Plant Design Challenges
Manufacturing high-quality publication gravure ink presents many
challenges. For starters, materials used in the process have high solids
concentrations at the grinding stage, making them viscous and difficult to
pump. The toluene solvents used to produce the inks can be potentially
hazardous to the environment, requiring a completely closed ink-production
system. These were only two of the most obvious obstacles.
So the two teams worked together to select suppliers based on their technical
understanding of the products, the availability of service and backup support,
ability to meet schedules and cost effectiveness. On-time delivery would play a
key role in the overall timescale of the project. The team educated suppliers
and provided them with installation and commissioning plans to emphasize the
importance of scheduling.
The team selected a combination of machines – PMD (pre-mixer disperser) batch
disperser technology, upgraded LME horizontal bead mills and a PSI-Mix inline
disperser. Plant utilization was split between simple intermediate product
production on PMD machines and ink production on the LME and PSI
combination.
The LME horizontal bead mill allowed Sun to increase throughput rates with virtually
no blockage. Its triple lobe disc actively counteracts product flow using a
“triple screw” effect. Because temperatures can rise significantly when
grinding very viscous materials, like those used in the publication gravure
process, the large cooling surfaces of the LME mill protect the integrity of
the product. By keeping temperatures down, the materials’ properties are not
altered. A dynamic cartridge media separator pre-classifies beads 0.1 mm to 5
mm and centrifuges them away from the screen. This prevents compaction of the
beads, resulting in high power draw and therefore high product temperature,
which can degrade the resin in the ink and change the pigment
shade.
The PSI mixer, an inline disperser, achieves homogeneous, fine dispersions
using a controlled process. Netzsch was challenged to optimize the speed
(rpm) of each PSI unit on each line to deal with the characteristic differences
for each pigment. Black pigment, for instance, is hard to break down but easy
to handle, while red is easier to process but difficult to handle. The combination of vacuum
dispersing, shearing and pressure wetting proved successful, giving Sun
excellent results and reproducible quality.
Additionally, a vacuum feeding system
eliminated emissions-related hazards. The system has very low dust emission,
reduces solvent emissions and the waste of solvents. It is environmentally
friendly because it degasses during mixing in a totally closed system. Doing so
helps the plant meet the United Kingdom’s ATEX directives for workplace health
and safety. But the vacuum system also provides a production advantage: it
disperses agglomerates so that each particle is encapsulated. This improves
efficiency and total throughput.
Concept to Power-Up in 48 Weeks
With less than a year to have the plant up and running, Netzsch arrived
at the site in October 2005 to supervise installation of the plant under CDM
regulations. “We were on site for every hour of the construction to ensure that
work was completed safely and on time,” said Scott Stephenson, Netzsch project
manager. “We were responsible for the safety of up to 50 contractors working
alongside each other.”
The delivery and erection of the first
mezzanine support steelwork occurred in stages that coincided with the arrival
of 32 machines from the Netzsch production facility in Germany. Within eight
weeks, steel was built around all of the Netzsch machinery.
At the same time, pipe work and the tank farm phases of the construction
were underway. The installation of 21 bulk storage tanks with capacities
ranging from 65,000 liters to 120,000 liters in two bounded areas – one for
raw, the other for finished goods – went successfully.
By late December, the team completed
positioning all major plant items and all materials necessary to complete the
installation of the process plant, and ancillary services were on site. Within
one month, workers installed internal pipe-work manifolds in sections, with the
process valves, and erected interconnecting tank farm pipe work and
supports.
In mid-March, operational staff
arrived to assist in sequence checks and become familiar with the HMIs, control
systems and general plant operation. The Sun Chemical/Netzsch team began
power-up of the plant, running successful input/output (I/O), rotation and
instrumentation checks.
After calibration and dry sequence
checking, the team began using water to run wet testing on the miles of pipe
work, valves, pumps and vessels. The team members’ extensive experience in
hazardous atmospheres ensured safe operation at this testing phase. After every
possible sequence was run and checked by both sides of operations staff, the
pipe work and tanks were drained and prepped for product trials.
The team began product trials and
plant start-up with solvents in early April 2006, and ramped up production on
all four color lines, the resin plant and the additives plant to ensure
production targets and guarantees. This continuous process led to full production
and, eventually, product supply to final customers at the end of May
2006.
In the end, the results were significant and a
vast improvement over Sun’s old Watford plant. The Rochdale plant produces blue
and black pigments in 12-metric ton batches. Batch times are approximately 12
hours compared to 48 hours at the old facility. Seven-metric ton red and yellow
pigment batches are completed in less than 5 hours compared to 7 hours in the
Watford plant. And batch accuracy at Rochdale is now an impressive 0.001
percent.
“This investment is fundamental in ensuring Sun
Chemical is aligned with the future growth of the Publication Gravure
business,” said Sun Chemical’s managing director in charge of the UK in a press
release issued by the company. “The new operation at Rochdale will re-enforce
our commitment and leadership in this sector and cater to the growing
re-emergence of Publication Gravure as a high-quality commercial printing
process for the future.”
The UK-based NETZSCH Project Engineering team, assisted by German colleagues in
machinery design and laboratory testing, brought together a turnkey plant of 32
machines and ancillaries on time and on budget. “Obviously we consider this
project a success,” said David Tomlinson, managing director of
NETZSCH-Mastermix Ltd. “One of the world’s largest ink producers entrusted us
to design, engineer and construct a new plant with the latest technology, and
it is running successfully today.” And now, almost two years since the plant
opened, the Sun’s Rochdale location is guaranteed to produce more than 13,200
metric tons of ink per year, and is capable of producing 30,000 metric tons if
operated at full capacity.