METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR RECYCLING PAPER
20230057947 ยท 2023-02-23
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02W30/64
GENERAL 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
International classification
Abstract
Disclosed is a method and system for recycling waste paper that employs mechanical force to reduce the waste paper to its constituent fibers. The disclosed method does not require the addition of chemicals or heat to the pulping process, but instead uses impact and frictional forces to break the waste paper down into fiber. The disclosed method also requires very little water, thus reducing the need for complicated water purification systems.
Claims
1. A method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material comprising the steps of: providing a shredding operation capable of reducing the waste paper material to smaller pieces; providing a hammermill operation operable via shearing, frictional and crushing force to reduce the shredded waste paper material to its constituent fibers; providing a conveying operation operable to convey the shredded waste paper material from the shredding operation to the hammermill operation; providing a packaging operation to package the waste paper fibers; and providing a conveyor operable to convey the waste paper fibers to the packaging operation.
2. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 1 wherein the shredding operation is comprised of a first waste paper shredder and a second waste paper shredder.
3. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 1 wherein the shredding operation is comprised of a first waste paper shredder operable to reduce waste paper material to pieces that are no more than about 20 cm in any one direction and a second waste paper shredder operable to reduce waste paper material to pieces that are no more than about 6 cm in any one direction.
4. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 1 wherein the conveyor operable to convey the shredded waste paper material from the shredding operation to the hammermill operation further comprises a magnetized section operable to remove ferrous metals from the shredded waste paper material.
5. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 1 wherein the conveying operation between the shredding operation and the hammermill operation is a pneumatic conveyor.
6. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 5 wherein the pneumatic conveyor is further operable to separate heavier material from the shredded waste paper material.
7. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 1 further comprising a separator operable to separate the fiber created from the waste paper from the air.
8. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 1 wherein the hammermill operation further comprises a screen comprising a plurality of apertures and the apertures may be selectively varied in size.
9. The method for extracting fiber from waste paper material of claim 1 wherein the hammermill operation further comprises a screen comprising a plurality of and wherein negative pressure is used to assist the waste paper fiber in passing through the screen.
10. A method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material comprising the steps of: providing a shredding operation capable of reducing the waste paper material to smaller pieces, the shredding operation comprised of a first waste paper shredder operable to reduce waste paper material to pieces that are no more than about 20 cm in any one direction and a second waste paper shredder operable to reduce waste paper material to pieces that are no more than about 6 cm in any one direction; providing a hammermill operation operable via shearing, frictional and crushing force to reduce the shredded waste paper material to its constituent fibers; providing a conveying operation operable to convey the shredded waste paper material from the shredding operation to the hammermill operation, the conveying operation further comprising a magnetized section operable to remove ferrous metals from the shredded waste paper material; and providing a packaging operation to package the waste paper fibers; and providing a conveyor operable to convey the waste paper fibers to the packaging operation.
11. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 10 wherein the conveying operation between the shredding operation and the hammermill operation is a pneumatic conveyor.
12. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 11 wherein the pneumatic conveyor is further operable to separate heavier material from the shredded waste paper material.
13. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 10 further comprising a separator operable to separate the fiber created from the waste paper from the air.
14. The method for extracting the fiber from waste paper material of claim 10 wherein the hammermill operation further comprises a screen comprising a plurality of apertures and the apertures may be selectively varied in size.
15. The method for extracting fiber from waste paper material of claim 10 wherein the hammermill operation further comprises a screen comprising a plurality of and wherein negative pressure is used to assist the waste paper fiber in passing through the screen.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0012] Now referring to the drawings in detail, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout,
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[0014] Magnetic belt conveyor 4 moves material to pneumatic conveyor 5. Pneumatic conveyor 5 also serves to filter out heavy objects from the flow of waste paper. Pneumatic conveyor 5 is used to transfer the waste paper to hammermill 7. A sprinkler system (not shown) may be used to add moisture to the waste paper to keep down dust and reduce the risk of fire. The waste paper material is fed into the grinding chamber of the hammermill 7, where it is reduced in size by a combination of the repeated impacts of the ganged hammers in the milling chamber, collisions with the walls of the grinding chamber and the impact of waste paper repeatedly impacting other pieces of waste paper. One section of the grinding chamber of the hammermill comprises a screen of uniformly sized apertures. When the particles of waste paper have been reduced in size such that they are able to fit through the screen, the particles may drop through the screen by gravity feed or be evacuated by negative pressure or both. The apertures in the screen of the hammermill may be modified to control the size of the output waste paper fiber.
[0015] In the embodiment shown in
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0016] The teachings of the present disclosure can find applicability in many waste paper recycling settings, but may be most useful in recycling OCC. In summary, bales of waste paper, preferably bales of OCC, are fed into first shredding operation to be reduced in size and then to a secondary shredding operation to be further reduced in size. Once reduced in size, the shredded waste paper is conveyed through a magnetic separator designed to separate metal from the shredded waste paper. A pneumatic separator may also be used to eliminate heavier materials from the shredded waste paper. The shredded waste paper is then conveyed to the hammermill where it is broken down to its constituent fibers.
[0017] Beneficially, the claimed method uses no chemicals to break down the waste paper Additionally, the claimed process does not use any significant amount of water, nor does it create any potentially polluting exhaust gases. Additionally, power consumption of the claimed method on a per ton basis is substantially lower than that of existing methods for pulping waste paper. Additionally, the claimed method results in a high yield of recycled pulp fiber.
[0018] While aspects of the present disclosure have been particularly shown and described with reference to the embodiments above, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various additional embodiments may be contemplated by the modification of the disclosed machines, systems and methods without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. Such embodiments should be understood to fall within the scope of the present disclosure as determined based upon the claims and any equivalents thereof.