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"Richard Clark" wrote in message
... On Thu, 11 Nov 2010 18:17:16 -0500, "Barry" wrote: But if you have ever worked with a Fourdriner machine that is not controlled well, i.e. the thickness varies with time due to any number of variables, I have. That and a year's worth of studying paper process chemistry for precision (sic) measurement of K and Kappa. It has been about 30 years ago, but I remember that while Kappa is related to the amount of lignin remaining in the pulp after cooking, every wet end process had its own peculiar measurement. I worked on the online measurement of Kappa for several solvent pulping processes that were to produce dissolving pulp for Eastman's cellulose ester process. Once the vendor that supplied our pulp got wind that we were researching solvent pulping, they quickly dropped their price and raised their quality enough that we halted work on our own pulping processes. One process we were considering involved the use of supercritical CO2. We never got beyond early pilot plant work on this. I fully understand the {sic} in your statement. When it gets down to what you describe as "not controlled well" that is more the definition of a Paper Mill that is destined for bankruptcy before the end of one week - if not a weekend. I've seen the production floor flood with product when the process encounters a bottle neck. The production pipeline is enormous with a lot of intertia. I have toured quite a few paper mills over the years with both Kraft and caustic pulping. I never really got to see one of the large continuous digesters though. We had a small caustic plant that used hardwoods in town with us. The odors were interesting - mercaptans by them and the occasional butyric acid spill by us. I always wonder how long the cellulose acetate business will last. While cigarette smoking is declining in the US, increasing demand from China seems to more than make up for the loss. Going back to the original TDR discussion, probably the most interesting use I ever put one through was in diagnosing thermocouple problems in our coal gasifier. I saw that the platinum-rhodium thermocouples had water in them. We finally got a metallurgist to do an "autopsy" on one of the thermocouples pulled out during a shutdown. When we broke open the thermocouple, water ran out. We saw a buildup of salts from the Saureisen cement at exactly the place that I predicted. Water was diffusing in through a silicon carbide protection tube and an Inconel sheath. Of course the gasifier operated at high temperature and pressure. A Nastran simulation of the thermowell showed that the temperature at that point was low enough for condensation to occur. Some extra insulation on the external flange solved that problem! 73, Barry WA4VZQ How the heck did we get off topic this far? :-) |
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