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Modeling drying and energy performance of industrial through-dryers

Weineisen, Henrik LU and Stenström, Stig LU (2008) In Drying Technology 26(6). p.776-785
Abstract
A model of an industrial through-dryer for production of tissue paper was developed. The model can be used to predict the performance of a dryer section of an industrial through-drying machine consisting of one or more through-drying rolls separated by free draw sections. Roll diameters, wrap angles, machine speed, basis weight, initial paper moisture ratio, operating pressure differentials, drying air temperatures, and drying air humidity are input parameters to the model. Based on the input information, the model predicts paper drying rate, paper moisture ratio, paper temperature, exhaust air humidity, exhaust air temperature, and air flow rate as a function of time, which at a given machine speed is equivalent to a certain position in... (More)
A model of an industrial through-dryer for production of tissue paper was developed. The model can be used to predict the performance of a dryer section of an industrial through-drying machine consisting of one or more through-drying rolls separated by free draw sections. Roll diameters, wrap angles, machine speed, basis weight, initial paper moisture ratio, operating pressure differentials, drying air temperatures, and drying air humidity are input parameters to the model. Based on the input information, the model predicts paper drying rate, paper moisture ratio, paper temperature, exhaust air humidity, exhaust air temperature, and air flow rate as a function of time, which at a given machine speed is equivalent to a certain position in the machine direction of the dryer. The model also includes a description of the fabric and along with the paper properties the model also predicts fabric drying rate, fabric moisture ratio, fabric temperature, and fabric air humidity as a function of time (or position). Air, vapor, and enthalpy fluxes were integrated over the residence time of each through-drying roll in order to retrieve the average flow rate and air properties of the air leaving each roll. These data were then used in a steady-state description of the air system of each roll, which means that, for given drying conditions, natural gas consumption in the burners and the fan power associated with each roll can be predicted. The model was used to study how the different operating conditions affect the energy demand and economics of the through-drying process. The simulation results indicate small differences in total drying cost for different operating conditions. Reduction of fabric water was shown to have a relatively large impact on overall drying cost. Reducing the initial fabric moisture ratio from 0.019 to 0.012 kg water/kg dry solids reduced total operating costs by approximately 3.3%. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
through-drying, through air drying, modeling, industrial dryer, machine
in
Drying Technology
volume
26
issue
6
pages
776 - 785
publisher
TAPPI
external identifiers
  • wos:000256619900017
  • scopus:46049106950
ISSN
1532-2300
DOI
10.1080/07373930802046443
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
06261c2c-1f38-4bc9-8c98-e7643117fe08 (old id 1191475)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 12:24:51
date last changed
2023-09-02 06:51:00
@article{06261c2c-1f38-4bc9-8c98-e7643117fe08,
  abstract     = {{A model of an industrial through-dryer for production of tissue paper was developed. The model can be used to predict the performance of a dryer section of an industrial through-drying machine consisting of one or more through-drying rolls separated by free draw sections. Roll diameters, wrap angles, machine speed, basis weight, initial paper moisture ratio, operating pressure differentials, drying air temperatures, and drying air humidity are input parameters to the model. Based on the input information, the model predicts paper drying rate, paper moisture ratio, paper temperature, exhaust air humidity, exhaust air temperature, and air flow rate as a function of time, which at a given machine speed is equivalent to a certain position in the machine direction of the dryer. The model also includes a description of the fabric and along with the paper properties the model also predicts fabric drying rate, fabric moisture ratio, fabric temperature, and fabric air humidity as a function of time (or position). Air, vapor, and enthalpy fluxes were integrated over the residence time of each through-drying roll in order to retrieve the average flow rate and air properties of the air leaving each roll. These data were then used in a steady-state description of the air system of each roll, which means that, for given drying conditions, natural gas consumption in the burners and the fan power associated with each roll can be predicted. The model was used to study how the different operating conditions affect the energy demand and economics of the through-drying process. The simulation results indicate small differences in total drying cost for different operating conditions. Reduction of fabric water was shown to have a relatively large impact on overall drying cost. Reducing the initial fabric moisture ratio from 0.019 to 0.012 kg water/kg dry solids reduced total operating costs by approximately 3.3%.}},
  author       = {{Weineisen, Henrik and Stenström, Stig}},
  issn         = {{1532-2300}},
  keywords     = {{through-drying; through air drying; modeling; industrial dryer; machine}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{6}},
  pages        = {{776--785}},
  publisher    = {{TAPPI}},
  series       = {{Drying Technology}},
  title        = {{Modeling drying and energy performance of industrial through-dryers}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07373930802046443}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/07373930802046443}},
  volume       = {{26}},
  year         = {{2008}},
}