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Surface modification of TiO2 with MPS and its effects on the wettability and physical properties of Kawayan Kiling (Bambusa vulgaris Schrad ex. Wendl) handsheets, TAPPI Jouranl April 2024
ABSTRACT: The need for hydrophobic papers has steadily increased over past years. These papers are often sought after as packaging materials and have high demand in the food industry and medicine. In this study, various concentrations of surface-modified TiO2-MPS were added to Kawayan Kiling (B. vulgaris) pulp at the wet-end section of handsheet formation. Surface-modified TiO2-MPS was made from nano-titanium (IV) oxide using 3-(trimethoxysilyl)propyl methacrylate as a coupling agent. The wettability of handsheets and physical properties were tested using various standard methods. Results reveal that the handsheets without surface-modified TiO2-MPS had the lowest water contact angle (WCA), while the handsheet with 12.34% (w/w) surface-modified TiO2-MPS had the highest WCA. At 17% (w/w) surfacemodified TiO2-MPS, the WCA rapidly declined. Handsheets with surface-modified TiO2-MPS have a rougher surface compared to the handsheets without chemicals and handsheets with unmodified TiO2. This roughness made the handsheet hydrophobic. The handsheet with 12.34% (w/w) unmodified TiO2 has a smoother surface than the control handsheet. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) analysis shows that the handsheet with 12.34% (w/w) unmodified TiO2 contained titanium, while the handsheet with 12.34% (w/w) surface-modified TiO2-MPS contained both titanium and silicon. Generally, the physical properties of handsheets improved with surface-modified TiO2- MPS, especially grammage, bulk thickness, tensile index, and water absorptiveness, which showed statistically significant differences across treatments. The tear index did not differ between treatments.
Journal articles
Magazine articles
The role of hornification in the deterioration mechanism of physical properties of unrefined eucalyptus fibers during paper recycling, TAPPI Journal February 2024
ABSTRACT: Physical properties of cellulosic paper deteriorate significantly during paper recycling, which hinders the sustainable development of the paper industry. This work investigates the property deterioration mechanism and the role of hornification in the recycling process of unrefined eucalyptus fibers. The results showed that during the recycling process, the hornification gradually deepened, the fiber width gradually decreased, and the physical properties of the paper also gradually decreased. After five cycles of reuse, the relative bonding area decreased by 17.6%, while the relative bonding force decreased by 1.8%. Further results indicated that the physical property deterioration of the paper was closely related to the decrease of fiber bonding area. The fiber bonding area decreased linearly with the reduction of re-swollen fiber width during paper recycling. Re-swollen fiber width was closely related to the hornification. Hornification mainly reduces the bonding area of unrefined eucalyptus fiber rather than the bonding force. The work elucidates the role of hornification in the recycling process of unrefined eucalyptus fibers and the deterioration mechanism of paper physical properties, which will be helpful to control the property deterioration of paper and achieve a longer life cycle.
Journal articles
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Modeling the influence of rheology on smooth rod coating systems, TAPPI Journal November 2022
ABSTRACT: Rod coating methods are of interest for the application of barrier coatings, especially at off-line facilities that may run at moderate speeds and narrow web widths. At lower line speeds and lower coating solids, it is difficult to achieve good coat weight control because of poor loading of the rod. While there is extensive literature available about blade and roll coating, there seems to be less reported on the rod loading of smooth rods to obtain various coat weights. Much of the work is around metering rods working on applicator rolls at high speeds that are associated with the metered size press, with a focus on ribbing instabilities. This work employs a simplified model, neglecting some complex features of rubber deformation and film split, to estimate the influence of the process parameters such as speed, rod diameter, viscosity, and rod loading on the coat weight obtained. As found in practice, at low speed and low viscosities, the coat weight-load curve is steep, leading to poor control of the coat weight and coat weight uniformity. If the viscosity is increased, the curve is modified, and control is possible with rod loading in a normal range. For shear thinning fluids described by the Carreau model, the power law index and other parameters need to be in the correct range to obtain the desired effect. Modeling predictions show a steeper dependence of coat weight with rod pressure when compared to pilot coater data. This may be caused by missing details in the mechanical loading of the rod related to tube pressure or from neglecting the impact of filter cake formation of the applied coating in the model.
Journal articles
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Black liquor evaporators upgrade — How many effects?, TAPPI Journal April 2023
ABSTRACT: Black liquor evaporation is generally the most energy intensive unit operation in a pulp and paper manufacturing facility. The black liquor evaporators can represent a third or more of the total mill steam usage, followed by the paper machine and digester. When considering an evaporator rebuild or a new system, the key design question is how many effects to include in the system. The number of effects is the main design feature that deter-mines the economy of the system and the steam usage for a given evaporation capacity. A higher number of effects increases steam economy and reduces energy cost to a point, but additional effects also have higher initial capital cost and increased power costs. This research paper uses life-cycle cost analysis (LCCA) as a method to determine the optimum number of evaporator effects for a new evaporator system. The same basic principles and method can also apply to existing evaporator rebuild projects.
Journal articles
Magazine articles
Creating adaptive predictions for packaging-critical quality parameters using advanced analytics and machine learning, TAPPI Journal November 2019
ABSTRACT: Packaging manufacturers are challenged to achieve consistent strength targets and maximize pro-duction while reducing costs through smarter fiber utilization, chemical optimization, energy reduction, and more. With innovative instrumentation readily accessible, mills are collecting vast amounts of data that provide them with ever increasing visibility into their processes. Turning this visibility into actionable insight is key to successfully exceeding customer expectations and reducing costs. Predictive analytics supported by machine learning can provide real-time quality measures that remain robust and accurate in the face of changing machine conditions. These adaptive quality “soft sensors” allow for more informed, on-the-fly process changes; fast change detection; and process control optimization without requiring periodic model tuning.The use of predictive modeling in the paper industry has increased in recent years; however, little attention has been given to packaging finished quality. The use of machine learning to maintain prediction relevancy under ever-changing machine conditions is novel. In this paper, we demonstrate the process of establishing real-time, adaptive quality predictions in an industry focused on reel-to-reel quality control, and we discuss the value created through the availability and use of real-time critical quality.
Journal articles
Magazine articles
Creasing severity and reverse-side cracking, TAPPI Journal April 2020
ABSTRACT: Crease cracking can be detrimental to the functionality and appearance of paperboard-based packaging. The effect of creasing severity on the degree of reverse-side crease cracking (bead-side of the crease) of paperboard was investigated. Samples were creased with a range of rule and channel geometries, and the cracking degree was quantified as the percent of cracked length relative to the total length of the crease. The cracking degree was typically below 5% at low crease penetration depths, but was exponentially higher beyond a critical penetration depth. A rule and channel combination with a wider clearance shifted the critical depth to larger values. The creasing severity parameter, termed the creasing draw, converged the cracking degree data from different rule and channel combinations to a single curve. The creasing draw was derived from the same analytical expres-sions as the transverse shear strain and quantifies the length of paper that is drawn into the channel during creasing. The critical draw is defined as the draw at which cracking becomes greater than 5%, which corresponds with the point at which cracking becomes exponential. The critical draw is a material/system parameter that defines the level below which cracking is minimal.
Journal articles
Does kraft hardwood and softwood pulp viscosity correlate to
Does kraft hardwood and softwood pulp viscosity correlate to paper properties?, October 2016 TAPPI JOURNAL
Journal articles
Magazine articles
Factors affecting the free shrinkage of handsheets: apparent density, fines content, water retention value, and grammage, TAPPI JOURNAL June 2018
Factors affecting the free shrinkage of handsheets: apparent density, fines content, water retention value, and grammage, TAPPI JOURNAL June 2018
Journal articles
Magazine articles
Stiffness and strength properties of five paperboards and their moisture dependency, TAPPI Journal February 2020
ABSTRACT: Five commercial multiply folding boxboards made on the same paperboard machine have been analyzed. The paperboards were from the same product series but had different grammage (235, 255, 270, 315, 340 g/m2) and different bending stiffness. The paperboards are normally used to make packages, and because the bending stiffness and grammage varies, the performance of the packages will differ. Finite element simulations can be used to predict these differences, but for this to occur, the stiffness and strength properties need to be deter-mined. For efficient determination of the three-dimensional properties in the machine direction (MD), cross direction (CD), and Z direction (ZD), it is proposed that the paperboard should be characterized using in-plane tension, ZD-tension, shear strength profiles, and two-point bending. The proposed setups have been used to determine stiff-ness and strength properties at different relative humidity (20,% 50%, 70%, and 90% RH), and the mechanical proper-ties have been evaluated as a function of moisture ratio.There was a linear relation between mechanical properties and moisture ratio for each paperboard. When the data was normalized with respect to the standard climate (50% RH) and plotted as a function of moisture ratio, it was shown that the normalized mechanical properties for all paperboards coincided along one single line and could therefore be expressed as a linear function of moisture ratio and two constants.Consequently, it is possible to obtain the mechanical properties of a paperboard by knowing the structural properties for the preferred level of RH and the mechanical property for the standard climate (50% RH and 23°C).
Journal articles
Magazine articles
Can carbon capture be a new revenue opportunity for the pulp and paper sector?, TAPPI Journal August 2021
ABSTRACT: Transition towards carbon neutrality will require application of negative carbon emission technologies (NETs). This creates a new opportunity for the industry in the near future. The pulp and paper industry already utilizes vast amounts of biomass and produces large amounts of biogenic carbon dioxide. The industry is well poised for the use of bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), which is considered as one of the key NETs. If the captured carbon dioxide can be used to manufacture green fuels to replace fossil ones, then this will generate a huge additional market where pulp and paper mills are on the front line. The objective of this study is to evaluate future trends and policies affecting the pulp and paper industry and to describe how a carbon neutral or carbon negative pulp and paper production process can be viable. Such policies include, as examples, price of carbon dioxide allowances or support for green fuel production and BECCS implementation. It is known that profitability differs depending on mill type, performance, energy efficiency, or carbon dioxide intensity. The results give fresh understanding on the potential for investing in negative emission technologies. Carbon capture or green fuel production can be economical with an emission trade system, depending on electricity price, green fuel price, negative emission credit, and a mill’s emission profile. However, feasibility does not seem to evidently correlate with the performance, technical age, or the measured efficiency of the mill.