[0001] The present invention relates to a process for producing paper by adding to an aqueous
fiber suspension, which possibly contains a filler, auxiliary agents to improve retention
and/or dewatering, the auxiliaries being a cationic long-chain polyacrylamide and
an aluminum salt, and by dewatering the fiber suspension during the sheet-forming
stage.
[0002] The invention thus relates to improving retention and dewatering in connection with
the production of paper. By means of retention agents, dispersed or emulsified substances
present in the pulp, such as fillers, resin dispersions, fines, etc., are flocculated,
whereby they are caused to adhere to the paper web. Owing to the high water content
of the pulp it is important that the agents used for improving retention also improve
dewatering in the wire section of the paper-making machine. High dewatering and high
retention are indeed often achieved simultaneously. Dewatering can further be divided
into free dewatering and dewatering produced by means of reduced pressure. These may
be contradictory, and therefore a precise balance is required between these properties.
Since the dewatering of the paper web is most expensive in the drying section of the
paper-making machine, maximal dewatering at as early a stage of the process as possible
is advantageous. The aim in selecting the retention agent is to obtain a maximally
dry paper web both after the wire section and after the press section.
[0003] It is known that many advantages can be gained by combining, in a suitable manner,
polymeric organic and inorganic components when forming a paper web. Advantage is
taken of this commercially by combining a cationic starch and a silica sol in a system
called Compozil. According to the Hydrocol combination, a cationic polymer and an
anionic swelling bentonite are added to the pulp. In patent application SE-8700058-4
(EP-A-276200), a cationic long-chain polysaccharide, mainly starch, is first added
to an alkalized pulp and then an aluminum source, whereupon polymeric aluminum compounds
are formed. It is stated that a synergistic effect is produced in this manner.
[0004] In patent application SE-8501652-5 (US-A-4980025) it is claimed that, by adding to
the pulp first a cationic polyacrylamide instead of a cationic starch or guar gum
and subsequently an anionic silica sol, a clearly improved synergistic effect is achieved,
especially in a pulp which contains large amounts of interfering substances.
[0005] WO-A-91/07543 discloses a process for the production of paper by forming and dewatering
a suspension of cellulose containing fibers and optional fillers on a wire. Three
components are added to the suspension, a cationic starch, a cationic polyacrylamide
and a polymeric silicic acid, in order to improve retention and dewatering at paper
production.
[0006] EP-A-0235893 discloses paper or paper board made by passing an aqueous cellulosic
suspension through a centriscreen or other shear device and then draining the purified
suspension. An improved combination of retention, drainage, drying and formation is
said to be achieved by adding to the suspension an excess of high molecular weight
linear synthetic cationic polymer before shearing the suspension and adding bentonite
after shearing.
[0007] The object of the present invention is to provide a paper production process wherein
paper or board is made from an aqueous suspension containing cellulose fiber and possibly
an inorganic filler by using a chemical combination and batching method which improve
retention and dewatering.
[0008] It is also an object of the invention to provide economical and well-controlled web
formation by the process according to the invention, in particular in a neutral and
alkaline paper production process. The other objects are a clean machine and good
compressibility. Furthermore, the quality properties of the paper must be good.
[0009] These objects have been achieved by the process according to the invention as described
in claim 1. The principal characteristics of further embodiments are given in the
accompanying patent claims 2 to 9.
[0010] The invention is based on the fact that by using a long-chain polyacrylamide and
an aluminum salt, a synergistic effect is achieved by adding to an aqueous fiber suspension,
which possibly contains a filler, first a cationic long-chain polyacrylamide and then,
directly before sheet formation, a polyaluminum salt or a combination which comprises
an aluminum salt and a base or an acid which form
in situ aluminum hydroxide particles having anionic surface charges, in which case the pH
before sheet formation should be within the range 7-9 in order to produce the anionic
surface charges of the aluminum hydroxide.
[0011] According to the invention, it has been observed that a synergistic effect is produced
by a suitable dosage.
[0012] The present invention provides a number of advantages over the commercial systems
and inventions mentioned above. By using a long-chain cationic polyacrylamide, the
process is not tied to polysaccharides, for example starch, which need to be used
in large amounts. Therefore there is the danger that, when passing into the cycled
waters, they cause problems, since they increase the consumption of oxygen in the
water and load the waste water treatment plant. Furthermore, they deteriorate dewatering
in certain conditions. Polysaccharides often also contain anionic substituents, even
though they are cationized. For this reason there may arise interaction with many
different pulp components. At the same time the pH dependency also increases. Also,
it is not possible to control sufficiently well the constancy of the quality of the
polysaccharides, since they are derived from vegetable raw materials. In a cationic
polyacrylamide, it is possible to produce, within very wide limits, the desired chain
length and charge density.
[0013] The known system based on a colloidal silica sol is in general very expensive compared
with the system according to the invention.
[0014] The known system made up of a polymer and bentonite involves certain disadvantages.
It has been noted that bentonite increases the linting and porosity of paper. Its
handling requires precise and rather expensive equipment. Controlling the constancy,
i.e. the formation, of paper with such a system is problematic, and variations in
basis weight may be great.
[0015] According to the invention, it is also possible to add to the fiber suspension cationic
auxiliary chemicals, which may also be polymeric, before the adding of the cationic
polyacrylamide.
[0016] According to the invention, the cationic long-chain polyacrylamide is first added
to the stock, which is thereafter subjected to shear forces. The aluminum salt is
added according to the invention after the shearing stage.
[0017] According to the invention, very good retention and dewatering are achieved without
the formation suffering to the same extent as when conventional retention agents are
used. This is due to the fact that the cationic flocs formed by the cationic long-chain
polyacrylamide are comminuted by shearing forces into "microflocs", which are then,
before web-forming, bound to-gether with the help of aluminum hydroxide particles
which have anionic surface charges. Although these bonds will open in the headbox,
they are largely re-formed on the wire, whereupon the "microflocs" of the web provide
good formation, and the small even-sized pores of the web, which are not clogged owing
to the good retention of fines, provide good dewatering, especially in the press section
and the drying section, and often also improved dewatering at the suction boxes of
the wire.
[0018] In the invention it is possible to use the cationic long-chain polyacrylamide in
amounts which are much larger than when batching the retention agents in the conventional
manner, just before web forming. Overdosage leads in the latter case even to a situation
in which retention is no longer improved or to a situation in which strong flocculation
deteriorates paper formation. According to the invention it is possible to use a 1-to
10-fold excess of cationic long-chain polyacrylamide as compared with normal use.
The amount depends, for example, on the filler content of the pulp and on the cationic
matter contained in the pulp. The amount of long-chain polyacrylamide is preferably
about 0.01-0.2 % of the dry weight of the pulp.
[0019] Normally the amount is over 0.02 %.
[0020] The cationic auxiliary chemical added to the fiber suspension before the cationic
polyacrylamide may be, for example, a dry-strength agent, such as a cationic or amphoteric
starch or guar gum or a cationic or amphoteric short-chain polyacrylamide. It may
also be a wet-strength agent, such as a polyamidamine-epichlorohydrine resin or polyamine-epichlorohydrine
resin. It may also consist of cationic substances, so-called fixer chemicals, which
neutralize and/or bind anionic interfering substances, such as polyethylene-imines,
quaternary polyamines or alum, or polyaluminum chloride.
[0021] These cationic chemicals enhance the action of the cationic long-chain polyacrylamide,
since they reduce the anionic quality of the pulp suspension and prevent interfering
substances from consuming the cationic long-chain polyacrylamide intended for the
flocculation of the fiber suspension. Thus the said cationic chemicals ensure that
the shearing of the flocs in, for example, the pressure sieve or the feeding pump
will result in stable microflocs in the headbox, since they contain a sufficient amount
of cationic polyacrylamide and the surface charge of the microflocs is sufficiently
cationic in order that they react with aluminum hydroxide particles having anionic
charges.
[0022] The amount of these cationic chemicals is preferably approx. 0.01 - 1 % of the dry
weight of the pulp.
[0023] Examples of the cationic long-chain polyacrylamides used in the invention include
the following. Especially advantageous are the copolymers of acrylamide and one or
two cationic unsaturated monomers. Suitable cationic monomers include dialkylamino(met)acrylates
or -(met)acrylamides, in the form of acid salts or quaternary ammonium salts. The
alkyl groups may each contain 1-4 carbon atoms, and the amino alkyl group may contain
1-8 carbon atoms. Dialkylaminoethyl(met)acrylates, dialkyl-aminomethyl(met)acrylamides
and N,N-dialkylamino-propyl(met)-acrylamides and their quaternary salts are preferred
monomers. Other suitable cationic monomers include diallyldialkylammonium chlorides.
The polymer may be either linear or cross-linked or partly cross-linked. In this context,
cationic polyacrylamides also include the homopolymers of cationic acrylic monomers
and the mixed polymers of two or more cationic monomers, at least one of the monomers
being acrylic-based.
[0024] The aluminum salts used in the invention are water-soluble, and they may be aluminum
sulfate, aluminum chloride, aluminum nitrate, or acid aluminum hydrophosphates in
which P:AI = 1.1:1 - 3:1.
[0025] When these aluminum salts or their mixtures are used, a base is added to form aluminum
hydroxide having anionic surface charges. The base used may be, for example, sodium
or potassium hydroxide, sodium or potassium carbonate, sodium or potassium metasilicate,
sodium or potassium waterglasses, sodium or potassium phosphate or borate, or sodium
or potassium aluminate, or mixtures of these.
[0026] Aluminate compounds such as sodium aluminate or potassium aluminate can also be used
as the water-soluble aluminum salts. In this case, acid is added in order to form,
within the pH range 7-9, an aluminum hydroxide having anionic surface charges. The
acid used may be mineral acids such as sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid
or phosphoric acid, or organic acids such as oxalic acid, citric acid or tartaric
acid. The acid used may also be acid aluminum salts such as aluminum sulfate, aluminum
chloride, aluminum nitrate, or various water-soluble aluminum hydrophosphates.
[0027] According to the invention it is also possible to use water-soluble polymeric aluminum
salts, i.e. polyaluminum salts, so-called basic aluminum salts, which are also called
polyaluminum hydroxy salts or aluminum hydroxy salts. According to the invention it
is possible to use as these salts, for example polyaluminum sulfate, polyaluminum
chloride and polyaluminum chloride sulfate. The polyaluminum salt may, in addition
to the chloride and/or sulfate ion, also contain other anions, e.g. phosphate, polyphosphate,
silicate, citrate, oxalate, or several of these.
[0028] Commercially available polymeric aluminum salts of this type include PAC (polyaluminum
chloride), PAS (polyaluminum sulfate), UPAX 6 (silicate-containing polyaluminum chloride),
and PASS (polyaluminum sulfate silicate).
[0029] The net formula of the water-soluble polyaluminum salt may be, for example
n[Al
2(OH)
m/Cl)
6-m]
and its alkalinity may vary so that the m-value ranges from 1 to 5 (alkalinity is
respectively 16 - 83 % according to the formula (m:6) x 100). In this case the ratio
Al/OH is 2:1 - 1:2.5. n is 2 or higher.
[0030] When a polyaluminum compound is used, it is also possible to add a base in order
to optimize the Al/OH ratio, even if all of the polyaluminum compounds in accordance
with the invention do work as such.
[0031] The said base or acid which forms
in situ an aluminum hydroxide with the aluminum salt may be added to the fiber suspension,
for example before the adding of the cationic long-chain polyacrylamide, or just before
the aluminum salt, or after it, or simultaneously with it.
[0032] The aluminum hydroxide may also be formed before the moment of adding, for example
in the adding tube, or in advance in sol form.
[0033] The amount of the aluminum salt, calculated as Al
2O
3, is preferably approx. 0.01-1.0 % of the dry weight of the pulp.
[0034] The paper pulp used may be bleached or unbleached sulfate or sulfite pulp, semichemical
pulp, refiner mechanical pulp, groundwood pulp, or mixtures of these. If a filler
is present, it is preferably ground or precipitated calcium carbonate, but also other
fillers such as kaolin, talc or titanium oxide are possible.
[0035] The invention is described below in greater detail with the help of examples.
[0036] In the tests described, the pH is approx. 8-8.5, normally approx. 8 when a polyaluminum
salt + CaCo
3 or alum + a base are used (the Al:OH ratio being approx. 4.5).
Example 1
[0037] Using a Britt Dynamic Jar as the tester, tests were carried out on a neutral pulp
which was made up of bleached birch pulp and bleached pine pulp at a ratio of 60:40.
The pulp components had been ground to SR values of 20 and 25. The filler was calcium
carbonate, DX-40, 20 % of the dry weight of the pulp. The pH of the pulp was approx.
8. In the tester the pulp was of a typical headbox consistency, i.e. approx. 0.8 %.
After the adding of the retention agent, the pulp was filtered for 30 s, and the ash
content was determined.
[0038] Tests were performed in this example by using the following systems:
System (I):
500 ml of a dilute pulp was placed in the tester, at 1000 rpm. After 10 s, polyacrylamide
A was added for 5 s. After 10 s, 100 ml of filtrate was filtered for approx. 30 min.
System (II):
Pulp was added as in I, but a base had been added to it for controlling the Al/OH
molar ratio approx. 30 min before the pulp was placed in the tester. After the polymer
addition, the rotation speed was increased to 1500 rpm for a period of 20 s, whereafter
it was returned to 1000 rpm, and alum Al2(SO4)3 x 14H2O was added. After 5 s, a filtration was performed as in System I.
System (III):
As System II, but without the addition of a base.
System (IV):
As System II, but without the additions of a base and alum.
System (V):
Was performed in accordance with System II, but without the addition of a base. Instead
of the polyacrylamide, a cationic starch, Raisamyl 135, having a degree of substitution
of 0.035, was added and was mixed in the same manner as the polymer in System II.
Silica sol BMA (Eka Nobel) was used instead of alum.
System (VI):
Was performed as System II, but without the addition of a base to the pulp. Alkali-treated
bentonite was added instead of alum (Hydrocol method).
[0039] The polyacrylamides A and B in the examples are copolymers of acrylamide and methyl-chloride
quaternized dimethylaminoethyl acrylate. Their charge densities and molecular weights
are (A) 1 mequiv./g:7·10
6 and (B) 1.5 mequiv./g:6·10
6.
[0040] Systems I-VI are compared in Table 1.
Table 1
| Test No. |
System |
Polymer/ batch |
Alum kg/t |
Al/OH |
BMA (100%) kg/t |
Bentonite kg/t |
Filler retention %. |
| 1 |
0 test |
|
|
|
|
|
3 |
| 2 |
I |
A 300 g/t |
|
|
|
|
49 |
| 3 |
II (according to inv.) |
A 1000 g/t |
5 |
1:3 |
|
|
63 |
| 4 |
II (according to inv.) |
" |
5 |
1:4.5 |
|
|
61 |
| 5 |
II (according to inv.) |
" |
10 |
1:3 |
|
|
68 |
| 6 |
II (according to inv.) |
" |
10 |
1:4.5 |
|
|
81 |
| 7 |
II (according to inv.) |
" |
10 |
1:6 |
|
|
58 |
| 8 |
III |
" |
5 |
1:0 |
|
|
56 |
| 9 |
III |
" |
10 |
1:0 |
|
|
64 |
| 10 |
II (according to inv.) |
B 1000 g/t |
10 |
1:3 |
|
|
70 |
| 11 |
II (according to inv.) |
" |
10 |
1:4.5 |
|
|
83 |
| 12 |
II (according to inv.) |
B |
10 |
1:6 |
|
|
64 |
| 13 |
III |
" |
10 |
1:0 |
|
|
66 |
| 14 |
IV |
A 1000 g/t |
- |
|
|
|
58 |
| 15 |
IV |
B 1000 g/t |
- |
|
|
|
52 |
| 16 |
V |
Raisamyl 135 5 kg/t |
|
|
2 |
|
48 |
| 17 |
V |
Raisamyl 135 10 kg/t |
|
|
2 |
|
59 |
| 18 |
VI |
Hydrocol 862 500 g/t |
|
|
|
1 |
50 |
| 19 |
VI |
Hydrocol 862 1000 g/t |
|
|
|
2 |
57 |
Example 2
[0041] This example shows that the process according to the invention improves retention
in a paper pulp which contains a cationic pulp starch. The pulp composition is in
other respects similar to that in the previous example. The test series was performed
in a Britt Dynamic Drainage Jar. The batching methods comply with the methods described
in Example 1. The degree of substitution of the cationic starch was 0.035. The starch
was added 15 min before the polyacrylamide, and the NaOH for preliminary alkalization
5 min before the polyacrylamide. In this example, the same polyacrylamides A and B
were used as in Example 1.
| Test No. |
Polymer/ batch kg/t |
Aluminum sulfate kg/t |
OH:Al |
Starch kg/t |
Ash retention % |
Batching method |
| 1 |
A/0.3 |
|
|
|
52 |
I |
| 2 |
A/0.5 |
|
|
|
40 |
IV |
| 3 |
A/0.5 |
|
|
4 |
37 |
IV |
| 4 |
A/0.5 |
5 |
|
4 |
42 |
III |
| 5 |
A/0.5 |
5 |
4.5 |
4 |
48 |
II (according to invention) |
| 6 |
A/0.5 |
5 |
2.25 |
4 |
46 |
II (according to invention) |
| 7 |
A/0.5 |
3 |
4.5 |
4 |
47 |
II (according to invention) |
| 8 |
A/0.5 |
3 |
2.25 |
4 |
44 |
II (according to invention) |
| 9 |
B/0.5 |
|
|
|
39 |
IV |
| 10 |
B/0.5 |
5 |
|
4 |
43 |
III |
| 11 |
B/0.5 |
5 |
4.5 |
4 |
50 |
II (according to invention) |
| 12 |
B/0.5 |
3 |
|
4 |
42 |
III |
| 13 |
B/0.5 |
3 |
4.5 |
4 |
48 |
II (accordin to invention) |
Example 3
[0042] Further retention tests were performed as in the above examples. The aluminum salt
used was aluminum sulfate or a polyaluminum chloride product. The chemical formula
of polyaluminum chloride (PAC) is Al
n(OH)
mCl
(3n-m). It is made up of a number of aluminum nuclei. The pulp was similar to that in the
previous examples. The polyaluminum chloride was batched in a manner similar to that
of aluminum sulfate. The difference was that the pre-alkalization was omitted. The
ratio OH:Al in the following table indicates, in addition to the degree of pre-alkalization,
also the alkalinity of the polyaluminum product.
[0043] The polyacrylamide used was the same polyacrylamide A as in Example 1. The batching
methods were as in Example 1.
| Test No. |
Polymer/ batch kg/t |
Aluminum source 1:Al sulfate 2:PAC kg/t |
OH:Al |
Ash retention % |
Batching method |
| 1 |
0.3 |
|
|
59 |
I |
| 2 |
1.0 |
|
|
57 |
IV |
| 3 |
1.0 |
1/10 |
4.5 |
81 |
II (according to invention) |
| 4 |
1.0 |
2/5.5 |
1.3 |
79 |
III (according to invention) |
| 5 |
1.0 |
2/5.1 |
2 |
84 |
III (according to invention) |
Example 4
[0044] This example shows that the action of polyacrylamide can be enhanced by batching
before it another polymer for binding interfering substances. In this case a short-chain
cationic polymer (QPOL) was added as a so-called fixing agent before the long-chain
polyacrylamide. The product concerned had a particularly high charge density. It was
added 10 min before the polyacrylamide, by stirring slowly. The polyacrylamide was
the same as in Example 2. The batching methods were as in Example 1.
| Test No. |
Polymer/ batch kg/t |
Aluminum sulfate kg/t |
OH:Al |
QPOL kg/t |
Ash retention % |
Batching method |
| 1 |
1.0 |
10 |
4.5 |
- |
52 |
II (according to invention) |
| 2 |
1.0 |
10 |
4.5 |
1.0 |
68 |
II (according to invention) |
Example 5
[0045] The process according to the invention works also when polyaluminum chloride (PAC)
is used as the fixing agent before the polyacrylamide. In this case the test conditions
are similar to those in Example 4, except that, instead of a quaternary polymer (QPOL),
the polyaluminum chloride product used in Example 3 was batched. The batching method
was according to Example 3.
| Test No. |
Polymer/ batch kg/t |
Aluminum sulfate kg/t |
OH:AI |
PAC kg/t |
Ash retention % |
Batching method |
| 1 |
I/1.0 |
10 |
4.5 |
- |
52 |
II (according to invention) |
| 2 |
I/1.0 |
10 |
4.5 |
2.5 |
63 |
II (according to invention) |
Example 6
[0046] By the process according to the invention, good dewatering properties are achieved
with wood-free fine-paper pulp. The pulps and batching methods were in accordance
with Example 1. The dewatering rate was measured by means of a cylindrical tube. At
the other end of the tube there was a wire through which the dewatering took place.
Before filtration, this tube was used for adding the chemicals to the pulp in the
manner described in the previous example, by using a Britt Jar Tester. Thereafter
the pulp was poured into a dewatering cylinder and was filtered. The removed filtrate
was measured as a function of the time. The pulp was of a type similar to that in
the previous examples. In the filtrations, 500 ml of pulp per testing point was used.
| Test No. |
Polymer/ batch kg/t |
Aluminum sulfate (1) PAC (2) |
OH:Al |
BMA a) kg/t |
Bentonite b) kg/t |
Batching method |
Dewatering time s/250 ml |
| 1 |
A/0.3 |
|
|
|
|
I |
45 |
| 2 |
A/1.0 |
|
|
|
|
IV |
38 |
| 3 |
A/1.0 |
(1)10 |
|
|
|
III |
36 |
| 4 |
A/1.0 |
(1)10 |
3 |
|
|
II (according to inv.) |
33 |
| 5 |
aa)C+A+1 |
(1)10 |
4.5 |
|
|
II (according to inv.) |
27 |
| 6 |
bb)D+A/1+1 |
(2)10 |
4.5 |
|
|
II (according to inv.) |
31 |
| 7 |
A/1.0 |
(2)5.1 |
2 |
|
|
III (according to inv.) |
30 |
| 8 |
D+A/1+1 |
(2)5.1 |
2 |
|
|
III (according to inv.) |
30 |
| 9 |
C/10 |
|
|
2 |
|
V |
36 |
| 10 |
E/1.0 |
|
|
|
1 |
VI |
30 |
Polymer
A: Polyacrylamide A, see Example 1
C: Cationic potato starch D.S. 0.035
D: Quaternary polyamine
B: Hydrocol 862 |
| a) silica sol, a commercial product |
| b) alkali-treated bentonite, a commercial product |
| aa) starch added 10 min before the polyacrylamide |
| bb) quaternary polymer added 10 min before the polyacrylamide |
Example 7
[0047] It is shown that the process according to the invention works also when certain other
aluminum salts are used. In this example, polyaluminum salts were used which contained
silica groups in addition to chloride, or sulfate instead of chloride. The fiber composition
in the pulp was similar to that in Example 2. The calcium carbonate concentration
was 30 %. A cationic polyacrylamide was added to the pulp in a Britt Jar Tester, and
it was mixed for 20 s at 1500 min
-1. Thereafter the aluminum salt was added and was mixed for 10 s at 1000 min
-1. In the filtering stage the rotation speed was 750 rpm. The ash retention was calculated
on the basis of the ash contents of the pulp and the filtrate. The molecular weight
of the cationic polyacrylamide was approx. 7 million g/mol and its charge density
1 mequiv./g. Compound A is a silicate-containing polyaluminum chloride and B is polyaluminum
sulfate.
| Test No. |
Polymer/ batch g/t |
Aluminum salt kg/t |
Compound |
Ash retention % |
| 1 |
1000 |
- |
|
47 |
| 2 |
1000 |
2 |
A |
56 |
| 3 |
1000 |
3 |
A |
58 |
| 4 |
1000 |
5 |
A |
71 |
| 5 |
1000 |
2.5 |
B |
74 |
| 6 |
1000 |
5.0 |
B |
77 |
1. A process for producing paper which comprises:
adding to an aqueous fiber suspension which optionally contains a filler, a cationic
long-chain polyacrylamide to form cationic flocs;
subjecting said suspension including polyacrylamide to shearing forces to comminute
said cationic flocs into cationic microflocs;
and then adding to it a polymeric aluminum salt or an aluminum salt, and, if necessary
a base or an acid, in order that the pH is within the range 7 to 9, whereupon aluminum
hydroxy particles having anionic surface charges will be formed in situ;
and directly afterwards forming a sheet from the suspension, the suspension being
dewatered during the sheet-forming stage,
said polyacrylamide and aluminum salt being auxiliary agents for improving retention
and/or dewatering.
2. A process according to claim 1, characterised in that the said fiber suspension may additionally contain one or several cationic auxiliary
agents, which may be dry-strength agents, such as cationic starch,
wet-strength agents, such as polyamidamine-epichlorohydrine resin, and/or
agents, such as polyethylene imine or quaternary polyamines or alum, which neutralize
and/or bind interfering substances.
3. A process according to claim 2, characterised in that said cationic additive or the said cationic additives are added to the said fiber
suspension before the adding of the cationic long-chain polyacrylamide.
4. A process according to any of the above claims, characterised in that the aluminum salt used is aluminum sulfate, aluminum chloride or aluminum nitrate,
in which case a base is added to the fiber suspension in order to form in situ an aluminum hydroxide having anionic surface charges.
5. A process according to claim 4, characterised in that the base is added in such an amount that the Al/OH molar ratio will be within a range
of approx. 1:2-1:5, preferably approx. 1:3.
6. A process according to any of the above claims, characterised in that the polymeric aluminum salt used is a water soluble polyaluminum hydroxy complex
with sulfate and/or chloride.
7. A process according to any of the above claims, characterised in that the polymeric aluminum salt used is a water soluble aluminum hydroxy complex with
sulfate and/or chloride, which complex contains in addition to a sulfate and/or chloride
anion also other anions, such as phosphate, silicate, oxalate or citrate.
8. A process according to any one of the above claims, characterised in that to the fiber suspension there is added the said cationic long-chain polyacrylamide
in an amount of approx. 0.01-0.2% of the dry weight of the pulp.
9. A process according to any of the above claims, characterised in that to the fiber suspension there is added the said polymeric aluminum salt or the said
aluminum salt, calculated as Al2O3, in an amount of approx. 0.01-1.0% of the dry weight of the pulp.
1. Ein Verfahren zur Papierherstellung, welches umfaßt:
- Hinzufügen eines kationischen langkettigen Polyacrylamids zu einer wässrigen Fasersuspension,
die wahlweise einen Füllstoff enthält, zur Bildung von kationischen Flocken;
- Einwirkung von Scherkräften auf die genannte Polyacrylamid enthaltende Suspension,
um die genannten kationischen Flocken zu kationischen Mikroflocken zu zerkleinern;
- und danach Zusatz eines polymeren Aluminiumsalzes oder eines Aluminiumsalzes zu
dieser Suspension, und, falls notwendig, eine Base oder eine Säure, derartig, daß
der pH im Bereich von 7 bis 9 liegt, worauf Aluminiumhydroxypartikel mit anionischen
Oberflächenladungen in situ gebildet werden;
- und direkt danach das Erzeugen einer Papierbahn aus der Suspension, wobei die Suspension
während des papierbahnbildenden Schrittes entwässert wird,
wobei das genannte Polyacrylamid und Aluminiumsalz Hilfsstoffe sind, um die Retention
und/oder das Entwässern zu verbessern.
2. Ein Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die genannte Fasersuspension zusätzlich einen oder mehrere kationische Hilfsstoffe
enthalten kann, die entweder Trockenfestigkeitsmittel sein können, wie kationische
Stärke, Naßfestigkeitsmittel, wie Polyamidin-Epichlorhydrinharz, und / oder Stoffe,
wie Polyethylenimin oder quaternäre Polyamine oder Alaun, welche Störstoffe neutralisieren
und/oder binden.
3. Ein Verfahren nach Anspruch 2, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß der genannte kationische Zusatzstoff oder die genannten kationischen Zusatzstoffe
zu der genannten Fasersuspension vor dem Zusatz des kationischen langkettigen Polyacrylamids
hinzugefügt werden.
4. Ein Verfahren nach einem der vorgenannten Ansprüche, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das verwendete Aluminiumsalz Aluminiumsulfat, Aluminiumchlorid oder Aluminiumnitrat
ist, in welchem Fall eine Base zu der Fasersuspension hinzugefügt wird, um in situ ein Aluminiumhydroxid mit anionischen Oberflächenladungen zu erzeugen.
5. Ein Verfahren nach Anspruch 4, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Base in einer derartigen Menge zugesetzt wird, daß das molare Verhältnis Al/OH
im Bereich von ca. 1:2-1:5 liegt, vorzugsweise von ca. 1:3.
6. Ein Verfahren nach einem der vorgenannten Ansprüche, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das verwendete polymere Aluminiumsalz ein wasserlöslicher Polyaluminiumhydroxy-Komplex
mit Sulfat und/oder Chlorid ist.
7. Ein Verfahren nach einem der vorgenannten Ansprüche, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das verwendete polymere Aluminiumsalz ein wasserlöslicher Polyaluminiumhydroxy-Komplex
mit Sulfat und / oder Chlorid ist, wobei der Komplex zusätzlich zu einem Sulfat- und/oder
Chlorid-Anion auch weitere Anionen enthält, wie z.B. Phosphat, Silicat, Oxalat oder
Citrat.
8. Ein Verfahren nach einem der vorgenannten Ansprüche, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß zu der Fasersuspension das genannte kationische langkettige Polyacrylamid in einer
Menge von ca. 0,01-0,2 % des Trockengewichts der Fasermasse hinzugefügt wird.
9. Ein Verfahren nach einem der vorgenannten Ansprüche, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß zu der Fasersuspension das genannte polymere Aluminiumsalz oder das genannte Aluminiumsalz
hinzugefügt wird, berechnet als Al2O3, in einer Menge von ca. 0,01-1,0 % des Trockengewichts der Fasermasse.
1. Procédé de production de papier, qui comprend :
- l'addition, à une suspension aqueuse de fibres qui contient éventuellement une charge,
d'un polyacrylamide cationique à longue chaîne pour former des flocs cationiques ;
- la soumission de ladite suspension, comprenant un polyacrylamide, à des forces de
cisaillement, pour pulvériser lesdits flocs cationiques en microflocs ;
- puis l'addition à celle-ci d'un sel d'aluminium polymère ou d'un sel d'aluminium
et, si nécessaire, d'une base ou d'un acide, pour que le pH soit compris dans l'intervalle
de 7 à 9, après quoi des particules d'hydroxyde d'aluminium possédant des charges
anioniques en surface vont se former in situ ;
- et, immédiatement ensuite, la formation d'une feuille à partir de la suspension,
la suspension étant déshumidifiée pendant le stade de formation de la feuille,
ledit polyacrylamide et ledit sel d'aluminium étant des agents auxiliaires pour
améliorer la rétention et/ou la déshumidification.
2. Procédé selon la revendication 1, caractérisé en ce que ladite suspension de fibres peut contenir en outre un ou plusieurs agents auxiliaires
cationiques, qui peuvent être des agents de résistance à sec, tels qu'un amidon cationique,
des agents de résistance à l'état humide, tels qu'une résine de polyamidamine-épichlorhydrine,
et/ou
des agents, tels que la polyéthyléne imine, ou les polyamines quaternaires ou l'alun,
qui neutralisent et/ou fixent des substances qui interfèrent.
3. Procédé selon la revendication 2, caractérisé en ce que ledit additif cationique ou lesdits additifs cationiques sont ajoutés à ladite suspension
de fibres avant addition du polyacrylamide cationique à longue chaîne.
4. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, caractérisé en ce que le sel d'aluminium utilisé est le sulfate d'aluminium, le chlorure d'aluminium ou
le nitrate d'aluminium, auquel cas une base est ajoutée à la suspension de fibres
pour former in situ un hydroxyde d'aluminium ayant des charges anioniques en surface.
5. Procédé selon la revendication 4, caractérisé en ce que la base est ajoutée en une quantité telle que le rapport en moles AI/OH soit compris
dans l'intervalle d'environ 1:2-1:5 et de préférence d'environ 1:3.
6. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, caractérisé en ce que le sel d'aluminium polymère utilisé est un complexe soluble de polyhydroxyde d'aluminium
avec un sulfate et/ou un chlorure.
7. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes caractérisé en ce que le sel d'aluminium polymère utilisé est un complexe d'hydroxyde d'aluminium soluble
dans l'eau avec un sulfate et/ou un chlorure, lequel complexe contient en plus d'un
anion sulfate et/ou chlorure également d'autres anions, tels que des anions phosphate,
silicate, oxalate ou citrate.
8. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, caractérisé en ce qu'on ajoute à la suspension de fibres ledit polyacrylamide cationique à longue chaîne
en une quantité d'approximativement 0,0 1 à 0,2 % du poids sec de la pâte.
9. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, caractérisé en ce qu'on ajoute à la suspension de fibres ledit sel d'aluminium polymère ou ledit sel d'aluminium
en une quantité, calculée en Al2O3, d'environ 0,0 1 - 1,0 % du poids sec de la pâte.