Title: Pulping and Bleaching PSE 476/Chem E 471
1Pulping and BleachingPSE 476/Chem E 471
- Lecture 17
- Introduction to Bleaching
2Agenda
- Brightness
- General Bleaching Principles
- Chemistry
- Process
- Chemicals
- Description
- Advantages/Disadvantages
3Why Bleach?
- Improve brightness.
- Improve brightness stability.
- Clean up pulp (impurities).
- Wood based (bark, resins, sand, shives).
- Process based (carbon specs, rust, rubber).
- External sources based (plastics, grease, ash).
- Increase capacity of paper to accept printing.
4The purpose of bleaching
5Bleach plant
6Brightness Determination (1)
Light shinning on a sheet of paper is either
transmitted, adsorbed, or reflected.
- Light is scattered by fibers at air/fiber
interfaces - Light is adsorbed by certain chemicals in the
fibers (lignin)
7Brightness Determination (2)
- Brightness is measurement of how much light is
reflected from a sheet of paper. - Whiteness does not mean brightness.
- Whiteness is a physical phenomena related to how
the eye views the paper. - A very white looking piece of paper may not have
high brightness. - Example blue dye added to a yellow tinged sheet
of paper will give a white sheet of paper with
low brightness.
8Brightness Determination (3)
- Brightness determination method
- Light reflectance measured and compared to light
reflectance from MgO. - MgO assumed to reflect 100 light.
- Brightness is reported as of MgO reflectance
(85 brightness is equivalent to 85 of MgO). - Variables
- Angle of light Light is applied to sheet at 45
angle. - Wavelength 457 nm (blue light most sensitive).
- Pine kraft
- Unbleached-ISO 23-28
- Semi bleached-ISO 60-80
- Bleached-ISO 88-91
9General Principles
- Two types of bleaching
- Lignin removing chemical pulps.
- Lignin retaining mechanical pulps.
- Bleaching is used because at a certain point in
the pulping process, carbohydrate degradation
becoming greater than lignin removal. - Bleaching chemicals are more selective for
lignin. - Bleaching chemicals much more expensive than
pulping chemicals so they are not used in
pulping.
10General PrinciplesChemistry
- Pulping
- Pulping typically involves cleavage of ether
linkages and some substitution (sulfonation). - Bleaching
- Bleaching involves attacks on aromatic rings,
olefinic structures, and carbonyl groups. - Substitution reactions play a big role.
11Multiple stages of bleaching
12General PrinciplesProcess
- Bleaching uses a combination of chemicals in
series. - One chemical alone will not remove residual
lignin. - Each step reacts with material modified in
previous step.
NaOH
NaOH
ClO2
ClO2
O2
O2
Unbleached
D
D
EO
EO
Bleached Pulp
Pulp
13Washing
14General PrinciplesChemicals (1)
15General PrinciplesChemicals (2)
16General PrinciplesChemicals (3a)
17General PrinciplesChemicals (3b)
18General PrinciplesChemicals (3c)
19Groups of bleaching chemicals (2)
- Bleaching chemicals can be divided into three
groups according to their function - 1 Group
- The chlorine (Cl2), ozone (O3) reacts with all
aromatic lignin units (phenolic groups and their
bonds) - 2 Group
- The chlorine dioxide(ClO2) and oxygen (O2) reacts
in general with lignin structures that have free
phenolic hydroxyl groups - 3 Group
- The hypochlorite (H) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)
reacts only with certain functional groups, for
example carbonyl groups
20Bleaching reactions
- Bleaching chemicals are used primarily as
oxidants, to break down residual lignin and to
increase its solubility. - Mode of operation
- Electrophiles (oxidative reactions, low pH,
involve cations) - Nucelophiles (reductive reactions, high pH,
anions) - Radicals
21Bleaching Generalities
- It is important to note that when bleaching with
a specific reagent, it will be converted into a
number of different reactive species which will
react with lignin and carbohydrates differently.
A simple example is when chlorine gas is added
to water both hypochlorous acid and/or
hypochorite is formed depending on the pH.