Flocculation kinetics of precipitated calcium carbonate

Citation:

Gaudreault, R. ; Di Cesare, N. ; Weitz, D. A. ; van de Ven, T. G. M. Flocculation kinetics of precipitated calcium carbonate. Colloids and Surfaces 2009, 340, 56-65. Copy at http://www.tinyurl.com/yjjgo3j8
gaudreault2009.pdf2.27 MB

Abstract:

When the percentage of filler in paper is increased, the optical properties are improved and the production cost lowered. However, fillers weaken paper strength by decreasing the fibre–fibre bonded area. Little is known about the optimum filler floc size or filler floc properties to allow developing optimum paper characteristics. Consequently, the kinetics of aggregation of scalenohedral precipitated calcium carbonate (PCC) filler was studied using various polymers (flocculants, coagulants and dry strength agents). The sodium salt of partially hydrolysed polyvinyl formamide copolymerized with acrylic acid (PVFA/NaAA) or C-starch lead to floc sizes, less sensitive to dosage within a certain range. Results from stability ratios correlate with PCC particle size. The change in particle size measured by photometric dispersion analysis (PDA) correlates well with the change in PCC particle size measured by light scattering/diffraction. Kinetic calculations show the orthokinetic aggregation times to be consistent with the experimental PDA results. The main uncertainty in the orthokinetic times is estimating the effective shear rate. It is proposed that the bridging surface area of PCC particles, the area which can form bonds between PCC particles or aggregates, should be used to study the kinetics of PCC aggregation, and not the total or projected surface area. In polymer induced aggregation, the PCC particle size increases to a plateau value with increasing polymer dosage. Two regions are most pronounced for C-PAM, PVFA/NaAA and A-starch. Region I corresponds to bridging flocculation. Region II is where the particle size reaches a plateau, and not the expected maximum predicted by classical polymer bridging theory or charge neutralisation theory, likely because of a competition between particle aggregation and polymer adsorption.

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