ink releasing stage has been applied. One aim of the process is to allow both the use of the fibers and the mineral fillers contained in that slurry, for pulp and board making, and the use the solids-free water contained in the same slurry as the washing liquid in the previous ink-separation treatment, thus closing the fibers and the water circuits.
This process includes chemical and thermo-mechanical treatments, starting under alkaline conditions, which may become neutral at the end of the process.

Description

.Iadd.CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation of reissue application Ser. No. 08/054,951 filed Apr. 27, 1993, entitled METHOD FOR PRODUCING PULP FROM PRINTED UNSELECTED WASTE PAPER, now abandoned, which is a continuation of reissue application Ser. No. 07/600,012, filed Oct. 18, 1990, now abandoned, which is an application for reissue of U.S. Pat. No. 4,780,179 issued Oct. 25, 1988, which .Iaddend..[.This.]. is a continuation of co-pending application Ser. No. 482,623 filed on Apr. 6, 1983, now abandoned.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION AND REVIEW OF THE PRIOR ART
Recycling of waste paper is possible only after most of the non cellulosic contaminants have been removed from the fiber mass. These contaminants may have been introduced during the printing steps (carbon black, pigments, ink vehicles, ink fixating polymers, etc. . . ), during converting, (varnishes, coats, binders, wrapping, etc. . . ) and later during the collecting phase (metallic pieces, plastics, soils and dirt of any kind).
Removing of the contraries generally occurs based on chronological dimensional sequences, through screening, magnetic separation, first in dry conditions and later in aqueous suspension.
The fiber mass is then screened through perforated plates and finer contraries are removed by centrifugal and centripetal cleaners.
The ink particles are not substantially removed during the preceding steps, and this operation is achieved in two steps: (a) detaching the ink particles from the fiber surface, through the combined action of chemicals, temperature and mechanical shear forces and (b) removing these particles from the pulp slurry.
Generally, all the contraries including the ink particles, are released from the fibers during the defibering phase. The waste paper is treated in a pulper, under alkaline conditions at 50°-60° C. temperature, in order to be well defibered and transformed into a pumpable slurry. An alternative to this process is to operate the pulper in cold conditions, then thicken the pulp above 15% consistency, then heat the pulp with steam at 60° C. introducing at that point the de-inking and bleaching chemicals. The pulp then remains in a reaction tower during 2-3 hours without any mechanical action.
The first drawback of these techniques is that all contaminants are submitted to the thermal treatment, including the ones which have low melting points, such as binders, hot melts, plastics and other "stickies". By this way, they become dispersed and cannot be removed any more by the conventional means, and will precipitate again on paper machine elements such as doctor blades, wires, felts, pipe walls, etc. . . , creating operating problems and loss of efficiency.
A second drawback is that these ink-releasing techniques have a weak action on the modern inks such as the rotooffset inks, where ink vehicles are made of synthetic resins which form an insoluble polymer on the surface of the fibers. The same consideration applies for xerocopy printed paper and varnished papers, where temperatures in the range of 60° C. will provide neither any softening of the ink vehicles nor any weakening of the bondings between the fibers and these vehicles.
An other limitation of these techniques is that it is not possible to increase the temperature of the ink releasing step, because the combination of the alkalinity and the temperature during a long time will result in an unacceptable yellowing of the pulp, specially if some groundwood is present in the mixture to be treated.
Ink removing techniques in use to-day are essentially two: floatation and washing.
In flotation, the diluted fiber slurry is intensively mixed with air after a hydrophobe ink collector has been added. Then stock is naturally deaereted and air bubbles collect the ink particles during the upwards travel to the surface. The resulting black foam is then collected and treated separately through centrifuges, then disposed of;
In washing, a very old and well known process, the finest dispersed particles are removed through several dilutions and squeezing cycles, generally arranged as a counter-current cascade configuration. The effluent of the first squeezing sequence contains all the free fine ink particles, but also a great quantity of fine cellulosic fibers and most of the mineral fillers, and are sewered and treated according to the local pollution regulations.
Some other ink removing techniques exist, such as solvent extraction but have not been followed by wide indutrial application, due to high production cost and low quality of the produced pulp.
In the U.S. Pat. No. 4,076,578 Puddington et Al. recall the fundamental concept of de-inking: (a) releasing ink from the paper fiber by mean of chemicothermomechanical treatment and (b) separating of dispersed ink particles from the pulp, then proposes a different method to achieve this goal, through absorption of the ink particles onto the surface of solid particles, followed by the removal of said particles from the pulp, and then removal of the ink from those solids.
Nowadays, none of the above mentioned processes has asserted itself because each of them presents some drawbacks.
The flotation is a low consistency process (between 1% and 2%) and thus involves high volumes of pulp, with consequent high investment cost. Also, the nature of this process is essentially physico-chemical and thus its stability is greatly related to the sability of the composition of the waste paper, the type of fibers (chemical or mechanical), the type and content of mineral filler, the calcium ion concentration. Consequently, the brightness of the de-inked pulp shows undesired high fluctuations. These brightness variations are also accompanied by all composition variations coming together with the raw material (waste paper), without any possibility of control or continuous measurement and monitoring.
To-day, it is generally admitted that the first condition for the good operation of a modern fast papermachine is the constancy of operating parameters, the most important one being the composition of the stock feeding the machine. Unfortunately, it is not possible to control the composition of a waste paper lot as easily as a virgin pulp bale. For this reason, the efficiency decrease of high-speed paper machines using high percentages of flotation de-inked pulp is mainly caused by the uncontrolled variations of the stock composition rather than by the brightness (or de-inking efficiency) variations. This problem can be solved using selected classified waste paper, at a price which makes the de-inked pulp uncompetitive respect to the virgin pulp, assuming that such type of waste is available.
Finally, the flotation process needs to be continuously controlled, on a three shift basis, by highly specialized chemical experts using sophisticated instrumentation and laboratory, thus appreciably increasing the production cost.
The washing process involves simpler, cleaner, and easier to control equipment, in particular when washing occurs at consistencies between 3% and 15%.
This process does not require any specialized control and it is admitted that not only the quality (cleanliness and strength) of the washed pulp is definitely higher than for the floated pulp, but this quality is much more constant and less sensitive to raw material variations of composition, thus offering a higher "runability" of the pulp in the paper machine room.
In fact, the principle of washing on a perforated plate statistically says that elements having a smaller size than the plate openings should pass through the plate. It appears that the variations of composition of the stock to be de-inked (fines, groundwood, mineral fillers) will reverberate on the fraction lost through the plate, giving a final product almost constant in quality, if not in quantity. This principle allows for the use of unselected waste paper, a lower quality product having a much lower cost and higher availability.
On the other hand, this process needs a much higher quantity of water, and produces the equivalent higher quantity of effluents which still contain a great quantity of valuable products, cellulosic short fibers, mineral fillers, mixed together with the undesired ink. Besides that direct loss, it is necessary to consider the indirect cost due to the abatement of the pollution created by the solids contained in the effluents.
In conclusion, it can be said that if flotation de-inking presents high investment and operating cost together with low constancy of the quality of the final product, washing de-inking also shows a high similar cost of the product due to both the intrinsical low yield of the process and the pollution abatement cost.
In order to minimize the negative aspects of each one of these basic processes, their supporters have proposed several combinations of them, keeping in mind to produce only one de-inked pulp starting from one waste paper mixture.
In the French patent application No. 79 19392, M. Fritz Zeeb of Voith Cy. suggests to remove the fine fibers fraction together with the mineral fillers from a flotation de-inked pulp, using screens and strains arranged as washing elements. This process, which is only summarily described without any example, seems to add up both costs and drawbacks of flotation and washing.
In the TAPPI magazne, vol. 63, No. 9, September 1980, M. Lothar Pfalzer of the same Voith Cy., while recalling the same concept (page 116, FIG. 3), specifies that the fine fiber fraction and mineral fillers are centrifugated and then disposed of and lost. It also appears from this publication that the effluent is totally sedimented after having been floculated by addition of aluminum sulfate, but it is also specified that a good dispersion of the ink particles can be obtained at high and well controlled pH. These two statements are rather contradictory and make this concept hardly applicable in practice.
M. Pfalzer also suggests the opposite philosophy (page 114, FIG. 1), which consists of a total flotation followed by a total sedimentation of the effluents of a conventional washing process. For the same reasons as above, which are: the low yield of the washing process, the non-compatibility between ink dispersing high pH and aluminum sulfate sedimentation low pH, the addition of the costs and drawbacks of each individual process, this proposal has not been applied on an industrial scale.
In the French patent application No. 78 29637, M. Calmanti of Montedison Cy. suggests in a more simple way to separate the ink particles from the fine fibers and the mineral fillers contained in the effluents of a washing process, by means of a simplified flotation process where no chemicals are added. It is also stated that the chemicals added at the begining of the process (pulping stage) will also provide for the ink collecting function. In this process, the so called "clarified" effluents which actually contain most of the fibers and mineral fillers lost during the washing step, are totally recycled ahead of the process.
A tentative application of this process had to be quickly abandoned for two reasons. At first, it has not been possible to obtain a satisfactory selective removal of the ink during the flotation, because of the antagonistic functions of the two chemicals mixed together at the pulper: (a) dispersing of the ink needed during washing, (b) coagulation of the ink needed during flotation. So, too much fibers and fillers were floated together with the ink resulting in a quick overloading of the sewer system, and immediate shut down of the plant.
Second, it has not been possible to recirculate continuously ahead of the washers, an effluent which contains most of the fines and fillers lost by the same washers. This total recirculation has quickly resulted in (a) a drop of the brightness due to the poor ink removal efficiency and (b) an unacceptable drop of the hydraulic capacity of the thickening elements. Both can be attributed to the saturation of the circuit with fines and fillers, dimensions of which are of the same order of magnitude than the ink particles.
In the Italian patent application No. 26944 A/80, M. Calmanti recalls the same principle, where the effluents at a concentration of 0,14% would be selectively floated with the only addition of air, and then totally recycled ahead of the process together with their suspended solids. M. Calmanti nevertheless suggests to install a "quick" flotation, a third flotation, installed ahead of the washing process. This configuration does not seem to bring any answer about the two basic previous problems; (a) how is it possible to have the best dispersion together with the best coagulation, (b) how is it possible to avoid the saturation, the clogging of the thickening elements, and the loss of the ink removal efficiency, due to the recirculation of the fines and the fillers together with the effluent.
GOALS OF THE INVENTION
The present invention aims to provide a practical and integral industrial process which allows to produce, in a continuous way and starting from a mixture of unselected waste papers, three separate products, namely:
(a) a totally cleaned and de-inked pulp having constant and controlled brightness and fiber classification, having a very low and constant fillers content;
(b) a totally cleaned and de-inked pulp having a fine fiber classification and a very high fillers content, these two parameters being variable in both quality and quantity;
(c) an effluent which does not practically contain suspended solids, which has not been submitted to any pH reversion, which does not contain any floculation or sedimentation chemical agent, and thus is immediately and totaly re-usable as the dilution and washing liquid during the ink removal step of the de-inking phase.
A further aim of this invention is to provide a practical and advantageous improved method for de-inking these grades of printed papers and boards which cannot be correctly de-inked by conventional methods.
An other aim of this invention is to provide a practical and advantageous method which allows high quality paper and board at high speeds using the low quality waste grades which could not be used for such noble purpose when treated by conventional methods.
The invention is also directed to the application of modified and purposely adapted ink removal processes, such as washing, selective separation, flotation, coagulation, filtration, onto the high ink-content slurry produced by the primary ink removal process.
The invention also aims to allow for the use in paper making of the by-products of a washing de-inking process, either on the paper machine which will use the primary pulp, or on a different paper machine.
An object of this invention is to provide a to create a constant and controlled composition of the pulp used for paper making, which can be different from the composition of the incoming waste paper mixture. This object is achieved by pumping controlled flows of each one of the two components and mixing them ahead of the paper machine(s) in the desired percentage; the capacities of the chests act as buffers between waste paper and paper machine stock compositions.
An other object of this invention is to increase the value of the by-product (the secondary pulp) by the fact that good long fibers can be extracted from the main line in order to optimize the operation both of the selective separation of the ink and of the filtration on fiber mat.
A further object of this invention is to accomplish the selective separation of the ink at a stage where this ink is highly concentrated (approximately three times more than in the main pulp), thus increasing the efficiency of the chemicals.
An ulterior object of this invention is to achieve the selective separation of the ink (which is the more delicate operation of the whole recycling process), in a satellite circuit of reduced capacity (approximately one third of the flow through the main line), thus being easier to operate and requiring lower investment cost.
This invention then aims to insure the highest possible constancy of quality of the primary pulp, by the fact that the variations of fines and fillers contents will instantaneously reverberate on the fraction produced by the satellite circuit, which in turn can also be stabilized by mean of a thorough mixing and high retention time in the final buffer chest.
With these and other aims and objects, the nature of which will become more apparent, a fuller understanding of this invention will be gained by reference to the following detailed description and the appended claims.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The following detailed description, together with the attached schematic flow-sheet, refers to one preferred practical application of the invention, although other procedures can also be applied.
Following the flow-sheet, the bales of waste paper (1) are loaded into a pulper (2) by means of a loading mechanism, together with the recycled water and eventual caustics in order to bring the pH at values above 7. It is possible but not mandatory to introduce part or all of the quantity of dispersing chemicals required by the ink-releasing action, during the pulping operation.
The pulp is then diluted using recycled water and pumped through one or several stages of screens and cleaners (3) in order to release contraries and contaminants from the paper surface, and further remove them from the pulp slurry.
When the de-inked pulp is used for high quality paper production or on high-speed machines, such as light weight coating base or newsprint, this operation must be done in the same way it is done with chemical or mechanical virgin pulps, using the same equipment and operating parameters. In particular, the best results have been obtained through a combination of pressurized slotted screens equipped with 0.3 mm. slot width working at 1% consistency followed by 4 inch size cleaners working at 2,8 bars pressure drop and 0,6% consistency in the first stage.
It is anyhow of paramount importance that the temperature of the stock be kept as low as possible so that the low melting point contaminants will remain rigid and will not extrude through the slotted screens and thus be eliminated by the screens. This pulp is then thickened (4) to the consistency required by the ink releasing process. The effluents produced by this thickening stage can easily be recycled, as they are cold and do not contain much fibers and very little ink. At the beginning of the following ink-releasing step (5) chemicals are mixed together with the fiber suspension. Caustics are added in order to raise the pH up to 9-10, together with oxydizing agent (such as hydrogen peroxide), and stabilizers (such as sodium silicate), and dispersing agents (surfactants, etc. . . ). The basic parameters of this process, - temperature, pressure, specific energy, chemicals dosing - will be determined in order to insure the optimum detachment of the ink particles from the surface of the fibers together with their finest dispersion inside the pulp.
In the following examples, this operation has been made in a kneader, also called triturator, which permits the temperature to be brought to the desired value (i.e. above the melting point of the ink vehicles) within few seconds and simultaneously applies very strong shear forces at high consistency and in presence of de-inking agents.
The principle of the operation is that at first, the combined actions of ink-releasing chemicals and temperature (90°-130° C.) will soften the ink vehicles and weaken the bondings between the same and the fibers, and then the combined actions of ink-dispersing chemicals and intense shear forces will detach and finely disperse these particles inside the fiber suspension. The high consistency (20-30%) allows to treat very low volumes of pulp in small machines during a very short time (2-3 minutes), .Iadd.for example 1 to 5 minutes or 2 to 10 minutes, .Iaddend.thus avoiding the yellowing of the pulp and increasing the efficiency of the chemicals.
This pulp then remains 5 to 20 minutes in a latency chest (6), at a consistency between 2% and 5%. It may then be deflaked (7) in order to thoroughly separate the fibers bundles one from the other, and thus facilitate the ink removal from the slurry.
The fibrous suspension finally goes through the ink removal process (8) which can be advantageously composed of multi-stage, counter-current, high consistency washing. The number of stages is choosen according to the quantity of ink to be removed and to the desired final brightness. The extraction of the water is conducted through strains of perforated plates, the dimensions of the openings of which will be selected in order to allow for a given quantity of fibers to be carried away together with the effluent, thus ensuring the optimum operation of both the following ink selective separation process, and the final filtration of the recovered satellite secondary pulp.
In case a filler-free secondary pulp is desired, the effluents from the washing step (8) can advantageously be strained again on one or several fine mesh filters (9). By this means, it is possible to remove at each filter stage up to 80% of the mineral fillers contained in that slurry. In such a case, the finest fraction must be sent to a conventional alkaline clarifier (10) and then be disposed of. The clarified fraction is then returned ahead or after the following ink selective separation step (11), according to the operating parameters of this last process (consistency, temperature), and according to the required brightness.
The necessary chemicals are also introduced ahead of this step. In case this process is a selective flotation, ink collectors such as fatty acids or their sodium or calcium soaps can be added, taking care to insure a mixing time of about 5 minutes at a temperature of about 35° to 45° C.
It may be worthy to recall that the dispersing agent used during the washing step has a negative effect both on the coagulation produced by the collecting agents during the flotation step, and on the drainability (freeness) of the fibrous suspension during the filtration step. It will be good to inactivate or neutralize these agents for example by precipitation with calcium chloride or calcium hydroxide. The precipitation of the sodium silicate will also contribute to increase the brightness of the secondary pulp through the formation of a precipitated mineral filler. It has also been observed that the quantity of mineral fillers removed together with the foam during the flotation step may vary from 30% up to 70% according to the operating parameters of the process: flotation time, temperature, pulp consistency, dosing and type of chemicals. The rejected foam containing the ink is then pumped to centrifuges or filter-presses and disposed of. The loss of solid particles has been observed to be between 10% and 20% of the flow of secondary pulp, which means about 3% to 6% of the total quantity of pulp feeding the washing step (8).
It has also been observed that the maximum efficiency of the ink removal has been reached at much higher consistencies that the ones recommended by the suppliers of the cells. For example, a cell designed to work at 1% has shown best results between 1,5% and 2%. This peculiarity allows for the treatment of lowest quantities of effluents, using higher consistencies during washing, and larger holes in the extractors perforated plates.
When the requested concentration for the ink selective separation process is higher (say 0,5% or more) than the maximum concentration which can be given to the effluent of the washing step, some heavy stock can be advantageously extracted from the latency chest (6). In this case, the small quantity of long fibers added to the secondary pulp will help in forming the filtering mat in the final filtration step (12).
The selective separation of the ink (11) can also be a process based on adsorption of the ink upon the surface of non-soap solids, as recommended by Ira Puddington et Al. in the U.S. Pat. No. 4,076,578.
The de-inked slurry leaving the process (11) is then filtered on fibrous mat up to at least 4% consistency, possibly above 10% in order to remove from the final secondary pulp the maximum possible quantity of dissolved salts.
In case this pulp contains a very high quantity of ground-wood fines and fillers (such as mixtures of newsprint and magazine paper), the pH ahead of the filtration step has to be dropped down to values below 8, by addition of sulfuric acid (preferably to aluminum sulfate), under intense mechanical agitation (as could be the suction side of a centrifugal pump), and after some long fibers extracted from the washed final primary pulp has been added to the the satellite slurry to be filtered.
It has been observed that the application of equipment such as Polydisk or Waco Filters to the thickening process (12) has permitted to produce clear filtrate having less that 100 ppm suspended solids and consequently totally re-usable in the pulping (2), cleaning (3) and washing (8) processes without any further clarification.
The final thickened secondary pulp leaving (12) must then be brought to a pH compatible with the following use by addition of sulfuric acid or aluminum sulfate, always under intense mechanical agitation, and can be stored in a buffer chest according to the final use.
EXAMPLES
The following examples will illustrate three different applications of the general procedure previously described, using different mixtures of waste paper and producing different grades of paper and board. Measurements of brightness were made with an Elrepho meter with 457 mm. light filter, according to I.S.O. standards. Chemicals dosings are expressed in percent by weight of the chemical at 100% concentration relative to the weight of total solids in the line where said chemical is added. Sodium silicate is considered at 38° Be and the Removink F and L as supplied.
EXAMPLE 1
The raw material is a mixture of over-issued newspapers and telephone books (white and yellow pages) in a ratio approximately 50/50. The de-inked pulps are used for the production of newsprint and telephone directory papers (white and yellow), on only one high speed paper machine.
In this installation, the pulper has a capacity of 46 m3 containing 2.700 kg of waste paper. Each batch takes 30 min. Dilution water is coming from the effluent of the thickening process (4) and make-up is made using clear filtrate from the Polydisk filter (12). One percent of sodium hydroxide is added in the pulper together with 1% of a de-inking agent such as Removink L 8001 supplied by Chemicarta SPA, Milano. .Iadd.This pulping step typically is performed at ambient or room temperature. .Iaddend.When this cold pulping operation is finished, the stock is pumped through turboseparator, screens and cleaners, at consistencies starting around 4% and ending at about 0,6%.
The turboseparator is equipped with a perforated plate having 3 mm. diameter holes and the rejected stock is then sent to a vibrating flat screen also having 3 mm. holes, the rejects of which are disposed of.
The accepted stock from the turboseparator is then diluted from 3% down to 1% before it passes through pressurized slotted screens fitted with 0,30 mm. slot width. The rejected stock is processed through a second stage screen having the same slot size, and rejects of the same go to a vibrating flat screen, rejects of which are disposed of.
The accepted stock from the first stage of screens is then diluted down to 0,6% consistency and processed through a conventional battery of 4 stages of Triclean cleaners. The light and the heavy rejects of the 4th stage are disposed of.
The total loss of both high and low consistency turboseparating, screening and cleaning is varies between 6% and 9% by weight, depending upon the
degree of contamination of the waste paper.
No more stickies or hot melts can be seen in the pulp, and a visual inspection is confirmed by the Sommerville test, which shows less than 0,2% of shives. At that point, the pulp is totally cleaned and the only remaining contaminant is the printing ink. The pulp is then thickened up to 30% consistency in two steps, using a disk filter up to 10-12% and then a screw press up to 30%. Characteristics of the pulp are: brightness=40°-45° ISO, freeness=50°-55° SR, filler content=6-8%, temperature=20°-25° C. The ink releasing step (5) is achieved in a kneader under the following operating conditions: temperature=95°-98° C., sodium hydroxide=1,5% , sodium silicate=4% , hydrogen peroxide=1,8% , specific energy=80 KW.H/Ton during 3 minutes. The brightness of the pulp at the end of the treatment is 50°-55° ISO, and freeness is 60°-65° SR. The pulp is then diluted using all the flow of effluents coming from the second stage of washers, then squeezed up to 12% in the first washing stage.
These washers are composed of inclined screws (better known as Rice-Barton or Baker's screws), where the pulp is drained under continuous and vigorous agitation through perforated plates having 1,4 mm. diameter holes, in order to produce an effluent having approximately 0,8-1% consistency.
The thickened stock is then processed through two other similar counter current washing steps and the final usable pulp presents the following characteristics: brightness=59°-60° ISO, freeness=46°-50° SR, filler content 2-3%, consistency=12-14%. This pulp represents 78% by weight of the quantity of pulp feeding the washers (8). The balance 22% is going to the satellite circuit with the first stage effluent which shows brightness=35°-40° ISO, filler content=20-25%, freeness=80° SR.
The capability for the ink of being removed from the fibers contained in the effluent has beenverified in the laboratory as follows: an effluent sample has been hyperwashed under fresh water shower on a 200 mesh wire ,and a handsheet has been made, showing a brightness of 56° ISO, which is very similar to the brightness of the final primary pulp. This effluent has then been mixed together with 4% of a special ink-collecting agent purposely designed for this application by Chemicarta SPA, Milano, and kept for 5 min. under agitation at 30° C.
The mixture is then processed through one single stage conventional flotation cell, Voith open type, during 15 min.. The loss of weight through the cell is 15-20%, which means only 3-4,5% respect to the total quantity of pulp entering the washers. We have found that addition of 0,5% to 1% of calcium chloride or calcium hydroxide together with the collector, ahead of the flotation, helps controlling the foam and the ink coagulation when low ash content pulps are processed.
The total alkalinity is then dropped down to pH=7-8 with addition of 1% of sulfuric acid on the suction side of the centrifugal pump feeding the disk filter (12). At this point, the pulp shows a brightness=53°-56° ISO, a filler content=15-20% and a freeness=78°-80° SR.
The disk filter (12) is a Polydisk filter sized according to a specific filtering factor=20 liters/min./m2. Besides this unusual value, it is also necessary to feed the mat-peeling showers with air instead of water, in order to reach the maximum possible consistency of the discharged pulp.
Using the above mentioned parameters, a final consistency of 8% to 10% could be obtained and the clear filtrate shown less than 100 ppm average suspended solids, measured on paper filter, black label.
The pulp is then brought to pH=6 and sent to a buffer chest having 8 hours total retention time. From this point, it is then pumped to the mixing chest of the paper machine at controlled flow rates according to the paper grade actually produced and in function of the mean composition of the secondary pulp.
The clear filtrate from the Polydisk filter is then totally recycled in order to dilute the stock ahead of the third washing stage and make-up is provided by fresh industrial water which does not contain aluminium ions.
The application of such a process in a paper mill having one single paper machine offers the following advantages:
(a) possibility to maintain constant freeness and ash content during a grade run, independently from the incoming waste paper characteristics, thus allowing the paper machine to run at maximum speed and efficiency;
(b) possibility to achieve very quick grade change, exactly as whenusing virgin pulp and fillers, without the need to intervene a long time before in the waste paper plant, thus permitting an easier and more constant operation of that plant;
(c) possibility to always use the highest possible quantity of recycled fibers in the paper, by the free disposal of each one of the two fractions and their use in the optimum way.
(d) possibility to produce totally cleaned pulps having the same standards of cleanliness than virgin pulps and thus offering the highest possible runability in the paper machine room, particularly being free of any "sticky" or "hot melt" or ink vehicle free particle.
EXAMPLE 2
The raw material is a mixture of printed continuous stationary , old books and office file, in a ratio 50/50.
The de-inked pulp is used to produce, on three distinct paper machines: (a) light weight machine-glazed wrapping papers, (b) fine papers for writing and printing, including wood containing printing grades, (c) stationary and continuous print-out papers.
The operation is similar to example (1) up to the thickening step (4), although it is not necessary to add any chemical agent--caustics or de-inking agent--during the pulping step (2). When entering the ink-releasing step (5), the pulp has a brightness=60° ISO, a freeness=40°-45° SR, and a filler content=20%.
The ink-releasing equipment is the same as for example (1) but operating parameters are as follow: Removink L8001=0,3%; hydrogen peroxyde=0,5%, sodium hydroxyde=1%, sodium silicate=3%. All other parameters remain unchanged. At the end of the process, the pulp has shown a brightness increase of 2° ISO and freeness did not show any appreciable variation.
The pulp is then washed by mean of three washing stages as for example (1), but the design of the perforated plates are different: the first stage is fitted with 2 mm. diameters holes, the second and the third stages are equipped with 1,4mm. diameter holes. Also the feed consistency of the washing stages is different, being 2,5%. With these parameters, the final washed primary pulp has shown following characteristics: brightness=75° ISO, filler content below 3%, freeness 27°-30° SR.
The effluent leaving the first washers has a consistency between 1% and 1,2%, a filler content=60%, brightness=50° ISO, and freeness=70° SR.
The flotation cell used in this application is a high consistency Swemac type, and heavy stock has been pumped from chest (6) and mixed together with the effluent before the flotation, in order to raise the consistency up to 1,5%. In this way, the two lines (primary by washing and secondary by flotation) have exactly the same solids flow rate, or the same capacity in tons/day, but produce two pulps having opposite characteristics. This extraction also procures long fibers which will help the final filtration (12).
This extraction could have been done using washed pulp and this would have increased the brightness of the secondary pulp. But in such a case, the washing equipment would have to be sized for 30% more capacity, which is not a worthy choice in our case.
The flotation is then conducted with only 2% of the same collector (Removink F) and the retention time through the cell is only 10 min., thus producing a loss of weight of 10% (which means 5% of the total pulp).
After acidification at pH=8 ahead of the disk filter, the pulp shows a brightness=70° ISO, a filler content=35-40%, a freeness=65°-70° SR.
The Polydisk filter can be sized using a filtering factor=25 liters/min./m2, and produces an effluent containing 70-100 ppm suspended solids. The other steps of this application are similar to the ones described in example (1).
The application of such a process in a paper mill having several paper machines as in this example is offering the following advantages:
(a) possibility to produce a pulp having physical and cleanliness characteristics similar to the ones of a virgin chemical pulp, thus usable for the production of fine light weight papers, with good Yankee dryer glazing capabilities;
(b) possibility to produce a pulp having physical and optical characteristics of a mixture of fine chemical and/or ground-wood pulp, and mineral fillers, thus usable for the production of printing papers where high opacity and smoothness are requested.
(c) possibility to mix these two pulps together in a ratio which can be very much different from the original one coming together with the raw material.
EXAMPLE 3
The raw material is a mixture of low quality printed waste, containing old books, office waste and stationary, and some newspapers and magazines, in variables proportions.
The mill has one multiply board machine, and produces high quality folding box board, which can be on-machine coated and must show an excellent multicolour offset printing aptitude. The white top liner is composed of 100% de-inked primary pulp and the underliner uses the secondary pulp, mixed with other pulp.
Pulping is conducted in a continuous way with the same parameters as for example 1. The cleaning and screening treatment (3) is simplified and composed of centrifugal high-density cleaners, followed by a turboseparator, working at 3% consistency. The following thickening stage is also simplified and composed of inclined screws producing pulp at 15% consistency, followed by a screw press. The finest contaminants will be detached and better dispersed during the ink-releasing step (5) and then carried away with the effluent during the washing stage. They will remain in the secondary pulp thus contributing to add weight and volume to the board, as the underliner does not need to be particularly cleaned.
The pulp entering the ink-releasing and dispersing step shows a brightness=50° ISO, a filler content=25-30%. The operating parameters are the same as for example (1), but the brightness drops down to 46°-48° ISO.
The following washing step has only two stages, which are fed at 2,5% consistency. The perforated plates of the inclined screws have 1,6 mm. diameter holes, and it has been found that the characteristics of the effluent are very similar to the one of example 1.
The washed primary pulp shows a brightness=68° ISO, a filler content=4% and a freeness=45°-50° SR. The fine cleaning of the primary pulp is achieved with the cleaners and the screens installed ahead of the board machine, which is sufficient to reach the desired quality. It must be said that the contaminants have been thoroughly dispersed in the kneader (5) and most of them have left this primary pulp during the washing step.
The satellite circuit is also simplified because the brightness of the underliner has only a third-order influence on the final brightness of the coated board. We have observed that a brightness of the underliner secondary pulp in the 50° ISO range was sufficient to insure the required brightness 80° ISO of the coated board, providing that the top liner primary pulp has 70° ISO. Thus, the flotation time has been reduced below 10 min. and the dosing of the collector has been kept below 2%. We have also observed that it was possible to run without any chemical when lower quality grades are produced, but no compromise can be applied on the dispersion effect, because black spots in the underliner are always visible even through the coated top liner.
The application of such a process to the production of stratified board is offering the following advantages:
(a) possibility to totally replace chemical pulp or high quality selected unprinted waste paper by a low value and large availability raw material;
(b) simplification of the main line by eliminating the fine screening and cleaning equipment;
(c) increase of the total yield, by transferring in the secondary pulp (and then in the underliner or in the middle ply) all finely dispersed contaminants which are not acceptable in the top liner.

Claims (20)

I claim:
1. A method of treating a mixture of printed and contaminated waste paper in order to produce a pulp for use in the manufacture of paper and paperboards, said waste paper containing non-ink contaminants including stickies, which method comprises:
(a) forming a first aqueous fibrous suspension of said waste paper at room temperature by applying specific mechanical energy lower that 50 KW.H/Ton to form a pumpable slurry and to release substantially all of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies, from the surface of the paper and without dispersing such non-ink contaminants as finely divided particles throughout the fibrous suspension;
(b) removing substantially all of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies, which have been released without dispersal as finely divided particles from the first fibrous suspension by screening and cleaning at room temperature to form a second aqueous fibrous suspension substantially free of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies;
(c) after the step of removing the non-ink contaminants softening the ink vehicles and weakening their binding with the surface of the fibers by submitting the second fibrous suspension at a consistency of more than 15% to the simultaneous actions of (A) a high temperature between 85° and 130° C., (B) high shear forces substantially corresponding to a specific mechanical energy of more than 50 KW.H/Ton applied at the said consistency of more than 15% and (C) at least one deinking agent under strong alkaline conditions having a pH of at least 9; and
(d) detaching the ink particles from the surface of the fibers and dispersing them into the second fibrous suspension by submitting the second fibrous suspension to the simultaneous actions of (A) high temperature between 85° and 130° C., (B) high shear forces substantially corresponding to a specific mechanical energy of more than 50 KW.H/Ton applied at the said consistency of more that 15% and (C) at least one chemical dispersing agent, under strong alkaline conditions having a pH of at least 9 whereby higher specific energy inputs and higher temperatures are used to detach the ink particles from the fibers of the second fibrous suspension after removal of the non-ink contaminants than are used on the first fibrous suspension before removal of the non-ink contaminants;
(e) limiting the total duration of the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) to a range between 2 and 10 minutes and
(f) removing the detached ink particles from the second fibrous suspension to provide a brightness of at least 59 ISO the final pulp.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the specific energy applied to the fibrous suspension during the forming step (a) is applied for approximately 20 minutes.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) are conducted at a pressure higher than the atmospheric pressure.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the total duration of the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) is kept between 3 and 5 minutes.
5. The method of claim 1 wherein the total specific energy applied during the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) is about 80 KW.H/Ton.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) are performed simultaneously in a single apparatus.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) are performed separately in two different pieces of equipment.
8. The method of claim 1 wherein the removing of the ink particles from the fibrous suspension is achieved by washing.
9. The method of claim 1 wherein the alkalinity of the fibrous suspension in steps (c) and (d) is obtained by adding any one of the following chemicals:
sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, magnesium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, sodium phosphate, sodium tripolyphosphate, sodium pyrophosphate, sodium silicate.
10. The method of claim 1 wherein an oxidizing agent is added during the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d).
11. The method of claim 1 wherein a bleaching action is performed during the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d).
12. The method of claim 1 wherein the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) are performed simultaneously in a triturator.
13. The method of claim 1 wherein the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) are performed simultaneously in a disintegrator.
14. A method of claim 1 wherein the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) are performed separately in a steaming chamber followed by a disperser.
15. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of removing the ink particles from the fibrous suspension is achieved by froth flotation.
16. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of removing the ink particles from the fibrous suspension is achieved by washing and froth flotation.
17. The method of claim 1 wherein the alkalinity of the fibrous suspension in steps (c) and (d) is obtained by adding a mixture of chemicals selected from the group consisting of, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, magnesium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, sodium phosphate, sodium tripolyphosphate, sodium pyrophosphate, sodium silicate.
18. The method of claim 1 wherein the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) are achieved at a consistency between 25% and 30%. .Iadd.
19. A method of treating a mixture of printed and contaminated waste paper in order to produce a pulp for use in the manufacture of paper and paperboards, said waste paper containing non-ink contaminants including stickies, which method comprises:
(a) forming a first aqueous fibrous suspension of said waste paper at ambient temperature by applying specific mechanical energy lower than 50 KW.H/Ton to form a pumpable slurry and to release substantially all of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies, from the surface of the paper and without dispersing such non-ink contaminants as finely divided particles throughout the fibrous suspension;
(b) removing substantially all of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies, which have been released without dispersal as finely divided particles from the first fibrous suspension by screening and cleaning at ambient temperature to form a second aqueous fibrous suspension substantially free of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies;
(c) after the step of removing the non-ink contaminants, softening the ink vehicles and weakening their binding with the surface of the fibers by submitting the second fibrous suspension at a consistency of more than 15% to the simultaneous actions of (A) a high temperature between 85° and 130° C., (B) high shear forces substantially corresponding to a specific mechanical energy of more then 50 KW.H/Ton applied at the said consistency of more than 15% and (C) at least one deinking agent under strong alkaline conditions having a pH of at least 9;
(d) detaching the ink particles from the surface of the fibers and dispersing them into the second fibrous suspension by submitting the second fibrous suspension to the simultaneous actions of (A) high temperature between 85° and 130° C., (B) high shear forces substantially corresponding to a specific mechanical energy of more than 50 KW.H/Ton applied at the said consistency of more than 15% and (C) at least one chemical dispersing agent, under strong alkaline conditions having a pH of at least 9 whereby higher specific energy inputs and higher temperatures are used to detach the ink particles from the fibers of the second fibrous suspension after removal of the non-ink contaminants than are used on the first fibrous suspension before removal of the non-ink contaminants;
(e) limiting the total duration of the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) to a range between about 1 and 5 minutes; and
(f) removing the detached ink particles from the second fibrous suspension to provide a brightness of at least 59 ISO to the final pulp..Iaddend..Iadd.20. A method of treating a mixture of printed and contaminated waste paper in order to produce a pulp for use in the manufacture of paper and paperboards, said waste paper containing non-ink contaminants including stickies, which method comprises:
(a) forming a first aqueous fibrous suspension of said waste paper at a low temperature by applying specific mechanical energy lower than 50 KW.H/Ton to form a pumpable slurry and to release substantially all of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies, from the surface of the paper and without dispersing such non-ink contaminants as finely divided particles throughout the fibrous suspension, the low temperature being sufficiently low to maintain rigidity of non-ink contaminants having a lowest melting point so that the lowest melting point non-ink contaminants will not extrude through screens;
(b) removing substantially all of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies, which have been released without dispersal as finely divided particles from the first fibrous suspension by screening and cleaning at the low temperature to form a second aqueous fibrous suspension substantially free of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies;
(c) after the step of removing the non-ink contaminants softening the ink vehicles and weakening their binding with the surface of the fibers by submitting the second fibrous suspension at a consistency of more than 15% to the simultaneous actions of (A) a high temperature between 85° and 130° C., (B) high shear forces substantially corresponding to a specific mechanical energy of more than 50 KW.H/Ton applied at the said consistency of more than 15% and (C) at least one deinking agent under strong alkaline conditions having a pH of at least 9;
(d) detaching the ink particles from the surface of the fibers and dispersing them into the second fibrous suspension by submitting the second fibrous suspension to the simultaneous actions of (A) high temperature between 85° and 130° C., (B) high shear forces substantially corresponding to a specific mechanical energy of more than 50 KW.H/Ton applied at the said consistency of more than 15% and (C) at least one chemical dispersing agent, under strong alkaline conditions having a pH of at least 9 whereby higher specific energy inputs and higher temperature are used to detach the ink particles from the fibers of the second fibrous suspension after removal of the non-ink contaminants than are used on the first fibrous suspension before removal of the non-ink contaminants;
(e) limiting the total duration of the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) to a range between about 1 and 5 minutes; and
(f) removing the detached ink particles from the second fibrous suspension to provide a brightness of at least 59 ISO to the final
pulp..Iaddend..Iadd.21. A method of treating a mixture of printed and contaminated waste paper in order to produce a pulp for use in the manufacture of paper and paperboards, said waste paper containing non-ink contaminants including stickies, which method comprises:
(a) forming a first aqueous fibrous suspension of said waste paper at a low temperature by applying specific mechanical energy lower than 50 KW.H/Ton to form a pumpable slurry and to release substantially all of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies, from the surface of the paper and without dispersing such non-ink contaminants as finely divided particles throughout the fibrous suspension, the low temperature being sufficiently low to maintain rigidity of non-ink contaminants having a lowest melting point so that the lowest melting point non-ink contaminants will not extrude through screens;
(b) removing substantially all of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies, which have been released without dispersal as finely divided particles from the first fibrous suspension by screening and cleaning at the low temperature to form a second aqueous fibrous suspension substantially free of the non-ink contaminants including the stickies;
(c) after the step of removing the non-ink contaminants softening the ink vehicles and weakening their binding with the surface of the fibers by submitting the second fibrous suspension at a consistency of more than 15% to the simultaneous actions of (A) a high temperature between 85° and 130° C., (B) high shear forces substantially corresponding to a specific mechanical energy of more than 50 KW.H/Ton applied at the said consistency of more than 15% and (C) at least one deinking agent under strong alkaline conditions having a pH of at least 9;
(d) detaching the ink particles from the surface of the fibers and dispersing them into the second fibrous suspension by submitting the second fibrous suspension to the simultaneous actions of (A) high temperature between 85° and 130° C., (B) high shear forces substantially corresponding to a specific mechanical energy of more than 50 KW.H/Ton applied at the said consistency of more than 15% And (C) at least one chemical dispersing agent, under strong alkaline conditions having a pH of at least 9 whereby higher specific energy inputs and higher temperature are used to detach the ink particles from the fibers of the second fibrous suspension after removal of the non-ink contaminants than are used on the first fibrous suspension before removal of the non-ink contaminants;
(e) limiting the total duration of the ink softening and detaching steps (c) and (d) to a range between 2 and 10 minutes; and
(f) removing the detached ink particles from the second fibrous suspension to provide a brightness of at least 59 ISO to the final pulp..Iaddend.
US09/012,245 1982-04-19 1998-01-22 Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper Expired - Lifetime USRE36424E (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US09/012,245 USRE36424E (en) 1982-04-19 1998-01-22 Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper

Applications Claiming Priority (7)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IT67514/82A IT1155310B (en) 1982-04-19 1982-04-19 PROCESS FOR THE RECYCLING PROCESS OF PAPER PRINTED FROM MACERO
IT67514/82 1982-04-19
US48262383A 1983-04-06 1983-04-06
US06/822,943 US4780179A (en) 1982-04-19 1986-01-27 Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper
US60001290A 1990-10-18 1990-10-18
US5495193A 1993-04-27 1993-04-27
US09/012,245 USRE36424E (en) 1982-04-19 1998-01-22 Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper

Related Parent Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US06/822,943 Reissue US4780179A (en) 1982-04-19 1986-01-27 Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper
US5495193A Continuation 1982-04-19 1993-04-27

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
USRE36424E true USRE36424E (en) 1999-12-07

Family

ID=11303060

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US06/822,943 Ceased US4780179A (en) 1982-04-19 1986-01-27 Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper
US09/012,245 Expired - Lifetime USRE36424E (en) 1982-04-19 1998-01-22 Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US06/822,943 Ceased US4780179A (en) 1982-04-19 1986-01-27 Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (2) US4780179A (en)
EP (1) EP0092124B1 (en)
JP (2) JPS58191289A (en)
AT (1) ATE24023T1 (en)
DE (1) DE3368090D1 (en)
IT (1) IT1155310B (en)

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040000383A1 (en) * 2002-05-01 2004-01-01 Henry Chou Process for facilitating the use of high lignin containing waste paper in the manufacture of paper products
EP1591583A1 (en) * 2004-04-26 2005-11-02 Voith Paper Patent GmbH Process for removing impurities by flotation from an aqueous fibrous suspension
US20050279472A1 (en) * 2004-06-18 2005-12-22 Sonoco Products Company Recycled white ticket stock and method of making same
US7074299B2 (en) 2002-05-01 2006-07-11 Fort James Corporation Process for using a phloroglucinol color delta to control blending, deinking and bleaching of groundwood-containing secondary pulp
US20070012208A1 (en) * 2005-07-13 2007-01-18 Byungwoo Cho Offset printing system
US7169257B2 (en) 2003-11-12 2007-01-30 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Method of deinking waste paper using a reduced alkali system
US20080149289A1 (en) * 2003-09-17 2008-06-26 Indiana Ticket Company High Opacity Tickets
US7862685B2 (en) 2006-01-09 2011-01-04 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Method for deinking pulp using premixed hydrophobically modified calcium carbonate particles
US20110108221A1 (en) * 2009-11-11 2011-05-12 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Polyester surfactants for deinking
US20110155334A1 (en) * 2006-01-09 2011-06-30 Kemira Chemical, Inc. Use of Modified Inorganic Particles With Deinking
US8034203B2 (en) 2007-04-13 2011-10-11 United States Gypsum Company Gypsum wallboard with improved nail pull strength and the method for making same

Families Citing this family (47)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
IT1155310B (en) * 1982-04-19 1987-01-28 Jean Marie Clement PROCESS FOR THE RECYCLING PROCESS OF PAPER PRINTED FROM MACERO
FR2603917B1 (en) * 1986-09-15 1991-08-30 Lamort E & M PROCESS AND PLANT FOR PROCESSING OLD PRINTED PAPERS
AU626654B2 (en) * 1989-03-15 1992-08-06 Woodfree Limited Method of de-inking waste paper materials
US5059280A (en) * 1989-07-31 1991-10-22 Kimberly-Clark Corporation Method for removing agglomerated particles after dry fiberizing wastepaper
DE3928842A1 (en) * 1989-08-31 1991-03-14 Henkel Kgaa METHOD FOR FLOTING FUELS FROM AGGREGATE IN THE PRESENCE OF POLYMERS AND / OR COPOLYMERS
FR2664627B1 (en) * 1990-07-12 1995-11-24 Tech Ind Papiers C Centre PROCESS FOR INKING PRINTED PAPERS.
US5302245A (en) * 1991-04-02 1994-04-12 Vps Technology Partnership Integrated wastepaper treatment process
DE69209118T2 (en) * 1991-04-05 1996-11-07 Kao Corp Decolorization composition and decolorization process
US5133832A (en) * 1991-07-08 1992-07-28 The Black Clawson Company Process and system for preparation of waste paper stock with short and long fiber fractionation
IT1251800B (en) * 1991-07-15 1995-05-26 Comer Spa PROCEDURE AND PLANT FOR CLARIFYING WASHING WATERS
DE4133683A1 (en) * 1991-09-20 1993-03-25 Voith Gmbh J M METHOD FOR PROCESSING PRINTED WASTE PAPER
US5518580A (en) * 1991-09-20 1996-05-21 J.M. Voith Gmbh Method of processing printed waste matter
CA2082557C (en) * 1992-02-24 1997-03-11 Charles W. Hankins Integrated pulping process of waste paper yielding tissue-grade paper fibers
NZ247276A (en) * 1992-04-06 1994-12-22 Westvaco Corp Production of papermaking fibre of low lignin content from recycled high lignin waste paper; mixtures with fresh pulp and products produced therefrom
US5637191A (en) * 1992-04-15 1997-06-10 Allied Colloids Limited Treatment of cellulosic material and compositions for use in this
US5340439A (en) * 1992-08-06 1994-08-23 International Paper Company Method for removing ink from printed paper using agglomerating agent, followed by addition of talc
DE4233286A1 (en) * 1992-10-02 1994-04-07 Voith Gmbh J M Process for the treatment of printed waste paper
US5707489A (en) * 1993-05-26 1998-01-13 J.M. Voith Gmbh Processing wastepaper containing waxes, hot melts and adhesives
US5423993A (en) * 1993-08-06 1995-06-13 John A. Boney Fiber recovery system and process
US5520780A (en) * 1993-11-30 1996-05-28 Dxresources Corporation Method and apparatus for de-inking newsprint using counterflow extractor
US5527426A (en) * 1994-01-21 1996-06-18 Westvaco Corporation Magnetic deinking of waste papers
US6001218A (en) * 1994-06-29 1999-12-14 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Production of soft paper products from old newspaper
US6074527A (en) * 1994-06-29 2000-06-13 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Production of soft paper products from coarse cellulosic fibers
US5582681A (en) * 1994-06-29 1996-12-10 Kimberly-Clark Corporation Production of soft paper products from old newspaper
US5512133A (en) * 1994-08-01 1996-04-30 International Paper Company Method for deinking recycled paper using a low flow elongated open top flotation vessel
US5626718A (en) * 1994-09-16 1997-05-06 Betz Laboratories, Inc. Use of polymers in the recycled fiber washing/deinking process
US5882476A (en) * 1995-05-05 1999-03-16 Solvay Minerals, Inc. Deinking printed wastepaper using alkaline solution containing sodium sulfite and sodium carbonate
US6159381A (en) * 1996-04-11 2000-12-12 Bleakley; Ian Stuart Waste paper treatment process
US6296736B1 (en) 1997-10-30 2001-10-02 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Process for modifying pulp from recycled newspapers
DE19806734A1 (en) * 1998-01-23 1998-09-17 Voith Sulzer Papiertech Patent Flotation cleaning of fibre suspensions especially for processing used paper materials, for recycling
ATE237023T1 (en) 1998-01-23 2003-04-15 Voith Paper Patent Gmbh METHOD FOR REMOVAL OF FINE IMPURITIES FROM A FIBER SUSPENSION
US6387210B1 (en) 1998-09-30 2002-05-14 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Method of making sanitary paper product from coarse fibers
FI112805B (en) * 2001-10-10 2004-01-15 Megatrex Oy Process for removing dyes, especially inks from recycled fiber materials
US7279073B2 (en) * 2002-08-13 2007-10-09 U.S. Greenfiber, Llc Apparatus for liquid-based fiber separation
US20080073044A1 (en) * 2002-08-13 2008-03-27 Bowman David J Apparatus for liquid-based fiber separation
FR2861604B1 (en) * 2003-10-29 2007-02-16 Millipore Corp PURIFICATION MODULE OF A FLUID CONTAINING A CLEANING AGENT, AND METHODS OF MAKING AND USING SUCH A MODULE
US20050133172A1 (en) * 2003-12-01 2005-06-23 Robinson Peter M. Deinking system for carbonate pulping
US8133351B2 (en) * 2008-07-09 2012-03-13 Nalco Company Deinking a cellulosic substrate using magnesium hydroxide
DE102007044952A1 (en) * 2007-09-20 2009-04-02 Voith Patent Gmbh Process for treating a paper fiber suspension
EP2112272A1 (en) * 2008-04-24 2009-10-28 Industrial Technology & Services LLC Method and apparatus for the integrated cleaning of a paper-pulp processing plant
JP5266588B2 (en) * 2009-04-07 2013-08-21 デュプロ精工株式会社 Recycled pulp manufacturing apparatus, used paper processing apparatus, and used paper processing method
DE102009047156A1 (en) * 2009-11-26 2011-06-01 Voith Patent Gmbh resolution
FR2963627B1 (en) 2010-08-05 2012-10-05 Kadant Lamort METHOD OF DISENGAGING, AND INSTALLATION FOR ITS IMPLEMENTATION
JP6062662B2 (en) * 2012-06-01 2017-01-18 住友ゴム工業株式会社 Copolymer, rubber composition and pneumatic tire
JP6443291B2 (en) * 2015-10-07 2018-12-26 王子ホールディングス株式会社 Method for producing deinked pulp
JP6635889B2 (en) * 2016-07-15 2020-01-29 日本製紙株式会社 Waste paper pulp manufacturing method
CN107282283B (en) * 2017-07-05 2019-04-12 咸阳非金属矿研究设计院有限公司 Mineral composition fiber wet process deslagging device

Citations (30)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB689278A (en) * 1950-01-30 1953-03-25 Defibrator Ab Improvements in or relating to the production of paper or paper pulp
US2757085A (en) * 1950-11-06 1956-07-31 Ncr Co Method for making paper filled with alumino-silicate
US2859110A (en) * 1956-03-26 1958-11-04 Fibreboard Paper Products Corp Method and apparatus for treatment of waste paper stock
US2916412A (en) * 1953-11-17 1959-12-08 Butler Co Method of deinking waste paper
US3016323A (en) * 1959-03-13 1962-01-09 Butler Paper Corp Paper de-coating and benefaction process and products thereof
US3057769A (en) * 1955-05-16 1962-10-09 Waldorf Paper Prod Co Method of preparing paper of uniform appearance
US3099570A (en) * 1961-07-19 1963-07-30 West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co Filler for paper and method of making the same
US3264169A (en) * 1960-08-29 1966-08-02 Norman A Altmann Method of de-coating paper
US3354026A (en) * 1963-09-05 1967-11-21 Garden State Paper Co Inc De-inking printed waste cellulosic stock
DE1761864A1 (en) * 1968-07-16 1971-09-02 Voith Gmbh J M Method and device for the recovery of fiber material from mixed waste paper
DE2413159A1 (en) * 1973-03-19 1974-10-03 Calor Celsius Ind Ab PROCESS FOR MANUFACTURING PAPER MATERIAL FROM WASTE PAPER AND ASSOCIATED DEVICE
US3849246A (en) * 1972-10-02 1974-11-19 Black Clawson Fibreclaim Inc Recovery of paper fiber from waste material contaminated with grease, wax and/or similar material
JPS5026641B1 (en) * 1970-12-29 1975-09-02
DE2413278A1 (en) * 1974-02-26 1975-09-11 Escher Wyss Gmbh PROCESS FOR SEPARATING PARTICLES WITH DIFFERENT DENSITY AND LARGE SPECIFIC SURFACE AREA FROM FIBER MATERIAL RECOVERED BY DISPOSING WASTE PAPER
US3963560A (en) * 1972-11-01 1976-06-15 Gaf Corporation Composition for deinking waste paper
JPS5220563B1 (en) * 1968-10-19 1977-06-04
US4076578A (en) * 1974-10-21 1978-02-28 Canadian Patents And Development Limited Ink removal from waste paper
GB1525947A (en) * 1974-11-07 1978-09-27 Munksjoe Ab Method and an apparatus for recovering fibres from fibrous material
US4127440A (en) * 1974-07-10 1978-11-28 Edet Aktiebolag Process for purifying waste water obtained by a papermaking process
FR2406692A1 (en) * 1977-10-20 1979-05-18 Montedison Spa COMPOSITION AND METHOD FOR DEENKING PRINTED PAPER WASTE
FR2417580A1 (en) * 1978-02-20 1979-09-14 Centre Tech Ind Papier Treatment of used paper - by dispersing contaminants into pulp by wet mechanical process for later removal, to omit manual sorting operation
GB2017780A (en) * 1978-03-29 1979-10-10 Voith Gmbh Recovering waste paper
FR2433609A1 (en) * 1978-08-18 1980-03-14 Voith Gmbh PROCESS AND DEVICE FOR REMOVING ASH FROM SUSPENSIONS OF FIBROUS MATERIALS IN THE PROCESSING OF OLD PAPERS
JPS5540850A (en) * 1978-09-18 1980-03-22 Oji Paper Co Deinking of printed waste paper
FR2441680A1 (en) * 1978-11-17 1980-06-13 Celleco Ab PROCESS FOR RECOVERING CELLULOSIC FIBERS FROM RAW MATERIAL SUCH AS OLD PAPER
US4360439A (en) * 1977-10-20 1982-11-23 Montedison S.P.A. Composition for the de-inking of printed waste paper by the washing process
US4360402A (en) * 1979-03-27 1982-11-23 J. M. Voith Gmbh Process and apparatus for preparing waste paper for reuse
US4390395A (en) * 1976-10-15 1983-06-28 Interox Process for the regeneration of waste paper
EP0092124A1 (en) * 1982-04-19 1983-10-26 Jean Marie Clement Process for preparing paper pulps from a random mixture of printed waste paper
US4687146A (en) * 1981-05-22 1987-08-18 A. Ahlstrom Osakeyhtio Apparatus for fiberizing and screening of fibrous materials

Family Cites Families (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS5026641A (en) * 1973-07-07 1975-03-19
DE2534819C2 (en) * 1975-08-05 1983-12-15 L. Schuler GmbH, 7320 Göppingen Device for destacking and transporting blanks
JPS54120705A (en) * 1978-03-07 1979-09-19 Jujo Paper Co Ltd Deinking of waste paper
DE3200893C1 (en) * 1982-01-14 1983-06-01 J.M. Voith Gmbh, 7920 Heidenheim Process and plant for the production of cleaned pulp from waste paper

Patent Citations (37)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB689278A (en) * 1950-01-30 1953-03-25 Defibrator Ab Improvements in or relating to the production of paper or paper pulp
FR1031536A (en) * 1950-01-30 1953-06-24 Defibrator Ab Process for preparing paper
US2757085A (en) * 1950-11-06 1956-07-31 Ncr Co Method for making paper filled with alumino-silicate
US2916412A (en) * 1953-11-17 1959-12-08 Butler Co Method of deinking waste paper
US3057769A (en) * 1955-05-16 1962-10-09 Waldorf Paper Prod Co Method of preparing paper of uniform appearance
US2859110A (en) * 1956-03-26 1958-11-04 Fibreboard Paper Products Corp Method and apparatus for treatment of waste paper stock
US3016323A (en) * 1959-03-13 1962-01-09 Butler Paper Corp Paper de-coating and benefaction process and products thereof
US3264169A (en) * 1960-08-29 1966-08-02 Norman A Altmann Method of de-coating paper
US3099570A (en) * 1961-07-19 1963-07-30 West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co Filler for paper and method of making the same
US3354026A (en) * 1963-09-05 1967-11-21 Garden State Paper Co Inc De-inking printed waste cellulosic stock
DE1761864A1 (en) * 1968-07-16 1971-09-02 Voith Gmbh J M Method and device for the recovery of fiber material from mixed waste paper
JPS5220563B1 (en) * 1968-10-19 1977-06-04
JPS5026641B1 (en) * 1970-12-29 1975-09-02
US3849246A (en) * 1972-10-02 1974-11-19 Black Clawson Fibreclaim Inc Recovery of paper fiber from waste material contaminated with grease, wax and/or similar material
US3963560A (en) * 1972-11-01 1976-06-15 Gaf Corporation Composition for deinking waste paper
DE2413159A1 (en) * 1973-03-19 1974-10-03 Calor Celsius Ind Ab PROCESS FOR MANUFACTURING PAPER MATERIAL FROM WASTE PAPER AND ASSOCIATED DEVICE
US3957572A (en) * 1973-03-19 1976-05-18 Mo Ochs Domsjo Ab Process for the manufacture of paper pulp from waste paper
GB1463776A (en) * 1974-02-26 1977-02-09 Escher Wyss Gmbh Processing waste paper
DE2413278A1 (en) * 1974-02-26 1975-09-11 Escher Wyss Gmbh PROCESS FOR SEPARATING PARTICLES WITH DIFFERENT DENSITY AND LARGE SPECIFIC SURFACE AREA FROM FIBER MATERIAL RECOVERED BY DISPOSING WASTE PAPER
US4127440A (en) * 1974-07-10 1978-11-28 Edet Aktiebolag Process for purifying waste water obtained by a papermaking process
US4076578A (en) * 1974-10-21 1978-02-28 Canadian Patents And Development Limited Ink removal from waste paper
CA1078557A (en) * 1974-11-07 1980-06-03 Munksjo Aktiebolag Method and apparatus for recovering fibres from fibrous material
GB1525947A (en) * 1974-11-07 1978-09-27 Munksjoe Ab Method and an apparatus for recovering fibres from fibrous material
US4390395A (en) * 1976-10-15 1983-06-28 Interox Process for the regeneration of waste paper
FR2406692A1 (en) * 1977-10-20 1979-05-18 Montedison Spa COMPOSITION AND METHOD FOR DEENKING PRINTED PAPER WASTE
US4360439A (en) * 1977-10-20 1982-11-23 Montedison S.P.A. Composition for the de-inking of printed waste paper by the washing process
FR2417580A1 (en) * 1978-02-20 1979-09-14 Centre Tech Ind Papier Treatment of used paper - by dispersing contaminants into pulp by wet mechanical process for later removal, to omit manual sorting operation
GB2017780A (en) * 1978-03-29 1979-10-10 Voith Gmbh Recovering waste paper
FR2421241A1 (en) * 1978-03-29 1979-10-26 Voith Gmbh OLD PAPER PROCESSING AND INSTALLATION
GB2030186A (en) * 1978-08-18 1980-04-02 Voith Gmbh J M Removing ash from stock suspension
FR2433609A1 (en) * 1978-08-18 1980-03-14 Voith Gmbh PROCESS AND DEVICE FOR REMOVING ASH FROM SUSPENSIONS OF FIBROUS MATERIALS IN THE PROCESSING OF OLD PAPERS
JPS5540850A (en) * 1978-09-18 1980-03-22 Oji Paper Co Deinking of printed waste paper
FR2441680A1 (en) * 1978-11-17 1980-06-13 Celleco Ab PROCESS FOR RECOVERING CELLULOSIC FIBERS FROM RAW MATERIAL SUCH AS OLD PAPER
GB2036603A (en) * 1978-11-17 1980-07-02 Celleco Ab Recovering cellulose fibres from waste material
US4360402A (en) * 1979-03-27 1982-11-23 J. M. Voith Gmbh Process and apparatus for preparing waste paper for reuse
US4687146A (en) * 1981-05-22 1987-08-18 A. Ahlstrom Osakeyhtio Apparatus for fiberizing and screening of fibrous materials
EP0092124A1 (en) * 1982-04-19 1983-10-26 Jean Marie Clement Process for preparing paper pulps from a random mixture of printed waste paper

Non-Patent Citations (115)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
"A high-consistency deinking system", H. Ortner, Tappi/Oct. 1980, vol. 63, No. 10, pp. 83-86, (K000689-K000692).*
"AFR Documentation", Final Lesson List and Review Status, R. Shaw, as of May 15, 1995, pp. 1-3, (K002374-K002376).*
"An Ideal Deinking Flow Diagram", S. Fahlgren, Tappi/Apr. 1966, vol. 49, No. 4, pp. 95A-96A, (K000670-K00671).*
"Characteristics of Waste Paper Dictate Repulper Requirements", N. Hoch, Paper Trade Journal, Sep. 13, 1971, pp. 80-83, (K000655-K000658).*
"Deinking of Printed Wastepapers by Flotation", F. Raimondo, Tappi/Sep. 1967, vol. 50, No. 9, pp. 69A-74A, (K000705-K000710).*
"Deinking of secondary fibers, A comparison of washing and flotation", L. Pfaizer, Tappi/Sep. 1980, vol. 63, No. 9, pp. 113-116, (K002378-K002381).*
"Dispergierung--eine Notwendigkeit fur grafische Papiere", V. Niggl, Wochenblatt Fur Papierfabrikation, 9, 1993, pp. 324-328, (K002440-K002443).*
"Energy usage in secondary fiber processes", G. Miller, Tappi/Oct. 1980, vol. 63, No. 10, pp. 87-90, (K000659-K000662).*
"Fibreflow-Developments in Defibering of Badly Contaminated Waste Paper", F. Sundman and J. Venbo, Jul. 5'95 FB CISTI Urgent Service, pp. 229-232, (K002427-K002430).*
"Hot pulping of secondary fibers", A.M. Altieri and J.W. Wendell, Jr., Paper Trade Journal, Oct. 23, 1967, p. 59, (K000672).*
"Recycling of Paper", J.J. Forsythe, Tappi/May 1972, vol. 55, No. 5, pp. 679-690, (K000693-K000704).*
"Secondary Fiber for Paperboard--How the Waste Paper is Processed", R. Cunningham, Paper Trade Journal/Sep. 13, 1971, pp. 65-67, (K000667-K000669).*
"Stock Preparation From Secondary Fibers", Dr. I.W. Mueller-Rid and Dr. I.H. Ortner, Paper Industry, Mar. 1965, pp. 50-56, (K000684-K000688).*
"Trends Toward Better Waste Paper Utilization Systems", J. McKela, Paper Trade Journal, Oct. 1, 1962, pp. 40-43, (K000673-K000676).*
"Whiter Waste Paper Use? and What about Deinking?", F. Doane, Paper Trade Journal/Apr. 12, 1971, pp. 38-41, (K000663-K000666).*
A high consistency deinking system , H. Ortner, Tappi/Oct. 1980, vol. 63, No. 10, pp. 83 86, (K000689 K000692).* *
AFR Documentation , Final Lesson List and Review Status, R. Shaw, as of May 15, 1995, pp. 1 3, (K002374 K002376).* *
Ahlstrom Recycled Fiber Systems, Reference List, Fibreflow Drum, Karhula, Apr. 25, 1995, pp. 1 7, (K002150 K002156).* *
Ahlstrom Recycled Fiber Systems, Reference List, Fibreflow Drum, Karhula, Apr. 25, 1995, pp. 1-7, (K002150-K002156).*
An Ideal Deinking Flow Diagram , S. Fahlgren, Tappi/Apr. 1966, vol. 49, No. 4, pp. 95A 96A, (K000670 K00671).* *
Beloit Corporation Deinking Manual, Second Edition, Sep. 1979, (K002506 K002547).* *
Beloit Corporation Deinking Manual, Second Edition, Sep. 1979, (K002506-K002547).*
Burns, "The Deinking Process", The British Ink Maker, Nov. 1974, pp. 25-27.*
Burns, "Waste Paper Preparation Plant and Systems", Paper Technology, Jun./Aug. 1973, pp. 196-205.*
Burns, The Deinking Process , The British Ink Maker, Nov. 1974, pp. 25 27.* *
Burns, Waste Paper Preparation Plant and Systems , Paper Technology, Jun./Aug. 1973, pp. 196 205.* *
Characteristics of Waste Paper Dictate Repulper Requirements , N. Hoch, Paper Trade Journal, Sep. 13, 1971, pp. 80 83, (K000655 K000658).* *
Cody, "What's Going On In Deinking", Pulp & Paper, Nov. 1978, pp. 123-130.*
Cody, What s Going On In Deinking , Pulp & Paper, Nov. 1978, pp. 123 130.* *
de Ceuster, "Hydrogen Peroxide Bleaching in Waste Paper Re-cycling", Paper Technology and Industry, Apr. 1977, pp. 126-132.*
de Ceuster, Hydrogen Peroxide Bleaching in Waste Paper Re cycling , Paper Technology and Industry, Apr. 1977, pp. 126 132.* *
Deinking of Printed Wastepapers by Flotation , F. Raimondo, Tappi/Sep. 1967, vol. 50, No. 9, pp. 69A 74A, (K000705 K000710).* *
Deinking of secondary fibers, A comparison of washing and flotation , L. Pfaizer, Tappi/Sep. 1980, vol. 63, No. 9, pp. 113 116, (K002378 K002381).* *
Dispergierung eine Notwendigkeit fur grafische Papiere , V. Niggl, Wochenblatt Fur Papierfabrikation, 9, 1993, pp. 324 328, (K002440 K002443).* *
Dyer, "De-inking in Finland: first mill on stream, second to make market pulp", Paper Trade Journal, Nov. 1, 1977, pp. 30-33.*
Dyer, De inking in Finland: first mill on stream, second to make market pulp , Paper Trade Journal, Nov. 1, 1977, pp. 30 33.* *
Energy usage in secondary fiber processes , G. Miller, Tappi/Oct. 1980, vol. 63, No. 10, pp. 87 90, (K000659 K000662).* *
Fahey et al., "Defibration and Dispersion of Waste Paper in a Frotapulper® Double Screw Machine", Report No. P 124, Nov. 12, 1986 (K002315-K002373).*
Fahey et al., Defibration and Dispersion of Waste Paper in a Frotapulper Double Screw Machine , Report No. P 124, Nov. 12, 1986 (K002315 K002373).* *
Fibreflow Developments in Defibering of Badly Contaminated Waste Paper , F. Sundman and J. Venbo, Jul. 5 95 FB CISTI Urgent Service, pp. 229 232, (K002427 K002430).* *
Fibreflow removes contaminants, saves chemicals and power in deinking line at tissue mill, S. Rutgvist, F. Sundman and J. Venho, PPI pp. 53 55, Mar. 1977 (K002433 K002435).* *
Fibreflow removes contaminants, saves chemicals and power in deinking line at tissue mill, S. Rutgvist, F. Sundman and J. Venho, PPI pp. 53-55, Mar. 1977 (K002433-K002435).*
Fibreflow, "A New Continuous Method For The Removal of Contraries and Recovery of Fibers From Waste Paper", J. Sainiemi, F. Sundman and J. Vento, Ahlstrom Laboratory 1976 (K002450-K002457).*
Fibreflow, A New Continuous Method For The Removal of Contraries and Recovery of Fibers From Waste Paper , J. Sainiemi, F. Sundman and J. Vento, Ahlstrom Laboratory 1976 (K002450 K002457).* *
Frotapulper , a unique part of our systems for treatment of paper pulps, waste paper and screen rejects, KMW, Frotapulper Reference List, Dec. 11, 1987 (K002265 K002278).* *
Frotapulper Systems in the Production of Pulp and Paper, A New Concept for High Consistency Treatment, KMW, Frotapulper Systems, pp. 1 24, (K002291 K002314).* *
Frotapulper® Systems in the Production of Pulp and Paper, A New Concept for High Consistency Treatment, KMW, Frotapulper Systems, pp. 1-24, (K002291-K002314).*
Frotapulper®, a unique part of our systems for treatment of paper pulps, waste paper and screen rejects, KMW, Frotapulper® Reference List, Dec. 11, 1987 (K002265-K002278).*
Hot pulping of secondary fibers , A.M. Altieri and J.W. Wendell, Jr., Paper Trade Journal, Oct. 23, 1967, p. 59, (K000672).* *
Keszthelvi, "High Consistency Deinking: The Flexible Process", TAPPI 1981 Pulping Conference, pp. 283-297.*
Keszthelvi, High Consistency Deinking: The Flexible Process , TAPPI 1981 Pulping Conference, pp. 283 297.* *
Linck, "The Vario Split, A New Machine For Improving Waste Paper Stocks", Escher Wyss publication, 21/1981, pp. 1-9.*
Linck, The Vario Split, A New Machine For Improving Waste Paper Stocks , Escher Wyss publication, 21/1981, pp. 1 9.* *
Matze, "Deinking--Washing or Flotation?", Wochenblatt Pap. Fab., vol. 104, Oct. 1976, pp. 778-783.*
Matze, Deinking Washing or Flotation , Wochenblatt Pap. Fab., vol. 104, Oct. 1976, pp. 778 783.* *
Nouvelles Techniques, La Papeterie No. 2, 1977, p. 55, (K002377).* *
Ortner, "A High-Consistency Deinking System", TAPPI Journal, V.63, n.10, Oct. 1980, pp. 83-86.*
Ortner, "The ATS-N High-Consistency Deinking System", TAPPI 1979 Pulping Conference, pp. 363-369.*
Ortner, A High Consistency Deinking System , TAPPI Journal, V.63, n.10, Oct. 1980, pp. 83 86.* *
Ortner, The ATS N High Consistency Deinking System , TAPPI 1979 Pulping Conference, pp. 363 369.* *
Paper Technology and Industry, Official Journal of the Technical Division British Paper and Board Industry Federation, vol. 18, No. 3, Mar. 1977, (K002444 K002449).* *
Paper Technology and Industry, Official Journal of the Technical Division British Paper and Board Industry Federation, vol. 18, No. 3, Mar. 1977, (K002444-K002449).*
Pfalzer, "Deinking by Washing or Flotation", TAPPI 1979 Pulping Conference, pp. 3-9.*
Pfalzer, "Deinking of Xerographic and Carbonless Copy Papers", TAPPI Journal, V.62, n.7, Jul. 1979, pp. 27-30.*
Pfalzer, Deinking by Washing or Flotation , TAPPI 1979 Pulping Conference, pp. 3 9.* *
Pfalzer, Deinking of Xerographic and Carbonless Copy Papers , TAPPI Journal, V.62, n.7, Jul. 1979, pp. 27 30.* *
Progress in Defibering Heavily Contaminated Wastepaper, Sundman et al., Tappi/Aug. 1978, vol. 61, No. 8, pp. 73 75, (K002113 K002115).* *
Progress in Defibering Heavily Contaminated Wastepaper, Sundman et al., Tappi/Aug. 1978, vol. 61, No. 8, pp. 73-75, (K002113-K002115).*
Pulp & Paper, Jul. 1977, "Fiberflow--new high--consistency defibering system for wastepaper", (K002406-K002407).*
Pulp & Paper, Jul. 1977, Fiberflow new high consistency defibering system for wastepaper , (K002406 K002407).* *
Pulp and Paper, Jul. 1977, "Fibreflow--new high-consistency defibering system for wastepaper", S. Rutgvist, F. Sundman and J. Venho, pp. 54-55, (K002431-K002432).*
Pulp and Paper, Jul. 1977, Fibreflow new high consistency defibering system for wastepaper , S. Rutgvist, F. Sundman and J. Venho, pp. 54 55, (K002431 K002432).* *
Puusta Paperlin, M 303, Uusiomassan Valmistus, Metsateollisuuden Tvonantajaliitto, 1982 (K004832 K004918).* *
Puusta Paperlin, M-303, Uusiomassan Valmistus, Metsateollisuuden Tvonantajaliitto, 1982 (K004832-K004918).*
R. Lundberg and A. de Ruvo, "The Influence of Defibration and Beating Conditions On the Paper Making Potential of Recycled Paper", Svensk Papperstidning, Nov. 12, 1978 (K002241-K002244).*
R. Lundberg and A. de Ruvo, The Influence of Defibration and Beating Conditions On the Paper Making Potential of Recycled Paper , Svensk Papperstidning, Nov. 12, 1978 (K002241 K002244).* *
R.A. Koffinke et al, "Modern Newsprint System Combines Flotation and Washing Deinking", TAPPI Journal, Feb. 1985, vol. 68, No. 2, pp. 61-63 (K6592-K6594).
R.A. Koffinke et al, Modern Newsprint System Combines Flotation and Washing Deinking , TAPPI Journal, Feb. 1985, vol. 68, No. 2, pp. 61 63 (K6592 K6594). *
R.A. Koffinke et al., "Modern Screening Developments", 1984 Pulping Conference, pp. 539-541 (K6589-K6591).*
R.A. Koffinke et al., Modern Screening Developments , 1984 Pulping Conference, pp. 539 541 (K6589 K6591).* *
R.A. Koffinke, "Coupling Shower to Machine Speed Said to Provide Complete Felt Coverage", Canadian Pulp & Paper Industry, Aug. 1975, pp. 21-22 (K6587-K6588).*
R.A. Koffinke, "Energy Considerations in Deinking Systems", 1981 Pulping Conference, pp. 189-193 (K6558-K6562).*
R.A. Koffinke, "High Consistency Processing System for Wastepaper Offers Advantages", Pulp & Paper, Sep. 1976, pp. 166-168 (K6578-K6580).*
R.A. Koffinke, "High Consistency Pulping Developments", 1983 Pulping Conference, pp. 133-137 (K6553-6557).*
R.A. Koffinke, "High-Consistency Slushing Effective", 1983 conference, reprinted by permission on pp. 58-61 of Pulp & Paper, Mar. 1984 (K6545-K6548).*
R.A. Koffinke, "Improved Deinking Systems Yield Cleaner Stock, Reduced Effluent", Pulp & Paper, Jul. 1981, pp. 159-162 (K6563-6566).*
R.A. Koffinke, "Modern New Print Combination Flotation and Washing Deink System", 1984 Pulping Conference, pp. 43-47 (K6540-K6544).*
R.A. Koffinke, "Pulping Developments in the Secondary Fiber Field", TAPPI Journal, Nov. 1980, vol. 63, No. 11, pp. 51-54 (K6571-K6574), 159-161 (K6575-K6577).*
R.A. Koffinke, "Secondary Fiber Trends Give Impetus to Pressure Screening", Pulp & Paper, Jul. 1975, pp. 116-118 (K6584-K6586).*
R.A. Koffinke, "Stock Prep System Combining High and Low Consistencies Has Advantages", Paper Trade Journal, Nov. 1, 1997, pp. 45-48 (K6581-K6583).*
R.A. Koffinke, "The Feldmuhle/Lamort Vertical Flotation System", 1983 Pulping Conference, pp. 383-386 (K6549-K6552).*
R.A. Koffinke, Coupling Shower to Machine Speed Said to Provide Complete Felt Coverage , Canadian Pulp & Paper Industry, Aug. 1975, pp. 21 22 (K6587 K6588).* *
R.A. Koffinke, Energy Considerations in Deinking Systems , 1981 Pulping Conference, pp. 189 193 (K6558 K6562).* *
R.A. Koffinke, High Consistency Processing System for Wastepaper Offers Advantages , Pulp & Paper, Sep. 1976, pp. 166 168 (K6578 K6580).* *
R.A. Koffinke, High Consistency Pulping Developments , 1983 Pulping Conference, pp. 133 137 (K6553 6557).* *
R.A. Koffinke, High Consistency Slushing Effective , 1983 conference, reprinted by permission on pp. 58 61 of Pulp & Paper, Mar. 1984 (K6545 K6548).* *
R.A. Koffinke, Improved Deinking Systems Yield Cleaner Stock, Reduced Effluent , Pulp & Paper, Jul. 1981, pp. 159 162 (K6563 6566).* *
R.A. Koffinke, Modern New Print Combination Flotation and Washing Deink System , 1984 Pulping Conference, pp. 43 47 (K6540 K6544).* *
R.A. Koffinke, Pulping Developments in the Secondary Fiber Field , TAPPI Journal, Nov. 1980, vol. 63, No. 11, pp. 51 54 (K6571 K6574), 159 161 (K6575 K6577).* *
R.A. Koffinke, Secondary Fiber Trends Give Impetus to Pressure Screening , Pulp & Paper, Jul. 1975, pp. 116 118 (K6584 K6586).* *
R.A. Koffinke, Stock Prep System Combining High and Low Consistencies Has Advantages , Paper Trade Journal, Nov. 1, 1997, pp. 45 48 (K6581 K6583).* *
R.A. Koffinke, The Feldmuhle/Lamort Vertical Flotation System , 1983 Pulping Conference, pp. 383 386 (K6549 K6552).* *
Recycling of Paper , J.J. Forsythe, Tappi/May 1972, vol. 55, No. 5, pp. 679 690, (K000693 K000704).* *
Secondary Fiber for Paperboard How the Waste Paper is Processed , R. Cunningham, Paper Trade Journal/Sep. 13, 1971, pp. 65 67, (K000667 K000669).* *
Stock Preparation From Secondary Fibers , Dr. I.W. Mueller Rid and Dr. I.H. Ortner, Paper Industry, Mar. 1965, pp. 50 56, (K000684 K000688).* *
Technologische und betriebliche Erfahrungen bei der Auflosung von Altpapier mit dem Fibreflow System, J. Hoffman and S. Virea, Wochenblatt Fur Papierfabrikation, Jun. 1983, pp. 177 180,(K002436 K002439).* *
Technologische und betriebliche Erfahrungen bei der Auflosung von Altpapier mit dem Fibreflow-System, J. Hoffman and S. Virea, Wochenblatt Fur Papierfabrikation, Jun. 1983, pp. 177-180,(K002436-K002439).*
The Modomekan System with a Frotapulper for Recycling of Contaminated Waste Paper, Source: 1977 Tappi Alkaline Pulping/Secondary Fibers Conf., R. Lundberg, pp. 233 243, (K002230 K002240).* *
The Modomekan System with a Frotapulper for Recycling of Contaminated Waste Paper, Source: 1977 Tappi Alkaline Pulping/Secondary Fibers Conf., R. Lundberg, pp. 233-243, (K002230-K002240).*
Trends Toward Better Waste Paper Utilization Systems , J. McKela, Paper Trade Journal, Oct. 1, 1962, pp. 40 43, (K000673 K000676).* *
Waste Paper Report, De inking in Finland: first mill on stream, second to make market pulp, H. Dyer, Paper Trade Journal/Nov. 1, 1977, (K002502 K002505).* *
Waste Paper Report, De-inking in Finland: first mill on stream, second to make market pulp, H. Dyer, Paper Trade Journal/Nov. 1, 1977, (K002502-K002505).*
Whiter Waste Paper Use and What about Deinking , F. Doane, Paper Trade Journal/Apr. 12, 1971, pp. 38 41, (K000663 K000666).* *
XIX. Eucepa, 13. 17, Oktober 1980, Munchen, Conference and Exhibition, vol. II No. 20 40, Paper in our world today and tomorrow, (K004798 K004812).* *
XIX. Eucepa, 13.-17, Oktober 1980, Munchen, Conference and Exhibition, vol. II No. 20-40, Paper in our world--today and tomorrow, (K004798-K004812).*

Cited By (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7074299B2 (en) 2002-05-01 2006-07-11 Fort James Corporation Process for using a phloroglucinol color delta to control blending, deinking and bleaching of groundwood-containing secondary pulp
US20040000383A1 (en) * 2002-05-01 2004-01-01 Henry Chou Process for facilitating the use of high lignin containing waste paper in the manufacture of paper products
US8043475B2 (en) 2003-09-17 2011-10-25 Indiana Ticket Company High opacity tickets
US20080149289A1 (en) * 2003-09-17 2008-06-26 Indiana Ticket Company High Opacity Tickets
US7169257B2 (en) 2003-11-12 2007-01-30 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Method of deinking waste paper using a reduced alkali system
US20070107859A1 (en) * 2003-11-12 2007-05-17 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Deinking blends for use in reduced alkali systems
US7767057B2 (en) 2003-11-12 2010-08-03 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Deinking blends for use in reduced alkali systems
EP1591583A1 (en) * 2004-04-26 2005-11-02 Voith Paper Patent GmbH Process for removing impurities by flotation from an aqueous fibrous suspension
US20050279472A1 (en) * 2004-06-18 2005-12-22 Sonoco Products Company Recycled white ticket stock and method of making same
US20070012208A1 (en) * 2005-07-13 2007-01-18 Byungwoo Cho Offset printing system
US20110155334A1 (en) * 2006-01-09 2011-06-30 Kemira Chemical, Inc. Use of Modified Inorganic Particles With Deinking
US7862685B2 (en) 2006-01-09 2011-01-04 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Method for deinking pulp using premixed hydrophobically modified calcium carbonate particles
US8287690B2 (en) 2006-01-09 2012-10-16 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Modified inorganic particles for deinking
US8034203B2 (en) 2007-04-13 2011-10-11 United States Gypsum Company Gypsum wallboard with improved nail pull strength and the method for making same
US20110108221A1 (en) * 2009-11-11 2011-05-12 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Polyester surfactants for deinking
US8317973B2 (en) 2009-11-11 2012-11-27 Kemira Chemical, Inc. Polyester surfactants for deinking
US8524036B2 (en) 2009-11-11 2013-09-03 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Polyester surfactants for deinking
US9404216B2 (en) 2009-11-11 2016-08-02 Kemira Chemicals, Inc. Polyester surfactants for deinking

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE3368090D1 (en) 1987-01-15
IT1155310B (en) 1987-01-28
EP0092124B1 (en) 1986-12-03
ATE24023T1 (en) 1986-12-15
IT8267514A0 (en) 1982-04-19
JPH055292A (en) 1993-01-14
US4780179A (en) 1988-10-25
JPS58191289A (en) 1983-11-08
EP0092124A1 (en) 1983-10-26

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
USRE36424E (en) Method for producing pulp from printed unselected waste paper
US2005742A (en) Process for deinking imprinted paper
KR100244421B1 (en) Integrated pulping process of waste paper yielding tissue-grade paper fibers
EP0576177B1 (en) Recovery and re-use of raw materials from paper mill waste sludge
JP6285479B2 (en) Paper manufacturing method
US8926793B2 (en) Processes for preparing pulp and paper
FI81132B (en) FOERFARANDE FOER FRAMSTAELLNING AV HOEGUTBYTESMASSA.
US5332474A (en) Conversion of pulp and paper mill waste solids to a papermaking filler product
JPS63243390A (en) Method and plant for regenerating old paper
US4324612A (en) Process for the preparation of groundwood pulp
US5895556A (en) Waste paper treatment process
CA1229955A (en) Method for producing pulp stock for paper making from printed unselected waste paper
CA2510463C (en) Process for pulping waste paper containing impurities
KR890000069B1 (en) Process for preparation of waste paper
GB2172525A (en) A method for the processing of waste paper
GB2112830A (en) Upgrading used paper
Holik et al. Stock preparation
KR20000030112A (en) The Method of Recovering UKPs from OCCs for High Quality Kraft Paper and/or Corrugated Container Manufacturing
Young Recovered paper and the US solid waste dilemma
Woodward Controlling contaminants in the production and use of deinked pulp
Engstrand et al. 15 Paper Recycling
JPH05148783A (en) Method for pulping waste paper of heat-sensitive recording chart
Radhakrishnan et al. Investigations on ecofriendly de-inking agents for paper recycling
Nath et al. Review On Technological Advancement In Waste Paper Recycling: A Simple Laboratory Method To Evaluate ONP And Mixed Office Waste By Floatation De-Inking
Silveri Recycling of Paper and Bulk Properties of Recycled Fiber

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
FEPP Fee payment procedure

Free format text: PAT HLDR NO LONGER CLAIMS SMALL ENT STAT AS INDIV INVENTOR (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: LSM1); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

REFU Refund

Free format text: REFUND - PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 4TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: R183); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE