Pulp Suspension Rheology - University of British Columbia

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Pulp Suspension Rheology James A. Olson, P.Eng. Pulp and Paper Centre Mechanical Engineering Dept. 604.822-5705 [email protected] General Questions What is pulp? How do we characterize a pulp suspension? What are the key consistency ranges? What is the crowding factor? What are the regimes of pipe flow? How does pulp affect piping head losses?

Transcript of Pulp Suspension Rheology - University of British Columbia

Page 1: Pulp Suspension Rheology - University of British Columbia

Pulp Suspension Rheology

James A. Olson, P.Eng.

Pulp and Paper Centre

Mechanical Engineering Dept. 604.822-5705

[email protected]

General Questions

• What is pulp?

• How do we characterize a pulp suspension?

• What are the key consistency ranges?

• What is the crowding factor?

• What are the regimes of pipe flow?

• How does pulp affect piping head losses?

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Why mix pulp fibres with water?

• Pulping process

• Conveying/cleaning media

• Fibre mat

• Hydrogen bonding

Pulp Suspension - The Players

Water Newtonian, ~ 60 deg. C

Pulp mechanical - chemical - recycled

Air operating + quality problems

Fillers e.g. clay, starch

Chemicals retention aids, defoamers

Debris colloidal, pitch, shives, plastic

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Pulp fibres• Poly-disperse

– Early wood / latewood

– Juvenile / mature

– Hardwood / softwood

– Chemical pulp / mechanical pulp

– Whole / fragmented

How to characterize a pulp fibre suspension

• Concentration– In pulp and paper the concentration is usually called

the “Consistency” and has a slightly different definition than typical concentration

• Fibre length– Pretty straightforward …

• Coarseness– Mass per unit length of fibre

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Pulp Consistency

reflects proportion of fibre and water

V

MC

C = consistency M = Mass if dry fibresV = Mass of Suspension (Water + Fibres)

Range of Consistencies

< 0.1% highly dilute - low fibre interaction (whitewater)

0.1 - 1% dilute suspension - free motion (cleaners, headboxes)

1 - 5% thin stock - substantial flocculation (screening)

5 - 15% medium consistency - semi-solid (storage)

15 - 30% high consistency - wet solid (formed paper)

30 - 70% wet web - damp solid (pressed paper)

70 - 100% paper

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Fibre Length

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0 1 2 3 4 5

Length (mm)

No

rmal

ized

Fra

ctio

n

Mean Fibre Lengths

• Definitions– Number average

– Length weighted average (assumes constant coarseness)

– Weight weighted coarseness (assumes coarseness proportional to length)

ii

iii

n

lnLn

iii

iii

ln

lnLw

2

iii

iii

ln

lnLww

2

3

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Coarseness• Definition: Mass per unit length

• The lower the coarseness– The more fibres per gram

– The thinner the wall thickness / diameter

– The more area available for bonding

– Smoother stronger paper

Mw

L

Crowding Factor (NF)• The number of fibres in a volume swept out by a fibre length• useful in characterizing frequency of interactions

r = aspect ratio (l/d)

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Crowding Factor Derivation

vm CC

CV = 2

2

3

2

2

3

234

2l

Nd

l

ld

N f

fibre volume

swept volume=

6

2

34

4

4/

2

2

2

2

w

lCN

l

NwC

wd

l

ld

LengthMasswCoarseness

mf

fm

f

f

Crowding Factor

NF < 1 chance collisions1 < NF < 60 forced collisions60 < NF continuous contact

N nF C 4 2

nC contacts per fibre

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Western Red Cedar

NF = 4, 26, 78, 130Cm = .02, .1, .3, .5 %

Aspen

NF = 1, 3, 17, 34Cm = .02, .1, .5, 1.0 %

Types of Flocculation

• Chemical flocculation (colloidal)• Mechanical flocculation

mechanical forceselastic fibre bending

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Mechanical Forces

Elastic Fibre Bending

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Elongational Flow

Flow Through Griddisruption by stretching (more than 5:1)

not shear

TU

RB

UL

EN

TF

LO

W

INT

ER

ME

DIA

TE

FL

OW

INC

IPIE

NT

PL

UG

FL

OW

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Refloculation Times

CM (%)

0.15

0.45

1.0

2.0

3.0

4.0

Velocity (m/s)

0.8 - 1.0

Time (s)

2

1.2 - 2.0

7.6

10.2

0.6

0.01

0.04

0.01

0.001

Velocity gradient

She

ar s

tres

s

dV

dy

NEWTONIAN

dV

dy

BINGHAM PLASTIC

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Modes of Flow

How does pulp affect piping losses?

WATER

Velocity, V

Frict

ion

loss

,dP

/dX

PULP

A

B

CD

H

A Yield stressA-B Plug flow with

wall contactB-C Plug flow with

water annulus C-D Annulus becomes

turbulentD-H True mixed flow

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How do we design a pump and pipe systems for such a complex flow?

• Standardized method for pipe design – TAPPI TIS 0410-14

– “Generalized method for determining the pipe friction loss of a flowing pulp suspension”

Tappi TIS 0410-14

• Calc Vmax– Point where annulus starts (B)

• If V < Vmax calc head as …• If V > VMax

– Calc Vw (velocity at which it acts just like water

– If Vmax < V < Vw then use Vmax in above

– If V > Vw then calc friction loss as if it is just water.

• Beware!– D is in mm– C is in %– V in M– DH/L is head (m) per 100 m of length

maxV K CH

FKV C DL

1.441.22wV C

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Example

10m

2m100 mm

Tank A1% SWK Pulp

Tank B

This example looks at how to ‘estimate’ the head loss in pulp pipe flow Remember the Energy Balance in one dimension (for example, MECH 280, White Ch. 3.6)

2 2

2 2 friction pump turbine

in out

P V P Vz z h h h

g g g g

h = head loss/gain (in units of meters)Tank A contains 1% (Cm) consistency softwood, kraft pulp at 725 CSF at 35 degrees C. The tank is full to a height of 10m. It is draining through a 100mm diameter smooth stainless steel pipe into a second tank B. The height of the pulp in Tank B is 2m and both are open to the atmosphere. If the mean velocity of the pulp in the pipe is 1 m/s and you neglect minor losses, how long is the pipe connecting the two tanks?

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