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GB1574645A - Method and apparatus forrecovering paper fibres from waste paper containing materials - Google Patents

Method and apparatus forrecovering paper fibres from waste paper containing materials Download PDF

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Publication number
GB1574645A
GB1574645A GB11201/77A GB1120177A GB1574645A GB 1574645 A GB1574645 A GB 1574645A GB 11201/77 A GB11201/77 A GB 11201/77A GB 1120177 A GB1120177 A GB 1120177A GB 1574645 A GB1574645 A GB 1574645A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
small
perforations
screen
holes
range
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status 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 status listed.)
Expired
Application number
GB11201/77A
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Black Clawson Co
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Black Clawson Co
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Black Clawson Co filed Critical Black Clawson Co
Publication of GB1574645A publication Critical patent/GB1574645A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21BFIBROUS RAW MATERIALS OR THEIR MECHANICAL TREATMENT
    • D21B1/00Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment
    • D21B1/04Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment by dividing raw materials into small particles, e.g. fibres
    • D21B1/12Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment by dividing raw materials into small particles, e.g. fibres by wet methods, by the use of steam
    • D21B1/30Defibrating by other means
    • D21B1/32Defibrating by other means of waste paper
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21BFIBROUS RAW MATERIALS OR THEIR MECHANICAL TREATMENT
    • D21B1/00Fibrous raw materials or their mechanical treatment
    • D21B1/02Pretreatment of the raw materials by chemical or physical means
    • D21B1/026Separating fibrous materials from waste
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02WCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO WASTEWATER TREATMENT OR WASTE MANAGEMENT
    • Y02W30/00Technologies for solid waste management
    • Y02W30/50Reuse, recycling or recovery technologies
    • Y02W30/64Paper recycling

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Paper (AREA)

Description

(54) A METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR RECOVERING PAPER FIBERS FROM WASTE PAPER CONTAINING MATERIALS (71) We, THE BLACK CLAWSON COM- PANY, a corporation organised under the laws of the State of Ohio, United States of America, of 605 Clark Street, Middletown, Ohio 45042, United States of America, do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement: Waste papers have for many years been an important source of fiber for use, or rather for reuse, in the manufacture of new paper products, and waste paper materials of a variety of types and grades are recognized commodities for purchase by paper and paper board mills. There has in recent years been increasing emphasis on recycling of used paper materials, and this emphasis has now extended to the recovery of reusable paper fiber from municipal solid waste, by means of the system and method of disclosed in our U.S. patent No. 3,736,223.
The recycling of commercially available waste paper has always presented some problems of cleaning and screening because the economics of collecting, sorting and baling of used paper products commonly result in the inclusion of substantial quantities of inorganic contaminents as well as plastics, rags and the like. The high specific gravity contaminants of waste paper mixtures are not difficult to separate from the paper, by conventional junk removers and centrifugal cleaners. The more serious problems derive from the plastics and other trash materials which have specific gravities so close to that of cellulose fiber that gravity separation is not effective, and which now commonly average as high as 15% by weight of commercial waste paper.
More specifically, pulpers which are commonly used for initially breaking down waste paper are quite efficient for slushing but less so for complete defibering, and much longer pulping time is required if the pulper is relied upon to reduce the paper to particle sizes capable of passage through relatively small holes, e.g. 8 inch in diameter or less.
Under such conditions, however, the plastics constituents of the mix will not be correspondingly reduced in particle size, and they will tend to accumulate in the pulper, and to interfere with proper extraction of the defibered paper. This in turn will return in such loss in the effectiveness of the pulper, as well as such excessive power, waste of that frequent stops for cleaning out the pulper becomes necessary.
When attempts were made in the past to avoid this problem by the use of larger extraction holes from the pulper, other difficulties resulted. For example, since a portion of the paper charge is not completely defibered, many paper pieces will be comparable in size to the fragments of plastics and cannot readily be separated by screening.
This problem can be overcome by subjecting the mixed fibers and fragments to treatment in apparatus of the type known as deflakers which will defiber the paper without comparable reduction of the particle sizes of the plastics, but such treatment is inefficient because the defibering apparatus must handle both the plastics, the paper pieces, and the already defibered paper, with resulting wasteful consumption of power.
The most effective system and method previously developed for dealing with this problem are disclosed in our U.S. patent 3,873,410. According to that patent, the different stations in the system are so arranged that the pulper is utilized only for slushing rather than for complete defibering of the paper, the slushed and centrifugally cleaned slurry is then screened at high consistency and with a high reject rate to separate such paper as has been essentially defibered from the plastics and remaining paper, and the material rejected by the screen is then directed to a deflaker from which the accepted material is recycled in the system.
In a system according to U.S. patent 3,873,410, the pulper is provided with extraction plate holes of relatively large diameter, typically one inch or more, and the entire output of extracted stock is subjected to a fine screening operation which accepts the fully defibered material. All of the reject material, which includes substantial quantities of good fiber, is defibered in a deflaker and then screened in a tailing screen, from which the accepted stock is either returned to the supply line to the initial screening station or back to the pulper. This system and method have proved to be definitely superior to previous approaches to the problem, especially for recovering fiber from municipal solid waste.
The present invention provides improvements and advantages over the system and method of U.S. patent 3,873,410 while retaining all of the advantages achieved by that patent over the previous art. More specifically, this invention derives from recognition that a substantial portion of any given charge of waste paper furnished to a pulper will be substantially completely defibered relatively quickly, and with much lower power requirements than all of the paper in the charge, if provision is made for continuously removing plastics and other lightweight trash which can interfere with efficient pulping and extraction.
The corollary of this principle of the invention is that whenever a pulper is equipped with sufficiently large extraction holes for continuous removal of the lightweight trash, a substantial quantity of essentially defibered paper will be entrained therewith, and will therefore be subjected to whatever defibering operation is carried out therefore be subjected to whatever defibering operation is carried out thereon. In addition to possible over-refining, this tends to diminish the efficienecy of the deflaker, to the extent that it is forced to work on material which needs no further defibering.
Hence, the present invention consists in a method of treating materials containing waste paper to recover paper fibers therefrom for reuse, which comprises the steps of: (a) supplying said materials and water to a vessel at rates maintaining the consistency of the resulting suspension in the range of 28%, (b) continuously pulping said suspension in said vessel to reduce said materials to fragments, (c) continuously extracting from said vessel a first slurry fraction comprising liquid and such of said fragments as pass through holes of relatively small size, (d) continuously extracting from said vessel a separate, second slurry fraction comprising liquid and such of said fragments as pass through holes larger than said small extraction holes, (e) screening said second extracted fraction through perforations of a size not larger than that of said small extraction holes, (f) mixing the accepted stock from this first screening step with said first extracted fraction, (g) screening the rejected stock from the first screening step through perforations of a size intermediate the sizes of said small and large extraction holes, and (h) recycling the accepted stock from this second screening step to said vessel.
The invention also consists in apparatus for treating materials containing waste paper to recover paper fibers therefrom for reuse, comprising: (a) pulping means including a tub, (b) means for supplying said materials and water to said tub at rates maintaining the consistency of the resulting suspension in the range of 28 %, (c) means for continuously pulping said suspension in said tub to reduce said materials to fragments, (d) means for continuously extracting from said tub a first slurry fraction comprising liquid and such of said fragments as pass through holes of relatively small size, (e) means for simultaneously extracting from said vessel a second slurry fraction comprising liquid and such of said fragments as pass through holes larger than said small extraction holes, (f) first screen means connected to receive said second fraction and having small perforations of a size not larger than that of said small extraction holes, (g) means for mixing the accepted stock from said screen means with said first fraction, (h) second screen means connected to receive the materials rejected by said first screen means and having perforations of a size intermediate the size of said small and large extraction holes, and (i) means for recycling the accepted stock from said second screen means to said tub.
The small extraction holes are preferably in the range of 18 to X inch, typically 3/6 inch, and communicate with an extraction chamber from which stock is continually drawn to a chest of suitable size for surge capacity. The larger extraction holes are preferably in the range of 2 to 2 inches in diameter, typically 1 inch in diameter, and communicate with a separate extraction chamber, The first slurry fraction, which is extracted through the small extraction holes, consists primarily of essentially defibered paper and a minimum of plastics and other floating trash. The second fraction also includes a substantial quantity of good fiber, in both fully and incompletely difibered form, but it will contain the major proportion of plastics sheet or film and other floating trash. Preferably the size of the second extraction holes is such as to promote extraction of the floating trash on a continuous basis so that it does not clog the pulper or unnecessarily load the rotor.
This second fraction is desirably first subjected to centrifugal cleaning to eliminate high specific gravity contaminants, and it is then screened in the first screen having perforations no larger and preferably somewhat smaller in size than the small extraction holes, i.e. perforations in the range of 1/,G to 3/16 inches and typically X inch. The stock accepted by this screen comprises primarily essentially defibered paper material, and it is therefore conducted to the same chest as the stock extracted through the small extraction holes for mixture therewith.
The material rejected by the first screen includes substantially all of the floating trash from the pulper, but it also includes a considerable quantity of reclaimable but still undefibered paper material. It may be delivered to a deflaker for further defibering action, with the output of the deflaker being supplied to the second or tailing screen having perforations of a size relatively larger than that of the perforations of the first screen and intermediate the sizes of the small and large extraction holes. Preferably, the perforations of this second screen are in the range of 1 to q inches. The stock accepted by this second screen is recycled to the pulper, and the reject from the screen, which is almost entirely plastics and other floating trash, may be discarded. Alternatively, the deflaker may be omitted from the system, in which case the screen is still used in the same way to separate the floating trash and return the reclaimable paper material to the pulper.
The advantages of the present method and apparatus over U.S. patent 3,873,410 include the fact that the majority of the extraction area can be devoted to the small holes for extraction of stock which requires no further defibering. At the same time, the larger extraction holes provide for continuous purging of the pulper of floating trash which would otherwise tend to interfere with the small extraction holes. In addition, with only a minor portion of extraction area having the larger holes, the flow to the first screen is correspondingly reduced, as well as the load on the deflaker if one is used, and in either case, recirculation of defibered stock to the pulper is reduced to a minimum. This all results in increased efficiency at each station and an overall higher production rate of usable fiber.
The single figure is a flow diagram illustrating an apparatus embodying and for carrying out the process of the invention.
The major piece of equipment in the system shown in the drawing is a pulper comprising a treatment vessel or tub 10 wherein a rotor 11 rotates above an extraction area composed of a plate 12 provided with holes of relatively of small size, namely in the range of 1X inch, and a second plate 13 provided with substantially larger holes, namely in the range of 2 to 2 inches in diameter. As shown, the plate 12 is of substantially larger area than plate 13 and may advantageously occupy as much as 90% of the total extraction area. Each of the plates 12 and 13 communicates with a separate extraction chamber therebelow, and each of these extraction chambers is in turn provided with its own discharge line 14 and 15 respectively.
A conveyor 20 carries the waste paper material to the tub 10, and it is to be understood that this charge may be selected from the full range of waste paper containing materials from commercial "waste paper" to municipal solid waste. A junk remover 22 is positioned adjacent the tub and communicates therewith through a conduit 23.
Water is continuously supplied to the tub by a line 24 through the line 25 and/or the junk remover 22 and its connecting conduit 23 into the tub.
Preferred examples of pulpers suitable for use in this station include those shown in U.S.
patents Nos. 3,339,851 and No. 3,595,488 and details of the junk remover are shown in U.K. patent No. 1,266,420. The essential characteristics of the pulper are that it be capable of subjecting mixed waste paper materials and water to forcts of mechanical and hydraulic sheer and mechanical impact which will quickly and effectively reduce the solid material in the tub to fragments capable of passage through the perforations in extraction plate 12. Normally the pulper will be equipped with a ragger 26, also as shown in U.K. patent 1,266,420, for removing stingy materials, large sheets of plastics, and the like.
The pulper 10 operates continuously, with additional waste paper and water being added at rates which will maintain the solids content of the mixture in the desired range of 2 to 8%, 3 to 5% being preferred for practical reasons. A first slurry fraction of water and defibered paper of sufficiently small size to pas through the small holes in extraction plate 12 is continuously withdrawn from the associated extraction chamber through line 14 by a pump 27 and supplied to a surge tank 30, from which the stock is processed further through the necessary cleaning and fine screening as desired in accordance with conventional practice. A second slurry fraction of water and frag mentary material which passes through the larger perforations in plate 13 is continuously withdrawn through line 15 by a pump 33, and if this slurry contains a significant amount of high specific gravity contaminants such as metal and glass, it is preferably delivered by pump 33 to a centrifugal cleaner 34 for removing the high specific gravity contaminants to simplify the subsequent screening as well as to prevent possible damage to the screen.
The cleaned slurry from the cleaner 34 will contain a considerable proportion of relatively large undefibered pieces of paper as well as pieces of plastics and the like of comparable size, but when the initial pulping operation is carried out in a pulper of the characteristics noted above, the result will also be that a substantial proportion of the paper which has been substantially completely defibered will be extracted with the floating trash through plate 13. This slurry is therefore subjected to a screening operation in a screen 35 which will result in acceptance of at least the majority of the substantially completely defibered paper and the rejection of the undefibered paper fragments, plastics and other pieces of reject material.
Highly successful results have been obtained in the practice of the invention with the screen 35 constructed in accordance with U.S. patent 2,835,173 and incorporating the improvements disclosed in our U.K. patent No. 1,444,376 and/or our U.S. patent No.
3,970,548. The screen 35 is accordingly shown as comprising a main housing 40 having a tangential inlet port 41 at the upper end thereof, an outlet port 42 for accepted stock from which a line 43 leads to the surge tank 30, and a discharge port 44 for reject stock.
Within the housing 40 is a screen cylinder 45, and a rotor 46 operates within the cylinder 40 and carries vanes 47 spaced inwardly from the surface of the screen cylinder. For the purposes of the invention, the perforations in the screen cylinder 45 are sized to accept only substantially defibered paper and particles of similar sizes and are of a size not larger than that of the small extraction holes in the plate 12. Satisfactory results have been obtained in the practice of the invention with a screen constructed as described wherein these perforations are smaller than the holes in extractor plate 12, namely in the range of approximately 1/ to A inch in diameter, and preferably 1 inch.
The reject flow from screen 35 will therefore contain the relatively minor amount of undefibered pieces of paper and substantially all of the plastics and other floating trash.
This reject flow is shown as constructed such, for example, as a disk refiner, and the flow from the deflaker 50 is supplied to a tailing screen 55 having perforations of a size intermediate the sizes of the small and large extraction holes in the plates 12, 13 and of any suitable type for separating the good fiber and undefibered pieces of paper from the larger pieces of plastics and other floating trash. For example, the screen 55 may be a vibrating flat bed screen of the Jonsson type with perforations larger than screen 35, e.g. t to 3 inch. The water neces sary for operation of screen 55 is supplied by a branch 56 from the water line 24 to the pulper.
Since the accepts flow from the screen 55 requires further pulping, it is returned at 57 to the pulper tub 10, and the reject is dis charged at 58. It should be noted that use of the deflaker is optional. For many instal lations it may be omitted, and the reject line 49 from screen 35 may be connected directly to the trailing screen 55, with the accepts flow recirculated from screen 55 to the tub for the necessary further defibering.
A major advantage of this invention is the provision it makes for operating each piece of apparatus in the system at the proper balance of load and efficiency. For example, in a typical 300 ton per day system, the flow of essentially defibered stock extracted through the small hole plate 12 will average 265 tons at 3% consistency, while the flow of trash-carrying stock extracted through the large hole plate 13 and delivered to the screen 35 will average 145 tons at the same consistency. The screen 35 will therefore be required to handle only about 35% of the -total flow of extracted stock.
The accepts flow from screen 35 will average 75 tons per day,-at approximately 2.7% consistency, leaving only about 70 tons at 3.4% consistency for handling by the deflaker 50 and/or the tailing screen 55. On the average, approximately 15 to 20% of the flows from the tailing screen will be reject, with the remainder being recirculated to the pulper. It should also be noted that if the deflaker or tailing screen lacks the capa city to handle the full flow of reject from the screen 35, that flow can be split accord ingly, with the surplus being recirculated to the pulper tub 10, as indicated by the broken line 60 and 61. In the subsequent repulping, a major amount -of the recycled paper frag ments will be sufficiently defibered for accep tance by the small hole extraction plate 12 or the screen 55, correspondingly reducing the loads on the deflaker and tailing screen.
Thus, with either arrangement, each piece of equipment is required to handle only that portion of the total load which requires the operation of that equipment, which promotes efficient operation as well as minimal operating cost and wear on the equipment;

Claims (10)

WHAT WE CLAIM IS:-
1. A method of treating materials containing waste paper to recover paper fibers therefrom for reuse, which comprises the steps of: (a) supplying said materials and water to a vessel at rates maintaining the consistency of the resulting suspension in the range of 28%, (b) continuously pulping said suspension in said vessel to reduce said materials to fragments, (c) continuously extracting from said vessel a first slurry fraction comprising liquid and such of said fragments as pass through holes of relatively small size, (d) continuously extracting from said vessel a separate, second slurry fraction comprising liquid and such of said fragments as pass through holes larger than said small extraction holes, (e) screening said second extracted fraction through perforations of a size not larger than that of said small extraction holes, (f) mixing the accepted stock from this first screening step with said first extracted fraction, (g) screening the rejected stock from the first screening step through perforations of a size intermediate the sizes of said small and large extraction holes, and (h) recycling the accepted stock from this second screening step to said vessel.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the first screening step is through perforations of a size smaller than that of the small extraction holes.
3. A method as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the small extraction holes are in the range of X to X inch in diameter, the larger extraction holes are in the range of 41 to 2 inches diameter, the first screening perforations are in the range of 1/,, to 3/lug inch in diameter, and the second screening perforations are in the range of A to 2 inch in diameter.
4. A method as claimed in claim 1, 2 or 3, including the step of subjecting the rejected stock from the first screening step to a defibering action before the second screening step.
5. Apparatus for treating materials containing waste paper to recover paper fibers therefrom for reuse, comprising: (a) pulping means including a tub, (b) means for supplying said materials and water to said tub at rates maintaining the consistency of the resulting suspension in the range of 28%, (c) means for continuously pulping said suspension in said tub to reduce said materials to fragments, (d) means for continuously extracting from said tub a first slurry fraction comprises ing liquid and such of said fragments as pass through holes of relatively small size, (e) means for simultaneously extracting from said vessel a second slurry fraction comprising liquid and such of said fragments as pass through holes larger than said small extraction holes, (f) first screen means connected to receive said second fraction and having small perforations of a size not larger than that of said small extraction holes, (g) means for mixing the accepted stock from said first screen means with said first fraction, (h) second screen means connected to receive the materials rejected by said first screen means and having perforations of a size intermediate the sizes of said small and large extraction holes, and (i) means for recycling the accepted stock from said second screen means to said tub.
6. Apparatus as claimed in claim 5, wherein the small perforations of the first screen means are smaller than the small extraction holes.
7. Apparatus as claimed in claim 5 or 6, wherein the small extraction holes are in the range of 1 to J inch in diameter, the larger extraction holes are in the range of 41 to 2 inches diameter, the first screen perforations are in the range of J/16 to 3/'16 inch in diameter, and the second screen perforations are in the range of k to 2 inch in diameter.
8. Apparatus as claimed in claim 5, 6 or 7, including defibering means connected to receive the materials rejected by the first screen means, and means for conducting the resulting defibering materials to the second screen means.
9. Apparatus for treating materials containing waste paper to recover paper fibers therefrom for resuse, constructed, arranged and adapted to operate substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
10. A method of treating materials containing waste paper to recover paper fibers therefrom for reuse, substantially as wherein before described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
GB11201/77A 1976-03-17 1977-03-16 Method and apparatus forrecovering paper fibres from waste paper containing materials Expired GB1574645A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US66767576A 1976-03-17 1976-03-17

Publications (1)

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GB1574645A true GB1574645A (en) 1980-09-10

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Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB11201/77A Expired GB1574645A (en) 1976-03-17 1977-03-16 Method and apparatus forrecovering paper fibres from waste paper containing materials

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JP (1) JPS5934834B2 (en)
BR (1) BR7701077A (en)
CA (1) CA1098353A (en)
DE (1) DE2711159A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2344667A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1574645A (en)
SE (1) SE7613057L (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2161091A (en) * 1984-07-06 1986-01-08 Voith Gmbh J M Process for the preparation of waste paper
CN111139676A (en) * 2018-11-06 2020-05-12 维美德技术有限公司 Screen deck, pulper, process and method for making a fibrous pulp suspension

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE2701737B2 (en) * 1977-01-18 1980-03-20 Hermann Finckh Maschinenfabrik Gmbh & Co, 7417 Pfullingen Process for the preparation and cleaning of fiber material as well as an installation for carrying out such a process
CS220858B1 (en) * 1978-12-06 1983-04-29 Marcel Lalak Method of treating the waste paper
FI99032C (en) * 1994-05-13 1999-10-20 Valmet Corp Procedure for defibrating recycled paper
CN110894693A (en) * 2018-09-13 2020-03-20 唐山市冀滦纸业有限公司 Pulping tailing treatment system in papermaking production and technology thereof

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR1325882A (en) * 1962-04-04 1963-05-03 Machine for pulping paper articles
GB1026210A (en) * 1963-10-25 1966-04-14 Ryoichi Nagai Method of,and apparatus for,preparing paper pulp
US3873410A (en) * 1973-08-27 1975-03-25 Black Clawson Co Method and apparatus for recovering paper fibers from waste paper containing materials

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2161091A (en) * 1984-07-06 1986-01-08 Voith Gmbh J M Process for the preparation of waste paper
CN111139676A (en) * 2018-11-06 2020-05-12 维美德技术有限公司 Screen deck, pulper, process and method for making a fibrous pulp suspension
EP3650601A1 (en) * 2018-11-06 2020-05-13 Valmet Technologies Oy Pulper and method for manufacturing fibre mass suspension
CN111139676B (en) * 2018-11-06 2022-04-15 维美德技术有限公司 Screen plate, pulper, process and method for manufacturing a fibre pulp suspension

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
SE7613057L (en) 1977-09-18
JPS5934834B2 (en) 1984-08-24
FR2344667A1 (en) 1977-10-14
CA1098353A (en) 1981-03-31
FR2344667B1 (en) 1982-11-12
DE2711159A1 (en) 1977-09-29
JPS52114707A (en) 1977-09-26
BR7701077A (en) 1977-10-18

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PS Patent sealed [section 19, patents act 1949]
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee