US3661702A - Stock flow system for paper-making machine - Google Patents

Stock flow system for paper-making machine Download PDF

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US3661702A
US3661702A US884844A US3661702DA US3661702A US 3661702 A US3661702 A US 3661702A US 884844 A US884844 A US 884844A US 3661702D A US3661702D A US 3661702DA US 3661702 A US3661702 A US 3661702A
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stock
elbow
flow
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single stream
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John A Means
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TI Gotham Inc
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Time Inc
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21FPAPER-MAKING MACHINES; METHODS OF PRODUCING PAPER THEREON
    • D21F1/00Wet end of machines for making continuous webs of paper

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  • ABSTRACT In order to establish diffusion among a plurality of fluid streams emanating respectively from a plurality of conduits in parallel, closely-spaced-apart relation, the streams are combined within a single enclosure to form a single stream of substantial width compared to its thickness.
  • the enclosure is formed with a double elbow so that the direction of movement of the stream is changed twice in succession, through an angle of substantially 90 in each case.
  • the enclosure is formed in the vicinity of each elbow in such a manner as to cause acceleration of the stock during each change in its direction of movement and deceleration of the stock immediately preceding each change in its direction of movement.
  • Some of the most advanced paper-stock flow systems that have been constructed heretofore include a plurality of hoses or other fluid conduits mounted in parallel for establishing a plurality of streams of stock that are combined into a single wide, flat stream a relatively short distance upstream of the nozzle.
  • Such machines are greatly superior in many ways to earlier flow systems. For example, flow systems including the parallel conduits have relatively little tendency to accumulate growths of slime. Moreover, control of cross-machine basisweight variations is facilitated by adjustments that can be made individually to the conduits.
  • the streams in the conduits must be combined into a single relatively wide, flat stream prior to ejection of the stream as a jet from the flow system nozzle onto a permeable wire or between a pair of permeable wires, for the formation ofa web of paper.
  • a permeable wire or between a pair of permeable wires for the formation of a web of paper.
  • Proposals heretofore made for accomplishing this result include the provision of a flat channel with or without stockflow-obstruction means, venturi shapings and other expedients. While certain of these prior expedients have improved the quality of paper that can be manufactured, they have not been a complete solution to the problem.
  • An object of the invention is to remedy the difficiencies of conventional methods and apparatus noted above.
  • an object of the invention is to establish diffusion among a plurality of fluid streams emanating respectively from a plurality of tubes, hoses or other fluid conduits in parallel, closely-spaced-apart relation in such a manner as to remove the raw-stock cross-machine basis-weight variations that depend on the geometry of the conduits, without diminishing the stock jet integrity and stability.
  • Another object is to improve the quality of the formed sheet.
  • the stream is decelerated immediately preceding each of the changes in direction of movement.
  • FIG. 2 is a sectional view in side elevation, on a larger scale than FIG. 1, ofa portion of the apparatus of FIG. I;
  • FIG. 3 is a sectional view in side elevation of another embodiment of the portion of the apparatus shown in FIG. 2.
  • the figures show a paper stock flow system I0 including a portion 11 thereof with which the present invention is particularly concerned.
  • the flow system 10 comprises a header 12 having an upstream end 14 of large diameter, a downstream end 16 of small diameter, open to permit recirculation of a portion of the stock supplied to the header l2, and a plurality of stock delivery openings 101-486 between the downstream end 16 and the upstream end 14. For clarity, most of the openings 101-186 are omitted from the drawing.
  • the portion 11 of the flow system 10 is a single enclosure provided for delivering the paper stock to a paper-making machine 20 that forms the stock into a paper web.
  • the enclosure 11 is formed with an unobstructed flow channel and may communicate with or include any suitable nozzle or slice 21 for ejecting the stock between forming wires or permeable belts 22 and 24 respectively wound about rolls 26 and 28 or other training means.
  • a flat channel 21 may be mounted between the portion 11 of the flow system 10 and the nozzle or slice 21.
  • the rolls 26 and 28 and the wires or belts 22 and 24 respectively rotate and move as shown by arrows 30 and 32 to receive and transport a jet of stock and form it into a paper web.
  • the flow channel 11 is undivided in the sense that it is substantially as wide as the stock stream delivered to the paper-making machine 20 (see FIG. 1B), and it is possible to trace a continuous path through the channel II from one edge to the other in a direction generally normal to the plane of FIG. 1, all points of such path lying in the path of stock flow.
  • the apparatus 10 also includes a plurality of flow channels 101'-I86 in parallel with one another and collectively in series with the undivided flow channel 11 and the header 12. For clarity, most of the flow channels l01186' are omitted from the drawings.
  • Each flow channel of the flow channels 101'- 186 in parallel with one another is connected at its downstream end to the undivided flow channel 11 and at its upstream end to a separate one of the openings l01186 on the header 12.
  • Each of the flow channels l01l86 includes an upstream portion made of flexible hose or the like, shown schematically in dash-dot outline in FIG. 1, and connected to the header 12.
  • Each flow channel also includes an expansion pipe similar to the expansion pipe 187 connected to the associated flexible hose.
  • Each flow channel includes, finally, a spreader pipe 188 of changing cross-section.
  • the expansion pipes 187 have progressively increasing cross-sectional flow area in the direction of stock flow in order to decelerate the stock, and the spreader pipes 188 of changing cross-section have crosssectional shapes that change from circular where they are connected to the expansion pipes 187 to rectangular where they are connected to the unobstructed flow channel 11.
  • the pipes 188 of changing cross-section have slightly decreasing crosssectional flow areas in the direction of stock flow, so that stock flowing therethrough is accelerated slightly.
  • the present invention is concerned particularly with the structure of the double-elbow portion 11, shown in detail in FIG. 2, of the flow system 10 and its cooperation with the separate flow channels 10ll86 to establish diffusion among the fluid streams emanating from those channels.
  • the problem that is solved arises from several phenomena.
  • the stream issuing from each conduit, whether circular or rectangular at its exit has a core of higher relative flow volume per unit of time, with increased kinetic energy, and is characterized by the further exaggeration that the core has relatively higher consistency.
  • the method of the invention comprises the steps of combining the streams emanating from the respective channels within the single enclosure 11 to form a single stream 34 flowing where combined substantially in the same direction as the structure in the pipes 188 (FIG. 1) and of substantial width compared to its thickness (FIG. 1A).
  • the width of the stream 34 is in fact substantially equal to the width of the paper web made on the paper-making machine 20.
  • the thickness'of the stream 34 is about an inch in a typical case at the upstream end 36 thereof and about 3 inches immediately upstream of a first elbow portion 38, so that the ratio of flow speed immediately upstream of the elbow 38 to flow speed at the upstream end 36 is about Vs.
  • the deceleration of the stock between the entrance 36 and the first elbow 38 can readily be effected over a length of some 21 inches.
  • the distance of 21 inches is not critical per se, the important consideration being that it be long enough so that the included angle between opposite walls 40 and 42 is between 0 and 6.
  • An angle substantially larger than 6 tends to be accompanied by counterflow instability.
  • a second elbow 44 Downstream of the first elbow 38 is a second elbow 44.
  • the elbows 38 and 44 change the direction of movement of the stream 34 twice in succession through angles each within the range of 80 to 100 and preferably substantially 90.
  • the stock is accelerated throughout each of the changes in direction of movement at the elbows 38 and 44 by construction of the walls in such a manner that the cross-sectional flow area of the stock is reduced at the elbows. In this way, stability of flow is maintained in the elbows.
  • the ratio of the cross-sectional flow area of the stock immediately upstream of the first elbow 38 to the cross-sectional flow area of the stock immediately downstream of the first elbow 38 is substantially 12/7.
  • the corresponding ratio for the second elbow 44 is comparable,
  • the wall portion 40a may have a radius of curvature of l A in., while the wall portion 42a has a radius of curvature of 3 in.
  • the wall portion 40b may have a radius of curvature of 3 in., while the wall portion 42b has a radius of curvature of l A; in.
  • the speed of movement of the unified stream 34 at the point 360 immediately after the second of the changes of direction, effected by the elbow 44, is the same as the speed of movement of the stream upstream of the end 36.
  • the direction of movement of the unified stream 34 immediately after the second of the changes therein, effected by the elbow 44, is substantially parallel to the direction of movement of the stream immediately before the first of the changes therein, effected by the elbow 38.
  • FIG. 3 shows, it is also within the scope of the invention to provide a double elbow portion 11 that causes the second change in direction of movement to be in the same sense (i.e., clockwise from the perspective of FIGS. 2 and 3) instead of in the opposite sense.
  • FIG. 3 employs the same reference characters as FIG. 2, with the addition of primes.
  • the direction of movement of the stream immediately after the second of the changes therein, effected by the elbow 44' is substantially opposite to the direction of movement of the stream immediately before the first of the changes therein, effected by the elbow 38.
  • the stock is decelerated. This is effected by the divergence from each other of opposite wall portions 40c and 420 (FIG. 2) and 40c and 42c (FIG. 3). Again, the included angle of expansion must be between 0 and 6.
  • the total deceleration immediately upstream of the elbow 44 is less than the earlier deceleration immediately upstream of elbow 38. As noted above, such earlier deceleration immediately upstream of the elbow 38 reduces stock velocity to A; of the velocity at the point 36.
  • the through-put of the stream 34 (FIG. 2) or 34 (FIG. 3) is within the range of 30 to 60 gallons per minute per inch of width of the stream.
  • novel and highly effective methods and apparatus facilitating the diffusion of streams from individual hoses, tubes or other fluid conduits or channels in a multiple stream system in such a manner as to remove the raw-stock cross-machine basisweight variations that are tube-geometry dependent.
  • the result is an improvement in formed sheet quality.
  • it is possible to distribute the flow from a spreader 188 having a downstream end 3 in. wide (in a direction normal to the plane of FIG. 1) uniformly over a width of 7 in.
  • the flow tapers off in directions normal to the plane of FIG. 1 over an additional 1.5 in. at either limit of the 7 in. so that a distribution over a total width of 10 in. is achieved.
  • a method of establishing diffusion among a plurality of streams of paper stock emanating respectively from a plurality of fluid conduits in parallel, closely-spaced-apart relation comprising the steps of combining said streams within a single enclosure to form a single stream of substantial width compared to its thickness, said single stream where combined flowing substantially in the same direction as said plurality of streams changing the direction of movement of said single stream twice in succession through angles each within the range of 80 to 100, accelerating said single stream throughout each of said changes in direction of movement, and decelerating said single stream immediately before each of said changes in direction of movement.
  • each of said angles is substantially 90.
  • Apparatus for establishing diffusion among a plurality of parallel streams of paper stock employed in the manufacture of a paper web comprising an unobstructed flow channel into which said streams discharge, said channel having a width substantially equal to the width of said paper web and defining a first elbow wherein stock flow direction changes through a first angle of substantially and a second elbow downstream of said first elbow wherein stock flow direction changes through a second angle of substantially 90, there being an accelerating portion throughout each of said elbows comprising converging opposite walls and wherein the cross-sectional flow area of said stock diminishes in the direction of stock flow and a decelerating portion immediately adjacent to and upstream of each accelerating portion comprising diverging opposite walls and wherein the cross-sectional flow area of said stock increased in the direction of stock flow.

Abstract

In order to establish diffusion among a plurality of fluid streams emanating respectively from a plurality of conduits in parallel, closely-spaced-apart relation, the streams are combined within a single enclosure to form a single stream of substantial width compared to its thickness. The enclosure is formed with a double elbow so that the direction of movement of the stream is changed twice in succession, through an angle of substantially 90* in each case. The enclosure is formed in the vicinity of each elbow in such a manner as to cause acceleration of the stock during each change in its direction of movement and deceleration of the stock immediately preceding each change in its direction of movement.

Description

United States Patent [151 3,661,702 Means 1 May 9, 1972 [54] STOCK FLOW SYSTEM FOR PAPER- MAKING MACHINE [72] Inventor: John A. Means, Norwalk, Conn.
[73] Assignee: Time, Incorporated, New York, NY.
[22] Filed: Dec. 15, 1969 [21] Appl. No.: 884,844
[52] U.S.Cl ,.l62/2l6, l62/336, 162/343 [51] Int. Cl. ..D2lf 1/06 [58] FieldofSearch ..l62/2l2,216, 343,336
[56] References Cited UNlTED STATES PATENTS 3,067,815 12/1962 Flaig et a1. ..162/336 X 3,135,650 6/1964 Robinson et al. ..162/216 2,865,260 12/1958 Lee 162/343 2,281,293 4/1942 Lang ..162/343 X Primary ExaminerS. Leon Bashore Assistant ExaminerRichard H. Tushin I Attorney-Brumbaugh, Graves, Donohue & Raymond [5 7] ABSTRACT In order to establish diffusion among a plurality of fluid streams emanating respectively from a plurality of conduits in parallel, closely-spaced-apart relation, the streams are combined within a single enclosure to form a single stream of substantial width compared to its thickness. The enclosure is formed with a double elbow so that the direction of movement of the stream is changed twice in succession, through an angle of substantially 90 in each case. The enclosure is formed in the vicinity of each elbow in such a manner as to cause acceleration of the stock during each change in its direction of movement and deceleration of the stock immediately preceding each change in its direction of movement.
10 Claims, 5 Drawing Figures Patented May 9, 1972 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 INVENTOR. JOHN A. MEANS his AT TOFNE Y5 Patented May 9, 1972 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 STOCK FLOW SYSTEM FOR PAPER-MAKING MACHINE BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to flow systems for paper-making machines and, more particularly, to novel and highly-effective methods and apparatus facilitating the establishment of diffusion among a plurality of streams of paper stock emanating respectively from a plurality of hoses, tubes or other fluid conduits or flow channels in parallel in such a manner as to remove the raw stock cross-machine basis-weight variations that depend on the geometry of the fluid conduits, without diminishing the integrity and stability of the jet of stock supplied to the wet end.
Some of the most advanced paper-stock flow systems that have been constructed heretofore include a plurality of hoses or other fluid conduits mounted in parallel for establishing a plurality of streams of stock that are combined into a single wide, flat stream a relatively short distance upstream of the nozzle. Such machines are greatly superior in many ways to earlier flow systems. For example, flow systems including the parallel conduits have relatively little tendency to accumulate growths of slime. Moreover, control of cross-machine basisweight variations is facilitated by adjustments that can be made individually to the conduits.
Notwithstanding these advantages, however, there remain in the best flow systems heretofore available residual variations in basis weight that depend on the geometry of the conduits. Even with the closest quality control the conduits are inevitably slightly different from one another. These differences relate to cross-sectional flow area and shape at various points along the lengths of the conduits, to the degree of smoothness of the interior surfaces of the conduits, to differences in the ages and length of use of the conduits, and to differences in the curves described by the conduits. Moreover, even if the conduits were identical in every respect, there are still small differences in the characteristics of the stock transported by the conduits, notwithstanding efforts to supply the conduits with stock that is completely homogeneous. Also, there are velocity and consistency gradients, discussed below, that would exist irrespective of differences among the conduits.
The streams in the conduits must be combined into a single relatively wide, flat stream prior to ejection of the stream as a jet from the flow system nozzle onto a permeable wire or between a pair of permeable wires, for the formation ofa web of paper. In order to obliterate any longitudinal streaks that might otherwise appear in the resulting web of paper at the boundaries of the streams from the conduits, it is necessary to establish diffusion of these streams.
Proposals heretofore made for accomplishing this result include the provision of a flat channel with or without stockflow-obstruction means, venturi shapings and other expedients. While certain of these prior expedients have improved the quality of paper that can be manufactured, they have not been a complete solution to the problem.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION An object of the invention is to remedy the difficiencies of conventional methods and apparatus noted above. In particular, an object of the invention is to establish diffusion among a plurality of fluid streams emanating respectively from a plurality of tubes, hoses or other fluid conduits in parallel, closely-spaced-apart relation in such a manner as to remove the raw-stock cross-machine basis-weight variations that depend on the geometry of the conduits, without diminishing the stock jet integrity and stability. Another object is to improve the quality of the formed sheet.
The foregoing and other objects of the invention are attained by combining the streams within a single enclosure to form a single stream of substantial width compared to its thickness, changing the direction of movement of the single stream twice in succession through angles each within the range of 80 to 100, and accelerating the single combined stream during each of the changes in direction of movement.
The stream is decelerated immediately preceding each of the changes in direction of movement.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING apparatus of FIGS. 1 and EA to the width ofa paper web made by means including such apparatus;
FIG. 2 is a sectional view in side elevation, on a larger scale than FIG. 1, ofa portion of the apparatus of FIG. I; and
FIG. 3 is a sectional view in side elevation of another embodiment of the portion of the apparatus shown in FIG. 2.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS The figures show a paper stock flow system I0 including a portion 11 thereof with which the present invention is particularly concerned. The flow system 10 comprises a header 12 having an upstream end 14 of large diameter, a downstream end 16 of small diameter, open to permit recirculation of a portion of the stock supplied to the header l2, and a plurality of stock delivery openings 101-486 between the downstream end 16 and the upstream end 14. For clarity, most of the openings 101-186 are omitted from the drawing.
The portion 11 of the flow system 10 is a single enclosure provided for delivering the paper stock to a paper-making machine 20 that forms the stock into a paper web. The enclosure 11 is formed with an unobstructed flow channel and may communicate with or include any suitable nozzle or slice 21 for ejecting the stock between forming wires or permeable belts 22 and 24 respectively wound about rolls 26 and 28 or other training means. A flat channel 21 may be mounted between the portion 11 of the flow system 10 and the nozzle or slice 21. The rolls 26 and 28 and the wires or belts 22 and 24 respectively rotate and move as shown by arrows 30 and 32 to receive and transport a jet of stock and form it into a paper web. The flow channel 11 is undivided in the sense that it is substantially as wide as the stock stream delivered to the paper-making machine 20 (see FIG. 1B), and it is possible to trace a continuous path through the channel II from one edge to the other in a direction generally normal to the plane of FIG. 1, all points of such path lying in the path of stock flow.
The apparatus 10 also includes a plurality of flow channels 101'-I86 in parallel with one another and collectively in series with the undivided flow channel 11 and the header 12. For clarity, most of the flow channels l01186' are omitted from the drawings. Each flow channel of the flow channels 101'- 186 in parallel with one another is connected at its downstream end to the undivided flow channel 11 and at its upstream end to a separate one of the openings l01186 on the header 12.
Each of the flow channels l01l86 includes an upstream portion made of flexible hose or the like, shown schematically in dash-dot outline in FIG. 1, and connected to the header 12. Each flow channel also includes an expansion pipe similar to the expansion pipe 187 connected to the associated flexible hose. Each flow channel includes, finally, a spreader pipe 188 of changing cross-section. The expansion pipes 187 have progressively increasing cross-sectional flow area in the direction of stock flow in order to decelerate the stock, and the spreader pipes 188 of changing cross-section have crosssectional shapes that change from circular where they are connected to the expansion pipes 187 to rectangular where they are connected to the unobstructed flow channel 11. The pipes 188 of changing cross-section have slightly decreasing crosssectional flow areas in the direction of stock flow, so that stock flowing therethrough is accelerated slightly.
Certain features of the flow system described above are disclosed and claimed in my co-pending application Ser. No. 816,894 filed Apr. 17, 1969 for Tapered Header and in a co-pending application of Means et al. Ser. No. 702, lOl filed Jan. 31, 1968, now Pat. No. 3,628,589, for "Flow Systems. These aspects of the flow system 10 disclosed herein are claimed only in the respective earlier-filed applications and per se do not constitute the present invention and are not claimed herein.
The present invention is concerned particularly with the structure of the double-elbow portion 11, shown in detail in FIG. 2, of the flow system 10 and its cooperation with the separate flow channels 10ll86 to establish diffusion among the fluid streams emanating from those channels.
The problem that is solved arises from several phenomena. First, there are differences in the conduits and in the stock supplied to the conduits. Second, the flow velocity in each of the conduits in parallel upstream of the portion 11 is relatively low near the conduit walls and higher in the center of the conduit. This velocity gradient in each conduit is due to friction with the conduit walls. Third, there is a nonuniform distribution of fibers in the flow stream, a higher concentration or consistency occurring in higher-velocity areas and a lower concentration or consistency occurring in lower-velocity areas. Thus, the stream issuing from each conduit, whether circular or rectangular at its exit, has a core of higher relative flow volume per unit of time, with increased kinetic energy, and is characterized by the further exaggeration that the core has relatively higher consistency. These individual highvelocity, high-consistency cores must be diffused with the remainder of the stock emanating from the respective conduits and additionally, to the extent practicable consistently with the need to maintain the integrity and stability of the jet of stock supplied to the wet end, the stock emanating from each conduit must be diffused with the stock emanating from adjacent conduits.
The method of the invention comprises the steps of combining the streams emanating from the respective channels within the single enclosure 11 to form a single stream 34 flowing where combined substantially in the same direction as the structure in the pipes 188 (FIG. 1) and of substantial width compared to its thickness (FIG. 1A). The width of the stream 34 is in fact substantially equal to the width of the paper web made on the paper-making machine 20. The thickness'of the stream 34, on the other hand, is about an inch in a typical case at the upstream end 36 thereof and about 3 inches immediately upstream of a first elbow portion 38, so that the ratio of flow speed immediately upstream of the elbow 38 to flow speed at the upstream end 36 is about Vs. The deceleration of the stock between the entrance 36 and the first elbow 38 can readily be effected over a length of some 21 inches. The distance of 21 inches is not critical per se, the important consideration being that it be long enough so that the included angle between opposite walls 40 and 42 is between 0 and 6. An angle substantially larger than 6 tends to be accompanied by counterflow instability.
Downstream of the first elbow 38 is a second elbow 44. The elbows 38 and 44 change the direction of movement of the stream 34 twice in succession through angles each within the range of 80 to 100 and preferably substantially 90.
In accordance with the invention, the stock is accelerated throughout each of the changes in direction of movement at the elbows 38 and 44 by construction of the walls in such a manner that the cross-sectional flow area of the stock is reduced at the elbows. In this way, stability of flow is maintained in the elbows. The ratio of the cross-sectional flow area of the stock immediately upstream of the first elbow 38 to the cross-sectional flow area of the stock immediately downstream of the first elbow 38 is substantially 12/7. The corresponding ratio for the second elbow 44 is comparable,
being substantially 17/8. These ratios are attained without disrupting stock flow by proper selection of the radii of curvature of the elbow wall portions. The wall portion 40a, for example, may have a radius of curvature of l A in., while the wall portion 42a has a radius of curvature of 3 in. Similarly, the wall portion 40b may have a radius of curvature of 3 in., while the wall portion 42b has a radius of curvature of l A; in.
The speed of movement of the unified stream 34 at the point 360 immediately after the second of the changes of direction, effected by the elbow 44, is the same as the speed of movement of the stream upstream of the end 36.
The direction of movement of the unified stream 34 immediately after the second of the changes therein, effected by the elbow 44, is substantially parallel to the direction of movement of the stream immediately before the first of the changes therein, effected by the elbow 38. However, as FIG. 3 shows, it is also within the scope of the invention to provide a double elbow portion 11 that causes the second change in direction of movement to be in the same sense (i.e., clockwise from the perspective of FIGS. 2 and 3) instead of in the opposite sense. FIG. 3 employs the same reference characters as FIG. 2, with the addition of primes. In this embodiment, the direction of movement of the stream immediately after the second of the changes therein, effected by the elbow 44', is substantially opposite to the direction of movement of the stream immediately before the first of the changes therein, effected by the elbow 38.
Between the two changes in direction of movement effected by the elbows 38 and 44, respectively (FIG. 2), or 38 and 44, respectively (FIG. 3), the stock is decelerated. This is effected by the divergence from each other of opposite wall portions 40c and 420 (FIG. 2) and 40c and 42c (FIG. 3). Again, the included angle of expansion must be between 0 and 6. The total deceleration immediately upstream of the elbow 44 is less than the earlier deceleration immediately upstream of elbow 38. As noted above, such earlier deceleration immediately upstream of the elbow 38 reduces stock velocity to A; of the velocity at the point 36.
The through-put of the stream 34 (FIG. 2) or 34 (FIG. 3) is within the range of 30 to 60 gallons per minute per inch of width of the stream.
Thus there is provided in accordance with the invention novel and highly effective methods and apparatus facilitating the diffusion of streams from individual hoses, tubes or other fluid conduits or channels in a multiple stream system in such a manner as to remove the raw-stock cross-machine basisweight variations that are tube-geometry dependent. The result is an improvement in formed sheet quality. In accordance with the invention it is possible to distribute the flow from a spreader 188 having a downstream end 3 in. wide (in a direction normal to the plane of FIG. 1) uniformly over a width of 7 in. The flow tapers off in directions normal to the plane of FIG. 1 over an additional 1.5 in. at either limit of the 7 in. so that a distribution over a total width of 10 in. is achieved. This results in very good mixing of the stock from one spreader with the stock from two adjacent spreaders and partial mixing with the stock from the next two adjacent spreaders. The flow from one spreader is'thus diffused over a width otherwise serviced by five spreaders. Similar results are obtained in the case of spreaders having exits of other widths, for example 4 in.
Many modifications of the representative embodiments disclosed herein will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the invention is to be construed as including all the modifications thereof within the scope of the appended claims.
I claim:
1. A method of establishing diffusion among a plurality of streams of paper stock emanating respectively from a plurality of fluid conduits in parallel, closely-spaced-apart relation, comprising the steps of combining said streams within a single enclosure to form a single stream of substantial width compared to its thickness, said single stream where combined flowing substantially in the same direction as said plurality of streams changing the direction of movement of said single stream twice in succession through angles each within the range of 80 to 100, accelerating said single stream throughout each of said changes in direction of movement, and decelerating said single stream immediately before each of said changes in direction of movement.
2. A method according to claim 1 wherein each of said angles is substantially 90.
3. A method according to claim 1 wherein the direction of movement of said single stream immediately after the second of said changes therein is substantially parallel to the direction of movement of said single stream immediately before the first of said changes therein.
4. A method according to claim 1 wherein the direction of movement of said single stream immediately after the second of said changes therein is substantially opposite to the direction of movement of said single stream immediately before the first of said changes therein.
5. A method according to claim 1 wherein the ratio of the speed of said stock immediately after the earlier of said two decelerations to the speed of said stock immediately before the earlier of said two decelerations is substantially /3.
6. A method according to claim 1 wherein the throughput of said single stream is within the range of 30 to 60 gallons per minute per inch of width of said single stream, and further comprising the step of forming a paper web from said single stream, said web having a width substantially equal to the width of said single stream.
7. Apparatus for establishing diffusion among a plurality of parallel streams of paper stock employed in the manufacture of a paper web, comprising an unobstructed flow channel into which said streams discharge, said channel having a width substantially equal to the width of said paper web and defining a first elbow wherein stock flow direction changes through a first angle of substantially and a second elbow downstream of said first elbow wherein stock flow direction changes through a second angle of substantially 90, there being an accelerating portion throughout each of said elbows comprising converging opposite walls and wherein the cross-sectional flow area of said stock diminishes in the direction of stock flow and a decelerating portion immediately adjacent to and upstream of each accelerating portion comprising diverging opposite walls and wherein the cross-sectional flow area of said stock increased in the direction of stock flow.
8. Apparatus according to claim 7 wherein the ratio of the cross-sectional flow area of said stock immediately upstream of said first elbow to the cross-sectional flow area of said stock immediately downstream of said first elbow is substantially 12/7, and the ratio of the cross-sectional flow area of said stock immediately upstream of said second elbow to the crosssectional flow area of said stock immediately downstream of said second elbow is comparable to said first-named ratio.
9. Apparatus according to claim 7 wherein said flow channel is formed with opposite walls diverging from each other with reference to the direction of stock flow therebetween by an included angle between 0 and 6 immediately upstream of said first elbow.
10. Apparatus according to claim 7 wherein said flow channel is formed with opposite walls diverging from each other with reference to the direction of stock flow therebetween by an included angle between 0 and 6 between said elbows.

Claims (9)

  1. 2. A method according to claim 1 wherein each of said angles is substantially 90*.
  2. 3. A method according to claim 1 wherein the direction of movement of said single stream immediately after the second of said changes therein is substantially parallel to the direction of movement of said single stream immediately before the first of said changes therein.
  3. 4. A method according to claim 1 wherein the direction of movement of said single stream immediately after the second of said changes therein is substantially opposite to the direction of movement of said single stream immediately before the first of said changes therein.
  4. 5. A method according to claim 1 wherein the ratio of the speed of said stock immediately after the earlier of said two decelerations to the speed of said stock immediately before the earlier of said two decelerations is substantially 1/3 .
  5. 6. A method according to claim 1 wherein the throughput of said single stream is within the range of 30 to 60 gallons per minute per inch of width of said single stream, and further comprising the step of forming a paper web from said single stream, said web having a width substantially equal to the width of said single stream.
  6. 7. Apparatus for establishing diffusion among a plurality of parallel stReams of paper stock employed in the manufacture of a paper web, comprising an unobstructed flow channel into which said streams discharge, said channel having a width substantially equal to the width of said paper web and defining a first elbow wherein stock flow direction changes through a first angle of substantially 90* and a second elbow downstream of said first elbow wherein stock flow direction changes through a second angle of substantially 90*, there being an accelerating portion throughout each of said elbows comprising converging opposite walls and wherein the cross-sectional flow area of said stock diminishes in the direction of stock flow and a decelerating portion immediately adjacent to and upstream of each accelerating portion comprising diverging opposite walls and wherein the cross-sectional flow area of said stock increased in the direction of stock flow.
  7. 8. Apparatus according to claim 7 wherein the ratio of the cross-sectional flow area of said stock immediately upstream of said first elbow to the cross-sectional flow area of said stock immediately downstream of said first elbow is substantially 12/7, and the ratio of the cross-sectional flow area of said stock immediately upstream of said second elbow to the cross-sectional flow area of said stock immediately downstream of said second elbow is comparable to said first-named ratio.
  8. 9. Apparatus according to claim 7 wherein said flow channel is formed with opposite walls diverging from each other with reference to the direction of stock flow therebetween by an included angle between 0* and 6* immediately upstream of said first elbow.
  9. 10. Apparatus according to claim 7 wherein said flow channel is formed with opposite walls diverging from each other with reference to the direction of stock flow therebetween by an included angle between 0* and 6* between said elbows.
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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2180917A1 (en) * 1972-04-21 1973-11-30 Ahlstroem Oy
US3865687A (en) * 1972-08-15 1975-02-11 Valmet Oy Viscosity perturbation damper connected with distribution header of papermaking machine headbox
JPS5031103A (en) * 1973-07-13 1975-03-27
US3887428A (en) * 1971-06-28 1975-06-03 Ahlstroem Oy Manufacture of continuous material webs of fibrous particles at high consistencies by passing particles through a series of constrictions
US4050499A (en) * 1974-07-08 1977-09-27 Boxboard Research And Development Association Head box for cylinder molds having a flexible lid element
US4679805A (en) * 1985-09-17 1987-07-14 Cunningham Michael J Space saver cart

Citations (4)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2281293A (en) * 1936-12-19 1942-04-28 American Voith Contact Co Inc Apparatus for delivering paper stock to paper making machines
US2865260A (en) * 1953-09-22 1958-12-23 Kimberly Clark Co Flow control apparatus
US3067815A (en) * 1958-05-09 1962-12-11 Voith Gmbh J M Suspension distributing system
US3135650A (en) * 1960-01-08 1964-06-02 Time Inc Flow system for paper formers

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2281293A (en) * 1936-12-19 1942-04-28 American Voith Contact Co Inc Apparatus for delivering paper stock to paper making machines
US2865260A (en) * 1953-09-22 1958-12-23 Kimberly Clark Co Flow control apparatus
US3067815A (en) * 1958-05-09 1962-12-11 Voith Gmbh J M Suspension distributing system
US3135650A (en) * 1960-01-08 1964-06-02 Time Inc Flow system for paper formers

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3887428A (en) * 1971-06-28 1975-06-03 Ahlstroem Oy Manufacture of continuous material webs of fibrous particles at high consistencies by passing particles through a series of constrictions
FR2180917A1 (en) * 1972-04-21 1973-11-30 Ahlstroem Oy
US3865687A (en) * 1972-08-15 1975-02-11 Valmet Oy Viscosity perturbation damper connected with distribution header of papermaking machine headbox
JPS5031103A (en) * 1973-07-13 1975-03-27
US3954558A (en) * 1973-07-13 1976-05-04 J. M. Voith Gmbh Feeding device for paper machines
JPS5317684B2 (en) * 1973-07-13 1978-06-10
US4050499A (en) * 1974-07-08 1977-09-27 Boxboard Research And Development Association Head box for cylinder molds having a flexible lid element
US4679805A (en) * 1985-09-17 1987-07-14 Cunningham Michael J Space saver cart

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