TITEL
Fluid flow in wood fiber network
FöRFATTARE
Pettersson, Patrik
INSTITUTION
Tillämpad fysik, maskin- och materialteknik / Strömningslära
SAMMANFATTNING
Cellulose material is processed to pulp suspensions and MDF boards in order
to produce products such as papers, magazines, laminate floors or door
skins. A critical stage of these processes is when the cellulose fiber
networks are compressed to specific densities and when most of the fluid
originally positioned between and inside the fibers is forced to leave the
network. The fiber network is then exposed to a drag force generated by the
flow. The magnitude of this force is dependent upon how easy the fluid can
flow through the network, which is commonly described by its permeability.
In addition to the permeability, which relates to the drag on each fiber,
there is a solid network force. The response to this force from the fiber
network is often termed as the compressibility of it. Hence, to be able to
model and predict the compression stage in cellulose material related
processes these two material properties must be known.
In this thesis two equipments to measure the permeability of MDF networks
and pulp suspensions are evaluated and a neat model for a part of the MDF-
compression stage is developed. A reference material consisting of
spherical particles and relevant fiber networks are used as test objects
for the equipments enabling a comparison to theoretical models and existing
experimental results. The outcome is that correct enough permeability data
are obtained with respective equipment as long as Reynolds number is
sufficiently low. The equipments are then used to study different materials
showing, for instance, that highly compressed MDF-networks are strongly
anisotropic as to permeability and that the tested hardwood pulps have an
overall higher permeability compared to the softwood pulps investigated. It
was also found that the permeability of the pulps was not influenced by
different mechanical treatments of the fiber network, as long as the
geometrical dimensions of the fibers were constants.
ISSN 1402-1757 / ISRN LTU-LIC--06/34--SE / NR 2006:34
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