MEASUREMENT OF CRYSTAL SIZE SPREAD THROUGH THE HIGH GRADE PAN STAGE FOR AN INDONESIAN AND AN AUSTRALIAN FACTORY
By NUR ISWANTO, EDWARD T. WHITE, MATT T. HARDIN and ROSS BROADFOOT
GROWTH rate dispersion (GRD) has long been observed in industrial
sugar vacuum pan operation and is a principal cause in broadening crystal
size distributions. This is the phenomenon where seeds with an initially
narrow size distribution spread their size distribution because each sugar
crystal grows at a different rate. These rate differences are maintained as
crystals grow towards shipment size. There is a special case of GRD
termed common history (CH) crystals, where the crystal size is
proportional to its relative growth rate. As CH crystals grow, the shape of
the size distribution on a log size scale is unchanged. Also dimensionless
measures of spread, such as the coefficient of variation (CV), are
constant. The CV of material in the high grade pan stage in Gunung Madu
Plantation (GMP) sugar factory, Indonesia, which produces plantation
white sugar, has been measured. The seed materials were prepared in high
grade graining, without washing, using the dissolved intermediate
products (B sugar and C sugar). A similar measurement also has been
carried out at the Broadwater sugar mill that adopts the classical three
massecuite boiling formula, in which C sugar is prepared into magma and
serves as footing material for A and B strikes. Shipment sugar is made
from the mixture of A sugar and B sugar. The results showed that high
grade sugars behave as common history crystals. Within the accuracy of
sampling and sizing, the crystal size distributions as the crystals grow
appeared to be of identical shape on a log size basis, demonstrating the
size distribution reflects the growth rate distribution. This occurred in
graining as well as in growth pans. Furthermore, the coefficient of
variation (CV) values remained constant throughout the boiling process.