Laser Ultrasonic Sensor Streamlines Paper Making
March 1, 2002
Contact: Dan Krotz, 510-486-4019, email:
DAKrotz@lbl.gov
BERKELEY, CA -- Hoping to save the paper manufacturing
industry millions of dollars in energy costs, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) and Institute of Paper Science & Technology
(IPST) engineers have developed a laser ultrasonic sensor that measures paper's
flexibility as it courses through a production web at up to 65 miles per hour.
The project's principal investigators are Rick Russo (LBNL) and Chuck Habeger
(IPST).
"We're measuring the elastic properties of paper at manufacturing
speeds using a noncontact, nondestructive monitor," says Paul Ridgway of
Berkeley Lab's Environmental Energy Technologies Division.
Last summer, Ridgway, Russo and IPST engineers tested the
laser ultrasonic sensor at a Mead Paper Company mill in Ohio. They installed the
sensor on a pilot paper coating machine and ran six paper grades through the web press, ranging from copy
paper to heavy linerboard. The sensor's signals remained excellent even at paper
speeds up to 5,000 feet per minute, and the laser didn't damage the paper. The
effects of the papers' moisture, tension, basis weight, and speed on the
measurements were also examined.
"The Mead test demonstrated the
instrument works in an industrial setting," Ridgway says. "It's a successful
step toward a mill trial on a paper-making machine in which the environment will
be much harsher. It will be hotter and wetter, and there will be more vibrations
and fiber debris in the air."
The sensor is part of Industries of the Future, a research and development collaboration between the Department of
Energy's Office of Industrial Technologies (OIT) and several industries to
improve energy and
resource efficiency. Under this program, the American Forest and Paper Association created
Agenda 2020,
which outlines the forest products industry's goals and research priorities. To
understand how the sensor contributes to this initiative, consider how paper is
currently evaluated. After it's manufactured, a small sample of a three-ton
paper roll is manually analyzed for its mechanical properties by observing how
it bends. If the sample doesn't meet specifications, the entire roll is scrapped
or sold as an inferior grade. To avoid this costly mistake, manufacturers often
over engineer paper, erring on the side of caution and using more pulp than
necessary to ensure the final product isn't substandard. Not only does this
consume more raw materials, it consumes more energy: the more pulp used per unit
of paper, the more heat is required during the drying phase, which even in the
most efficient mills requires an enormous amount of energy.
Rather than
rely on postproduction evaluation and hope for the best, the team has developed
a sensor that measures flexibility on the fly, in real time. It also conducts
the measurements without touching the paper, an important advantage given that
at 30 meters per second the slightest contact can mar lightweight grades such as
copy paper and newsprint. This represents an improvement over contact
transducers, another real-time evaluation tool that measures paper's tensile
elasticity by placing an ultrasound head directly onto the paper as it's
coursing through the web. Because it touches the paper, this technique can only
be used with thicker stock.
In rough terms, the sensor measures the time
it takes ultrasonic shock waves to propagate from a laser-induced excitation
point to a detection point only millimeters away. The velocity at which the
ultrasound waves travel from the ablation point through the paper to the
detection point is theoretically related to two elastic properties, bending
stiffness and out-of-plane shear rigidity.
More specifically, a detection
beam from a commercially available Mach-Zender interferometer is directed toward
a quickly rotating mirror. As the mirror spins, the beam is reflected in a
circular pattern much like a lighthouse's beam. During a portion of each
revolution, the beam meets the paper as it courses along the production belt and
remains with the paper until the beam's arc leaves the paper's plane. Think of
the lighthouse beam momentarily tracking a speedboat as it races parallel to
shore. Because both the beam and the paper are moving at the same speed, the
detection beam remains on the same point on the paper throughout their brief
contact.
An optical encoder
determines when the detection beam is perpendicular to the paper, at which time
a specially designed adjustable delay circuit fires the pulsed
neodymium-yttrium-aluminum-garnet laser. This nanosecond pulse causes a microscopic thermal expansion or ablation on
the paper, which is too small to mar the paper and effect how it absorbs ink,
but strong enough to send ultrasonic shock waves through the sheet. The waves
propagate through the paper until they're registered by the detection beam.
Because the laser is synchronized to only fire when the detection beam is
perpendicular to the paper, the distance between the ablation point and
detection point is known, and the waves' speed is
calculated.
A
full-scale pilot test of the laser ultrasonic sensor is scheduled for the summer
of 2003. Further in the future, the sensor could provide quality-control
safeguards and real-time process information for feedback control in any
manufacturing process involving thin, moving sheets such as metals, plastics,
polymeric materials, and glasses.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of
Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley, California. It conducts
unclassified scientific research and is managed by the University of
California.