WO1990004676A1 - A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web - Google Patents

A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1990004676A1
WO1990004676A1 PCT/SE1989/000579 SE8900579W WO9004676A1 WO 1990004676 A1 WO1990004676 A1 WO 1990004676A1 SE 8900579 W SE8900579 W SE 8900579W WO 9004676 A1 WO9004676 A1 WO 9004676A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
paper web
press roll
paper machine
paper
carrying
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/SE1989/000579
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Anders Ingmar Andersson
Cai Olof Hellner
Original Assignee
Valmet Paper Machinery Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Valmet Paper Machinery Inc. filed Critical Valmet Paper Machinery Inc.
Priority to DE68922742T priority Critical patent/DE68922742T2/en
Priority to EP89911902A priority patent/EP0440697B1/en
Publication of WO1990004676A1 publication Critical patent/WO1990004676A1/en
Priority to FI911987A priority patent/FI93879C/en

Links

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21FPAPER-MAKING MACHINES; METHODS OF PRODUCING PAPER THEREON
    • D21F9/00Complete machines for making continuous webs of paper
    • D21F9/003Complete machines for making continuous webs of paper of the twin-wire type
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21FPAPER-MAKING MACHINES; METHODS OF PRODUCING PAPER THEREON
    • D21F11/00Processes for making continuous lengths of paper, or of cardboard, or of wet web for fibre board production, on paper-making machines
    • D21F11/14Making cellulose wadding, filter or blotting paper

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web, comprising a wet end having at least one forming wire for forming and carrying a paper web, and a drying section provided with a drying cylinder in which the paper web is dried, said paper machine having a first operating arrangement for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web with certain bulk and soft ⁇ ness values, in which first operating arrangement the drying sec ⁇ tion is provided with a felt movable in a loop and arranged to run from a pick-up means at the transition between wet end and drying section, to a press roll which defines a nip with the drying cylinder, said felt carrying the paper web on its lower surface, and the carrying forming wire being arranged to run up to said pick-up means in the drying section to transfer the paper web formed to said felt.
  • the soft crepe paper web produced in a conventional paper machine of the type described in the introduction, for instance, has cer ⁇ tain upper limited values for bulk and softness.
  • special methods have been utilized, such as mixing in expendable microspheres of thermoplastic material as described in US 4,619,734, or utilizing machines which operate with through drying see, for instance, US 3,303,576, US 3,812,000, US 3,821,068 and US 4,036,684 in which the through drying is performed on cylinders with perforated outer surface, which may be covered by a fabric for instance, hot drying air being supplied internally and passing out through the cylin- dric surface, or in the reverse direction.
  • US 4,144,124 describes a twin wire machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web wherein the carrying forming wire extends up to and beyond a press roll from which the paper web is transferred to a yankee cylinder, the press roll being wrapped by a loop of felt and possibly also an embossing wire.
  • GB 602,237 relates to a fourdrinier machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web wherein the formed paper web is transferred to a pick-up felt running in a loop between the fourdri ⁇ ier former and the roll which may consist of a press roll pressing against a yankee cylinder, the under side of the paper web carried by the pick-up felt being covered by a covering felt running in a loop.
  • twin wire machine and fourdrinier machine for manu ⁇ facturing soft crepe paper webs are so constructed that they can ⁇ not easily be altered to different operating arrangements in order to produce soft crepe paper webs of different qualities with respect to bulk and softness.
  • the object of the present invention is to eliminate the problem mentioned above and to provide a paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web which can easily be altered for adaptation to varying conditions on the market, such as the competitive situa ⁇ tion and to accommodate consumer wishes.
  • the novelty of the invention lies substantially in that the paper machine is rebuildable between said first operating arrangement and a second operating arrangement for the production of a soft crepe paper web having higher bulk and softness values in relation to the first operating arrangement and in which second operating arrangement the carrying forming wire is arranged to run in an extended loop from the wet end to the press roll of the drying section, that the felt of the drying section is replaced by a per- for ed bel of w re type, movable in a loop and permeable to air and liquid, which is arranged to travel from said pick-up means to said press roll in contact with the extended carrying forming wire while enclosing the paper web therebetween in order to form a con ⁇ tinuous sandwich structure, that means producing jets of air are arranged along the sandwich structure to remove water from the paper web by means of air flowing through the paper web, and that cleaning means are arranged along the loop of the belt to clean it so ' that the permeability to water and air is maintained.
  • Figure 1 shows schematically a paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web in a first conventional operating arrangement.
  • Figure 2 shows schematically the paper machine according to Figure 1 in a second, rebuilt operating arrangement in accordance with the present invention.
  • Figure 3 is a diagram showing the relation between dry strength and softness for soft crepe paper webs produced according to the two different operating arrangements.
  • FIG. 1 it is schematically shown therein parts of a conventional paper machine suitable for the manufacture of a soft crepe paper web such as tissue and other sanitary paper products.
  • the paper machine shown is a twin wire machine co pris- ing a wet end 1 and a dry section 2.
  • the wet end includes a head- box 3, a movable carrying forming wire 4, a movable covering form ⁇ ing wire 5 and a forming roll 6 which may be perforated and pro ⁇ vided with suction means. Alternatively, the forming roll may be smooth.
  • the headbox 3 supplies a single or multi-layer flow of stock between the two moving forming wires 4, 5 for forming a paper web 7 by dewatering the stock.
  • the two forming wires 4, 5 run together over the forming roll 6 and then in individual loops over a plurality of rolls arranged to impel, guide, align and stretch the carrying forming wire 4 and the covering forming wire 5.
  • the rolls defining the path of the covering forming wire 5 include a breast roll 8 and, a short way after the forming roll 6, a guide roll 9 which can be termed a forward drive roll.
  • the covering forming wire 5 leaves the carrying forming wire 4 and the paper web 7 either immediately before the wire 4 and paper web 7 diverge from the forming roll 6, or at a transfer suction box, not shown, or other transfer means located between forming roll 6 and forward drive roll 9.
  • the carrying forming wire 4 runs to the dry- ing section 2 where it leaves the paper web 7 by changing its direction of travel around a guide roll 11.
  • the drying section 2 comprises a drying cylinder 12 having rela ⁇ tively large diameter and a polished cylindric surface.
  • the drying cylinder 12, preferably consisting of a yankee cylinder, is covered by a hood (not shown), in which hot air is blown at high speed against the paper web 7.
  • the paper web is creped from the yankee cylinder 12 by means of a creping doctor (not shown) to obtain the desired creping, after which the finished creped paper web is wound onto a roll.
  • the drying section 2 includes a felt 13 disposed upstream of the yankee cylinder 12 and travelling in a loop around several rolls and around a pick-up means, suit ⁇ ably in the form of a roll 14, located nearest the wet end 1 and thereby in the vicinity of said guide roll 11 for the carrying forming wire 4, and a press roll 15 which presses against the yankee cylinder 12 and is provided with suction means 16 to de- water the paper web before the latter comes into contact with the yankee cylinder 12.
  • the pick-up means may alternatively consist of a shoe.
  • two guide rolls 17, 18 are disposed between the pick-up roll 14 and press roll 15, said guide rolls 17, 18 de ⁇ flecting with a small angle the direction of travel of the felt 13.
  • a blind-drilled roll 19 is disposed after the press roll 15, in contact with the yankee cylinder.
  • the paper web 7 is trans ⁇ ferred to the felt 13 at the point where this and the carrying forming wire 4 converge at the pick-up roll 14 and thereafter immediately diverge from each other.
  • Suitable conditioning means are disposed along the loop of the felt 13 in order to condition the felt prior to contact with the paper web.
  • Figure 2 shows schematically the same paper machine as that according to Figure 1 with respect to its basic structure, but supplemented and modified in accordance with the present inven ⁇ tion, enabling it to be rebuilt between a first operating arrange ⁇ ment according to Figure 1 and a second operating arrangement according to Figure 2.
  • Modification to the second operating arrangement substantially consists of removing the felt 13 and re ⁇ placing it with an endless, perforated belt 25 of wire type, permeable to air and liquid, and of extending the carrying forming wire 4a up to the yankee cylinder 12 so that it travels in a larger loop with respect to said first operating arrangement and over a predetermined sector of the press roll 15.
  • the carrying forming wire 4a travels in contact with the belt 25 from the pick- -up roll 14 to the press roll 15, encasing the paper web 7 between itself and the bel 25 as an intermediate layer for forming a con- tinuous sandwich structure that is maintained up to the press roll 15.
  • a guide roll 26 is disposed in the larger loop of the carrying forming wire 4a, after and spaced from the point where the belt 25 first encounters the press roll 15, so that the carrying forming wire 4a travels around said predetermined sector of the press roll 15, this being sufficient for the paper web to be transferred to the belt with the aid of suction means 16 inside the press roll 15, said suction means being disposed within said sector and up to the nip defined by the press roll 15 and yankee cylinder 12.
  • additional rolls 27 are disposed within and outside the larger loop of the carrying forming wire 4a in order to guide and stretch it.
  • the previously mentioned guide roll 11 is not used in this modified second operating arrangement.
  • the loop can be made shorter in relation to the felt 13 used previously, since the roll 19 is superfluous, and thus also the two guide rolls 20, 21 in the vicinity thereof.
  • Suction boxes 28 may be mounted before the guide roll 14 where the paper web 7 thus is exposed. (Such suction boxes may also be used in the first operating arrangement.)
  • the paper web can hence be dewatered to a dry solids content of up to a maximun of 25%.
  • these means comprise a suction box 29 disposed on the under side of the sandwich structure immediately after the guide roll 14, and a pair of suction boxes 30, 31 disposed on the upper side of the sandwich structure downstream of the lower suction box 29, a steam blowing tube 32 being disposed on the other side of the sandwich struc ⁇ ture, opposite the suction box 30.
  • a blowing nozzle (not shown) may be disposed at the press roll 15 in the loop for the forming wire 4a, opposite said sector of the press roll 15 where a part of the suction means 16 is thus located.
  • cleaning means are also disposed at one or more points between the press roll 15 and the pick-up roll 14, seen in the direction of movement of the belt, to clean thoroughly the belt to ensure that its per ⁇ meability to water and air is continuously maintained.
  • these cleaning means comprise a water spray tube 33 disposed inside the loop and two suction boxes 34, 35 and an • oscillating high pressure spray tube 36 disposed between the suc ⁇ tion boxes outside the loop, immediately downstream of said water spray tube 33.
  • a water spray tube 38 is provided at the nip defined by the open belt 25 and the roll 37 located after the suction boxes 34, 35, said spray tube 38 supplying water to pro ⁇ quiz a liquid film between the roll and belt.
  • a pipe 39 for blow ⁇ ing ai is disposed outside the loop, immediately before the last roll 40, before the belt 25 reaches the guide roll 14. The water from the water spray tubes 33 and 38 is collected in a trough 41.
  • the drying section 2 may also include means (not shown) for IR heating of the paper web 7.
  • An IR hood may be disposed, for in ⁇ stance, at a point on the yankee cylinder 12 where the paper web is exposed between press roll 15 and said drying hood covering the yankee cylinder 12.
  • One or more IR hoods may also be disposed between the pick-up roll 14 and the press roll 15 to IR heat the paper web while this forms the intermediate layer of the sandwich structure.
  • the paper machine may be provided with a press felt (not shown) moving in a loop, said press felt being arranged inside the loop of belt 25 or the carrying forming wire 4a, running around a press roll, not shown, pressing against one side of the sandwich structure and an opposite press roll, not shown, which may also be wrapped by such an inner press felt.
  • a press felt (not shown) moving in a loop
  • said press felt being arranged inside the loop of belt 25 or the carrying forming wire 4a, running around a press roll, not shown, pressing against one side of the sandwich structure and an opposite press roll, not shown, which may also be wrapped by such an inner press felt.
  • an inner press loop arranged inside the loop of the belt 25 may be extended to also run around the press roll 15.
  • the belt 25 Since the belt 25 is perforated or open, i.e. provided with a great number of through-holes running in the thickness direction of the paper web 7, it will function as an embossing belt so that when the paper web 7 passes the nip between press roll 15 and yankee cylinder 12, parts of it will be pressed into these holes, thus producing a relief pattern. These parts of the paper web pressed into the holes will not be subjected to any appreciable pressure, thus contributing to higher bulk and softness.
  • the paper machine described can easily be changed to the different operating arrangements in order to manufacture soft crepe paper webs of different qualities with respect to bulk and softness, in dependence of the varying conditions prevailing on the market at the moment. These conditions may quickly change from one time to another.
  • the extra drying devices placed within the range of the sandwich structure in the second operating arrange ⁇ ment enable increased dry solids content to be achieved before the yankee cylinder so that the paper machine can be run at in- creased speed which is at least substantially equivalent to the speed of through drying machines mentioned in the introduction.
  • Figure 3 illustrates the relation between dry strength and soft ⁇ ness.
  • the line A indicates average values for soft crepe paper web produced using the conventional first arrangement of the paper machine. It is clear that a desired increased strength results in reduced softness. Conversely a desired increased softness results in reduced strength of the soft crepe paper web.
  • Line B indicates average values for soft crepe paper web produced using the second operating arrangement of the paper machine according to the pre ⁇ sent invention. Thus, it is clear that within a desired range for the strength of the soft crepe paper web, higher softness is ob ⁇ tained in relation to soft crepe paper web produced using the paper machine in its conventional arrangement.
  • the invention has been described in connection with a twin wire machine, however, it can also be applied to a fourdrinier machine in which the supporting forming wire, i.e. the fourdrinier wire, is extended up to the yankee cylinder in the same way as the carrying forming wire 4a in the twin wire machine described.

Abstract

A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web, comprising a wet end (1) having a forming wire (4) for forming and carrying a paper web (7), and a drying section (2) provided with a drying cylinder (12), said paper machine having a first operating arrangement for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web with certain bulk and softness values, in which first operating arrangement the drying section has a felt (13) arranged to run in a loop from a pick-up roll (14) at the transition between the wet end and drying section, to a press roll (15) at the drying cylinder, and the carrying forming wire runs up to the pick-up roll (14) to transfer the paper web to the felt (13). According to the invention the paper machine is rebuildable between said first operating arrangement and a second operating arrangement for the production of a soft crepe paper web having higher bulk and softness values in relation to the first operating arrangement and in which second operating arrangement the carrying forming wire (4a) runs up to the press roll (15). Said felt is replaced by a belt (25) of wire type, movable in a loop from the pick-up roll (14) to the press roll in contact with the carrying forming wire (4a), while enclosing the paper web therebetween in order to form a sandwich structure. Means (29-31) producing jets of air are arranged along the sandwich structure to remove water from the paper web (7). Further cleaning means (33-36, 38) are disposed along the belt (25) to clean it so that the permeability to water and air is maintained.

Description

A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web
The present invention relates to a paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web, comprising a wet end having at least one forming wire for forming and carrying a paper web, and a drying section provided with a drying cylinder in which the paper web is dried, said paper machine having a first operating arrangement for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web with certain bulk and soft¬ ness values, in which first operating arrangement the drying sec¬ tion is provided with a felt movable in a loop and arranged to run from a pick-up means at the transition between wet end and drying section, to a press roll which defines a nip with the drying cylinder, said felt carrying the paper web on its lower surface, and the carrying forming wire being arranged to run up to said pick-up means in the drying section to transfer the paper web formed to said felt.
The soft crepe paper web produced in a conventional paper machine of the type described in the introduction, for instance, has cer¬ tain upper limited values for bulk and softness. To achieve bulk and/or softness values above these limited values special methods have been utilized, such as mixing in expendable microspheres of thermoplastic material as described in US 4,619,734, or utilizing machines which operate with through drying see, for instance, US 3,303,576, US 3,812,000, US 3,821,068 and US 4,036,684 in which the through drying is performed on cylinders with perforated outer surface, which may be covered by a fabric for instance, hot drying air being supplied internally and passing out through the cylin- dric surface, or in the reverse direction.
US 4,144,124 describes a twin wire machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web wherein the carrying forming wire extends up to and beyond a press roll from which the paper web is transferred to a yankee cylinder, the press roll being wrapped by a loop of felt and possibly also an embossing wire. GB 602,237 relates to a fourdrinier machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web wherein the formed paper web is transferred to a pick-up felt running in a loop between the fourdriπier former and the roll which may consist of a press roll pressing against a yankee cylinder, the under side of the paper web carried by the pick-up felt being covered by a covering felt running in a loop.
However, said twin wire machine and fourdrinier machine for manu¬ facturing soft crepe paper webs are so constructed that they can¬ not easily be altered to different operating arrangements in order to produce soft crepe paper webs of different qualities with respect to bulk and softness.
The object of the present invention is to eliminate the problem mentioned above and to provide a paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web which can easily be altered for adaptation to varying conditions on the market, such as the competitive situa¬ tion and to accommodate consumer wishes.
The novelty of the invention lies substantially in that the paper machine is rebuildable between said first operating arrangement and a second operating arrangement for the production of a soft crepe paper web having higher bulk and softness values in relation to the first operating arrangement and in which second operating arrangement the carrying forming wire is arranged to run in an extended loop from the wet end to the press roll of the drying section, that the felt of the drying section is replaced by a per- for ed bel of w re type, movable in a loop and permeable to air and liquid, which is arranged to travel from said pick-up means to said press roll in contact with the extended carrying forming wire while enclosing the paper web therebetween in order to form a con¬ tinuous sandwich structure, that means producing jets of air are arranged along the sandwich structure to remove water from the paper web by means of air flowing through the paper web, and that cleaning means are arranged along the loop of the belt to clean it so'that the permeability to water and air is maintained. The invention will be described further in the following with reference to the drawings, in which
Figure 1 shows schematically a paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web in a first conventional operating arrangement.
Figure 2 shows schematically the paper machine according to Figure 1 in a second, rebuilt operating arrangement in accordance with the present invention.
Figure 3 is a diagram showing the relation between dry strength and softness for soft crepe paper webs produced according to the two different operating arrangements.
With reference to Figure 1, it is schematically shown therein parts of a conventional paper machine suitable for the manufacture of a soft crepe paper web such as tissue and other sanitary paper products. The paper machine shown is a twin wire machine co pris- ing a wet end 1 and a dry section 2. The wet end includes a head- box 3, a movable carrying forming wire 4, a movable covering form¬ ing wire 5 and a forming roll 6 which may be perforated and pro¬ vided with suction means. Alternatively, the forming roll may be smooth. The headbox 3 supplies a single or multi-layer flow of stock between the two moving forming wires 4, 5 for forming a paper web 7 by dewatering the stock. The two forming wires 4, 5 run together over the forming roll 6 and then in individual loops over a plurality of rolls arranged to impel, guide, align and stretch the carrying forming wire 4 and the covering forming wire 5. The rolls defining the path of the covering forming wire 5 include a breast roll 8 and, a short way after the forming roll 6, a guide roll 9 which can be termed a forward drive roll. The covering forming wire 5 leaves the carrying forming wire 4 and the paper web 7 either immediately before the wire 4 and paper web 7 diverge from the forming roll 6, or at a transfer suction box, not shown, or other transfer means located between forming roll 6 and forward drive roll 9. The carrying forming wire 4 runs to the dry- ing section 2 where it leaves the paper web 7 by changing its direction of travel around a guide roll 11.
The drying section 2 comprises a drying cylinder 12 having rela¬ tively large diameter and a polished cylindric surface. The drying cylinder 12, preferably consisting of a yankee cylinder, is covered by a hood (not shown), in which hot air is blown at high speed against the paper web 7. The paper web is creped from the yankee cylinder 12 by means of a creping doctor (not shown) to obtain the desired creping, after which the finished creped paper web is wound onto a roll. Further, the drying section 2 includes a felt 13 disposed upstream of the yankee cylinder 12 and travelling in a loop around several rolls and around a pick-up means, suit¬ ably in the form of a roll 14, located nearest the wet end 1 and thereby in the vicinity of said guide roll 11 for the carrying forming wire 4, and a press roll 15 which presses against the yankee cylinder 12 and is provided with suction means 16 to de- water the paper web before the latter comes into contact with the yankee cylinder 12. The pick-up means may alternatively consist of a shoe. Further, two guide rolls 17, 18 are disposed between the pick-up roll 14 and press roll 15, said guide rolls 17, 18 de¬ flecting with a small angle the direction of travel of the felt 13. A blind-drilled roll 19 is disposed after the press roll 15, in contact with the yankee cylinder. The paper web 7 is trans¬ ferred to the felt 13 at the point where this and the carrying forming wire 4 converge at the pick-up roll 14 and thereafter immediately diverge from each other. Suitable conditioning means (not shown) are disposed along the loop of the felt 13 in order to condition the felt prior to contact with the paper web.
Figure 2 shows schematically the same paper machine as that according to Figure 1 with respect to its basic structure, but supplemented and modified in accordance with the present inven¬ tion, enabling it to be rebuilt between a first operating arrange¬ ment according to Figure 1 and a second operating arrangement according to Figure 2. Modification to the second operating arrangement substantially consists of removing the felt 13 and re¬ placing it with an endless, perforated belt 25 of wire type, permeable to air and liquid, and of extending the carrying forming wire 4a up to the yankee cylinder 12 so that it travels in a larger loop with respect to said first operating arrangement and over a predetermined sector of the press roll 15. The carrying forming wire 4a travels in contact with the belt 25 from the pick- -up roll 14 to the press roll 15, encasing the paper web 7 between itself and the bel 25 as an intermediate layer for forming a con- tinuous sandwich structure that is maintained up to the press roll 15.
A guide roll 26 is disposed in the larger loop of the carrying forming wire 4a, after and spaced from the point where the belt 25 first encounters the press roll 15, so that the carrying forming wire 4a travels around said predetermined sector of the press roll 15, this being sufficient for the paper web to be transferred to the belt with the aid of suction means 16 inside the press roll 15, said suction means being disposed within said sector and up to the nip defined by the press roll 15 and yankee cylinder 12. Further, additional rolls 27 are disposed within and outside the larger loop of the carrying forming wire 4a in order to guide and stretch it. The previously mentioned guide roll 11 is not used in this modified second operating arrangement.
No extra rolls are required for installation of the belt 25. In- stead, the loop can be made shorter in relation to the felt 13 used previously, since the roll 19 is superfluous, and thus also the two guide rolls 20, 21 in the vicinity thereof.
Suction boxes 28 may be mounted before the guide roll 14 where the paper web 7 thus is exposed. (Such suction boxes may also be used in the first operating arrangement.) The paper web can hence be dewatered to a dry solids content of up to a maximun of 25%. By extending the carrying forming wire 4a as described, and allowing this to cooperate with an open belt 25 of wire type, which has equal or substantially equal permeability to water and air as the forming wire 4a, in order to encase the paper web therebetween to form a continuous sandwich structure as described, it is now pos¬ sible to arrange additional dewatering means producing jets of air, along this sandwich structure in order to further increase the dry solids content before the yankee cylinder. In the modified operating arrangement of the paper machine shown in Figure 2 these means comprise a suction box 29 disposed on the under side of the sandwich structure immediately after the guide roll 14, and a pair of suction boxes 30, 31 disposed on the upper side of the sandwich structure downstream of the lower suction box 29, a steam blowing tube 32 being disposed on the other side of the sandwich struc¬ ture, opposite the suction box 30. Further, a blowing nozzle (not shown) may be disposed at the press roll 15 in the loop for the forming wire 4a, opposite said sector of the press roll 15 where a part of the suction means 16 is thus located. Moreover, cleaning means are also disposed at one or more points between the press roll 15 and the pick-up roll 14, seen in the direction of movement of the belt, to clean thoroughly the belt to ensure that its per¬ meability to water and air is continuously maintained. In the embodiment shown these cleaning means comprise a water spray tube 33 disposed inside the loop and two suction boxes 34, 35 and an • oscillating high pressure spray tube 36 disposed between the suc¬ tion boxes outside the loop, immediately downstream of said water spray tube 33. Further, a water spray tube 38 is provided at the nip defined by the open belt 25 and the roll 37 located after the suction boxes 34, 35, said spray tube 38 supplying water to pro¬ duce a liquid film between the roll and belt. A pipe 39 for blow¬ ing ai is disposed outside the loop, immediately before the last roll 40, before the belt 25 reaches the guide roll 14. The water from the water spray tubes 33 and 38 is collected in a trough 41.
The drying section 2 may also include means (not shown) for IR heating of the paper web 7. An IR hood may be disposed, for in¬ stance, at a point on the yankee cylinder 12 where the paper web is exposed between press roll 15 and said drying hood covering the yankee cylinder 12. One or more IR hoods may also be disposed between the pick-up roll 14 and the press roll 15 to IR heat the paper web while this forms the intermediate layer of the sandwich structure.
In its second operating arrangement according to Figure 2, the paper machine may be provided with a press felt (not shown) moving in a loop, said press felt being arranged inside the loop of belt 25 or the carrying forming wire 4a, running around a press roll, not shown, pressing against one side of the sandwich structure and an opposite press roll, not shown, which may also be wrapped by such an inner press felt. If desired such an inner press loop, arranged inside the loop of the belt 25 may be extended to also run around the press roll 15.
Since the belt 25 is perforated or open, i.e. provided with a great number of through-holes running in the thickness direction of the paper web 7, it will function as an embossing belt so that when the paper web 7 passes the nip between press roll 15 and yankee cylinder 12, parts of it will be pressed into these holes, thus producing a relief pattern. These parts of the paper web pressed into the holes will not be subjected to any appreciable pressure, thus contributing to higher bulk and softness.
The paper machine described can easily be changed to the different operating arrangements in order to manufacture soft crepe paper webs of different qualities with respect to bulk and softness, in dependence of the varying conditions prevailing on the market at the moment. These conditions may quickly change from one time to another. Furthermore, the extra drying devices placed within the range of the sandwich structure in the second operating arrange¬ ment, enable increased dry solids content to be achieved before the yankee cylinder so that the paper machine can be run at in- creased speed which is at least substantially equivalent to the speed of through drying machines mentioned in the introduction.
Figure 3 illustrates the relation between dry strength and soft¬ ness. The line A indicates average values for soft crepe paper web produced using the conventional first arrangement of the paper machine. It is clear that a desired increased strength results in reduced softness. Conversely a desired increased softness results in reduced strength of the soft crepe paper web. Line B indicates average values for soft crepe paper web produced using the second operating arrangement of the paper machine according to the pre¬ sent invention. Thus, it is clear that within a desired range for the strength of the soft crepe paper web, higher softness is ob¬ tained in relation to soft crepe paper web produced using the paper machine in its conventional arrangement.
The invention has been described in connection with a twin wire machine, however, it can also be applied to a fourdrinier machine in which the supporting forming wire, i.e. the fourdrinier wire, is extended up to the yankee cylinder in the same way as the carrying forming wire 4a in the twin wire machine described.

Claims

C L A I M S
1. A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web, comprising a wet end (1) having at least one forming wire (4) for forming and carrying a paper web (7), and a drying section (2) provided with a drying cylinder (12) in which the paper web (7) is dried, said paper machine having a first operating arrangement for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web with certain bulk and soft¬ ness values, in which first operating arrangement the drying sec¬ tion (2) is provided with a felt (13) movable in a loop and ar¬ ranged to run from a pick-up means (14) at the transition between wet end (1) and drying section (2), to a press roll (15) which de¬ fines a nip with the drying cylinder (12), said felt carrying the paper web (7) on its lower surface, and the carrying forming wire (4) being arranged to run up to said pick-up means (14) in the drying section (2) to transfer the paper web (7) formed to said felt (13), characterized in that said paper machine is rebuildable between said first operating arrangement (Figure 1) and a second operating arrangement (Figure 2) for the production of a soft crepe paper web having higher bulk and softness values in relation to the first operating arrangement and in which second operating arrangement the carrying forming wire (4a) is arranged to run in an extended loop from the wet end (1) up to the press roll (15) of the drying section (2), that the felt (13) of the drying section (2) is replaced by a perforated belt (25) of wire type, movable in a loop and permeable to air and liquid, which is arranged to travel from said pick-up means (14) to said press roll (15) in contact with the extended carrying forming wire (4a), while en¬ closing the paper web (7) therebetween in order to form a con¬ tinuous sandwich structure, that means (29, 30, 31) producing jets of air are arranged along the sandwich structure to remove water from the paper web (7) by means of air flowing through the paper web (7), and that cleaning means (33, 34, 35, 36, 38) are disposed along the loop of the belt (25) to clean it so that the perme¬ ability to water and air is maintained.
2. A paper machine as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that in the second operating arrangement (Figure 2) a guide roll (26) for the carrying forming wire (4a) is disposed in the vicini¬ ty of the press roll (15) so that the carrying forming wire (4a) encloses a predetermined sector of the press roll (15) before it leaves the paper web (7), within which sector the press roll is provided with suction means (16).
3. A paper machine as claimed in claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the means producing jets of air comprise at least one suction box (29, 30, 31).
4. A paper machine as claimed in any of claims 1-3, character¬ ized in that the means producing jets of air comprise at least one blow nozzle (32).
5. A paper machine as claimed in claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the means producing jets of air comprise at least one suction means (30) and at least one steam blow nozzle (32), the suction means (30) and steam blow nozzle (32) being disposed opposite each other, one on each side of the sandwich structure.
6. A paper machine as claimed in claim 4, characterized in that a blow nozzle is directed towards the suction means (16) of the press roll (15) on the other side of the sandwich structure.
7. A paper machine as claimed in any of the preceding claims, characterized in that at least one IR hood is arranged for IR heating of the paper web.
8. A paper machine as claimed in claim 7, characterized in that the IR hood is disposed close to the sandwich structure.
9. A paper machine as claimed in claim 7, characterized in that the IR hood is disposed at the drying cylinder (12) after the press roll (15).
10. A paper machine as claimed in any of the preceding claims, characterized in that means are arranged to form at least one felted press nip acting on the outer surfaces of the sandwich structure.
11. A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web, comprising at least one forming wire (4) for forming and carrying a paper web (7), a drying cylinder (12) and a press roll (15) which together define a nip through which the paper web (7) passes, the carrying forming wire (4a) being arranged to run in an extended loop up to the press roll (15), characterized in that a perforated belt (25) of wire type, permeable to air and liquid, is arranged to run in contact with the extended carrying forming wire (4a), while enclosing the paper web (7) therebetween in order to form a continuous sandwich structure along a distance from a wire guide means (14) upstream of the press roll (15) up to the press roll (15), that means (29, 30, 31) producing jets of air are dis¬ posed along the sandwich structure to remove water from the paper web (7), and that cleaning means (33, 34, 35, 36, 38) are disposed along the loop of the belt (25) to clean it so that the perme- ability to water and air is maintained. .
PCT/SE1989/000579 1988-10-25 1989-10-20 A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web WO1990004676A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE68922742T DE68922742T2 (en) 1988-10-25 1989-10-20 PAPER MACHINE FOR THE PRODUCTION OF A SOFT CREPE PAPER TAPE.
EP89911902A EP0440697B1 (en) 1988-10-25 1989-10-20 A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web
FI911987A FI93879C (en) 1988-10-25 1991-04-24 Paper machine for making a soft crepe-paper web

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE8803810A SE462225B (en) 1988-10-25 1988-10-25 PAPER MACHINE MAKES TAPE MAKE
SE8803810-4 1988-10-25

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1990004676A1 true WO1990004676A1 (en) 1990-05-03

Family

ID=20373730

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/SE1989/000579 WO1990004676A1 (en) 1988-10-25 1989-10-20 A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web

Country Status (7)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0440697B1 (en)
JP (1) JP2804331B2 (en)
AT (1) ATE122747T1 (en)
DE (1) DE68922742T2 (en)
FI (1) FI93879C (en)
SE (1) SE462225B (en)
WO (1) WO1990004676A1 (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1993022498A1 (en) * 1992-04-23 1993-11-11 Valmet-Karlstad Ab A method of rebuilding a conventional tissue machine to a tad machine, and an improved c-wrap type twin wire former suitable for use therein
WO1997035066A1 (en) * 1996-03-20 1997-09-25 Ppr Consulting Ltd. Oy Dewatering device for a paper machine
WO2005010275A2 (en) * 2003-07-23 2005-02-03 Voith Paper Patent Gmbh Method and device for the production of a fibre web in particular a sc-a or sc-b paper web
WO2010033072A1 (en) * 2008-09-17 2010-03-25 Metso Paper Karlstad Ab A tissue papermaking machine and a method of manufacturing a tissue paper web
US7887673B2 (en) * 2004-05-26 2011-02-15 Metso Paper Karlstad Paper machine and method for manufacturing paper
EP1324688B2 (en) 2000-10-05 2012-11-28 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Thin, soft bath tissue

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP4733569B2 (en) * 2006-05-31 2011-07-27 大王製紙株式会社 Continuous cleaning apparatus and continuous cleaning method using the same

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE2641714B2 (en) * 1975-09-17 1981-06-25 Valmet Oy, Helsinki Tissue paper machine

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS5129202A (en) * 1974-08-31 1976-03-12 Kyowa Leather Cloth SUEEDOYOGAIKANOTEISURUTOSHITSUSEI TSUKISEINISUGURETASHIITOJOBUSHITSU NO SEIZOHOHO

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE2641714B2 (en) * 1975-09-17 1981-06-25 Valmet Oy, Helsinki Tissue paper machine

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1993022498A1 (en) * 1992-04-23 1993-11-11 Valmet-Karlstad Ab A method of rebuilding a conventional tissue machine to a tad machine, and an improved c-wrap type twin wire former suitable for use therein
WO1997035066A1 (en) * 1996-03-20 1997-09-25 Ppr Consulting Ltd. Oy Dewatering device for a paper machine
EP1324688B2 (en) 2000-10-05 2012-11-28 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Thin, soft bath tissue
WO2005010275A2 (en) * 2003-07-23 2005-02-03 Voith Paper Patent Gmbh Method and device for the production of a fibre web in particular a sc-a or sc-b paper web
WO2005010275A3 (en) * 2003-07-23 2005-09-01 Voith Paper Patent Gmbh Method and device for the production of a fibre web in particular a sc-a or sc-b paper web
US7887673B2 (en) * 2004-05-26 2011-02-15 Metso Paper Karlstad Paper machine and method for manufacturing paper
WO2010033072A1 (en) * 2008-09-17 2010-03-25 Metso Paper Karlstad Ab A tissue papermaking machine and a method of manufacturing a tissue paper web
US8414741B2 (en) 2008-09-17 2013-04-09 Metso Paper Sweden Ab Tissue papermaking machine and a method of manufacturing a tissue paper web

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
FI93879C (en) 1995-06-12
ATE122747T1 (en) 1995-06-15
SE462225B (en) 1990-05-21
SE8803810D0 (en) 1988-10-25
SE8803810L (en) 1990-04-26
DE68922742T2 (en) 1995-10-05
EP0440697A1 (en) 1991-08-14
JP2804331B2 (en) 1998-09-24
FI911987A0 (en) 1991-04-24
FI93879B (en) 1995-02-28
JPH04501443A (en) 1992-03-12
EP0440697B1 (en) 1995-05-17
DE68922742D1 (en) 1995-06-22

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5230776A (en) Paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web
US7241364B2 (en) Papermaking machine for forming tissue employing an air press
US6077398A (en) Method and apparatus for wet web molding and drying
US5667636A (en) Method for making smooth uncreped throughdried sheets
US4102737A (en) Process and apparatus for forming a paper web having improved bulk and absorptive capacity
US5397437A (en) Method of rebuilding a conventional tissue machine to a TAD machine
EP1194638B1 (en) Drying section
US4055461A (en) Paper machine with single-wire and curved twin-wire formers
JP2005273132A (en) Method of reconstructing paper machine
US7815768B2 (en) Multi-layer woven creping fabric
CA2405162C (en) Soft crepe paper machine and press section thereof
EP0440697B1 (en) A paper machine for manufacturing a soft crepe paper web
CA1116452A (en) Tissue paper machine
US7153389B2 (en) Method of manufacturing a soft crepe paper web
US6042692A (en) Paper machine for manufacturing a web of soft crepe paper
CA1068525A (en) Press section arrangement

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): FI JP US

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH DE FR GB IT LU NL SE

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1989911902

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 911987

Country of ref document: FI

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1989911902

Country of ref document: EP

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 1989911902

Country of ref document: EP

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 911987

Country of ref document: FI