Kadant Composites’ self-appointed mission for the past eight years
has been to find commercial uses for paper sludge, a soggy mix of short cellulose
fibers, calcium carbonate, and clay that is the copious byproduct of paper
recycling. A big mill processing 600 tons/day of recycled paper produces 150
tons of sludge that it needs to get rid of. Who would have thought that gunk
could be the key to a line of attractive outdoor decking?
Kadant Composites
in Bedford, Mass., was formerly Thermo Fibergen, a unit of Thermo Fibertek,
which belonged to the conglomerate Thermo Electron and built machinery for
paper recycling. Fibertek understood the scale of the sludge problem—10
million tons generated annually in North America. Finding uses for that sludge
became a pet project at Fibertek. Burning it for energy wasn’t an option
because the mineral content was too high.
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| Kadent Composites president Jonathan Painter (left) and v.p. of R&D Anatole Klyosov are part of the entrepreneurial team turning paper sludge into HDPE composite decking.
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In 1996, Fibertek set up Fibergen
to help paper recyclers get rid of their sludge. The idea was for Fibergen
to build a plant next to a recycled paper mill, process the sludge for
a tipping fee, and then find customers for it. This approach never got beyond
the first sludge processing plant in the Midwest because it required paper
mills to commit to long-term disposal contracts, which most weren’t
willing to do. But just one plant gave Fibergen more than enough sludge
to work with.
Fibergen bought and adapted a process to de-water and dry
the sludge into small granules, which Fibergen patented and named Biodac.
Then Fibergen hired Harvard professor Anatole Klyosov to look for ways
to separate the cellulose from the minerals. What he came up with instead
were applications that utilized Biodac’s
ability to soak up liquids like a sponge.
One early use was non-dusting
kitty litter. Fibergen also soaked Biodac in a diluted salt solution
for use as a sidewalk de-icer. But the biggest success was a delivery
vehicle for agricultural chemicals. Biodac soaks up liquid fertilizers
and can be scattered on fields, where it decomposes and provides slow
release into the soil. As an inert carrier for pesticides, it’s
non-dusting, which makes it safer for farm workers.
Soaking up plastic
The idea of using the smallest Biodac granules as a filler for plastics
came almost by accident, says Klyosov, who had no direct experience
in plastics processing. A co-worker ran into someone researching
plastic composites who suggested trying Biodac as a filler. It made sense.
The little granules contain many of the same fillers—calcium
carbonate, clay, and cellulose fibers—that
plastic compounders use, but typically not all at the same time.
“Under
a microscope, Biodac looks like rocks wrapped in string,” Klyosov
notes. It has 1.58 g/cc density vs. around 2.8 g/cc for plain calcium
carbonate.
Biodac proved to be a better filler than expected. Because
the granules are porous, they soak up plastic resin and bond well
to it. “When you put
the smallest size of Biodac in plastic, you get a kind of physical
crosslinking, not chemical,” says Klyosov. Unlike wood fibers,
which are loaded with lignin and tannin that inhibit resin bonding,
Biodac is low in those chemicals, which are removed in paper making.
So a compound with Biodac doesn’t
need coupling agents, though they can help.
Kadant developed GeoDeck
deck profiles, hollow tongue-in-groove boards of HDPE with up to
30% Biodac plus additional fiber from rice hulls. The composites
end up being roughly one-third plastic, one-third mineral, one-third
fiber. Kadant could use up to 70% Biodac, but such a high level
is too abrasive for the extruders. Whiteners and brighteners from
the paper boost the effect of colorants in GeoDeck, making it less
subject to fading than wood-plastic composites.
In 2000, Fibergen
set up a production plant in Green Bay, Wis., with nine lines to produce
GeoDeck. In 2001, Fibertek separated from Thermo Electron and was renamed Kadant,
while the Fibergen subsidiary became Kadant Composites. In 2001, GeoDeck sales
were under $2 million. They grew to $9 million in 2002, $12.5 million
in 2003, and are expected to top $15 million this year.
Kadant
Composites has developed new building products containing Biodac, including
corrugated roof tiles that look like red clay, and flat, square tiles that
resemble slate. Kadant hasn’t run out of ideas for Biodac, and it certainly
can’t outgrow the supply of the patented filler to make
them.