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Colloidal silica and its effects during formation of paper sheets in the presence of nanofibrillated cellulose, cationic starch, and cationic acrylamide copolymer, TAPPI Journal May 2025
ABSTRACT: This work considered effects of colloidal silica addition during laboratory preparation of paper sheets containing nanofibrillated cellulose (NFC) that had been pretreated with cationic starch. The emphasis was on process performance issues, including dewatering rates, fine particle retention, and the extent of fiber flocculation. In addition, micrographs were obtained to show what was happening to the NFC upon treatments with cationic starch and subsequent application of hydrodynamic shear. Contrasting results were obtained, depending on the charge density of the cationic starch. Pretreatment of the NFC with a high charge density cationic starch (degree of substitution 0.2) resulted in strong interactions with the colloidal silica, enhancing the dewatering rate and contributing to fine-particle retention. The medium charge cationic starch pretreatment led to effects suggesting a bridging mechanism of action, and subsequent colloidal silica had no significant effect on dewatering. Treatment of that system with a high level of colloidal silica (0.2%) resulted in lower retention. In general, the final colloidal silica treatments tended to decrease the level of flocculation in the suspensions, giving more uniform handsheets. Mechanisms, some of them related to the clustering and dispersion of cationic starch-treated NFC, were proposed to account for the observed effects.