Wood fiber accounts for more than 90% of the raw material used in the production of paper and board products, and it can come from a variety of sources. These sources can be slushed virgin fiber that is produced onsite, market pulp from other pulp mills, or recycled/secondary fiber. In the "recycled" fiber category, the most difficult source to process is post-consumer waste. This fiber arrives at the mill contaminated with a variety of undesirable materials. This course will focus on how the fibers are cleaned and separated from the contaminants using the two categories of physical separation: centrifugal cleaning and screening.
•State the purpose of recycled fiber cleaning and screening
•Identify some of the typical contaminants/material found in recycled fiber sources
•List the different techniques used to clean recycled fiber
•Explain the principle of separation for centrifugal cleaning
•Identify the purpose of a high density cleaner
•Identify the main components of a cylindrical screen
•Explain the principle of separation for screening
•Differentiate between coarse and fine screens
•Differentiate between high density and low consistency cleaners
•Differentiate between forward and reverse cleaners
Industrial Libraries
- Convergence Industrial Maintenance Library
- Convergence Pulping Library
- Industrial Premium