Abstract: A water soluble, surface active, polymeric agent is mixed with digestion liquor, preferably with an additional surface active defoamer coagulant agent prior to or during acidification of the alkaline digestive liquor. This results in an easily separable, non-gelatinous, non-gummy, coagulated lignin as a solids, particulate fraction that tends to float on a clarified liquid fraction containing recoverable salts. The solids fraction and the liquid frictions are easily separated, one from the other, by a gravity separation step.
Abstract: Digestion liquor is used in the paper pulping process to dissolve lignins and free the cellulose fiber from raw wood chips. After pulping, spent digestion liquor is laden with lignins. Heretofore, it was known that lignins could be coagulated by acidification of the digestion liquor, but such method coagulated the lignins in a slimy gelatinous mass that was difficult to separate from the liquor. It has been discovered that the addition of water soluble, surface active, polymeric agents to the digestion liquor prior to acidification, results in an easily separable lignin coagulant after acidification.