Friday, June 5, 2009

Refining

Refining in the paper making processing refines the fiber. Sounds easy enough right? It's a little more complicated than that. Refining the fibers means cutting or brushing the fibers. Too much cutting and the fibers produce too many fines which is lost during the drainage process. So we want to keep the fibers long enough to provide the strength properties we are looking for while also cutting the fibers to a length that will produce an aesthetically pleasing sheet. Too long of fibers will produce knotting and blobs in the sheet, not very uniform. The brushing part of the refining process fibrillates the fiber to produce more surface area for bonding. The more bonding that takes place the stronger the sheet. Imagine a fiber starting as a long stick. After refining the stick may be cut in half or thirds. It also will have the outside bark stripped off and look like its been chewed up a bit. That's basically what refining does.

There are different types of refiners from cones to cylinders to discs. The most common seem to be the disc models. Pulp is pumped into the refiner through a set of discs. One disc is stationary while the other spins. The plates on the disc have bars which differ depending on the refiner model and the desired results. So plates cause more cutting while others provide more brushing. As the bars from the opposing plates cross the squeeze and cut the fibers. Operators adjust the load or amount of pressure on the plates to attain a desired freeness which is the measurement used to gauge refining. The freeness is usually tested by a lab person or a utility hand.

Different plate patterns are available for different purposes, as well as different fiber species. Hardwood plates are designed for more brushing since the fibers are already relative short. Hardwood refiners are also generally set in parallel since they usually only require one pass through the main refiners. Softwood fibers on the other hand are generally set in parallel since the fibers are longer. This gives the operator more flexibility in controlling the freeness.

This is a very brief overview of refining. There's much more to it. So if there is anything in particular you would like to know, just let me know.

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