Paper and Pulp
Paper and Pulp
Paper and Pulp
AND PULP
INDUSTRIE
S
Paper has a rich, colourful history which has
spanned the world's geography and its cultures.
Tracing its development , offers us insight into
humanity's relentless imagination, creativity and
sometimes folly.
It was introduced in Korea in the 4th century
and spread to Japan in 6th.
• Papermaking spread slowly throughout Asia to
Nepal and later to India. It made its true
push westward in 751AD
The birth of the modern paper and printing industry
is accredited to JOHANN GUTENBURG
Papermaking today is a large, capital-intensive industry,
characterized by high-speed machines and complex systems of
control for manufacturing to close tolerances thousands of
products vital to education, communications, marketing, packaging,
construction, etc.
Throughout the 19th century, pulp and paper was largely a domestic
industry, serving the gradually increasing needs.
hardwood
non wood fibres
recovered/recycled fibre
Chemicals
Energy
water
Softwood
Contain more lignin than hardwoods
Longer and coarser fibre than hardwoods
Strength to withstand stretching and tearing
Improves the runnability of paper on the machine.
Greater amount of lignin means that more amount of chemicals and
energy
E.g.: pine, spruce
etc..
Hardwoods
Provide Smooth surface
Primarily used in the production of printing paper because short
fiber pulp improves the printing properties of paper
E.g...... Acacia, lemon, gum, birch, eucalyptus, pinus,
patula, paper mulberry, rubber plant wood etc..
Non wood fibres
Annual crops: flax, kenaf, hemp etc.- often grown especially
for paper production
agricultural residues: rye, wheat straw, bagasse, etc.. (
vegetable wastes, fruit pulp etc.. – newer alternatives
being
researched on) - byproducts of crops grown for other
uses
Grasses and reeds:
Straw: rice, lemon, panni,
wheat, bagasse, Ulla,
barley, siru, etc..
reeds, munji,
Sabai grass, bamboo etc...
ADVANTAGES OF NON WOOD
Non wood fibers can reduce the amount of chemicals needed
FIBRES:
for pulping as well as shorten time, thus saving energy.
The high cellulose content of cotton linter (85% to 90%)
compared to that of wood (35% to 49% cellulose) and the
low lignin content of hemp (3%) make these non wood fibers
valuable for papermaking
Recovered fibre (recycled paper)
Grade determined by the process used in
manufacturing the virgin pulp when the paper
was first made and contaminants added to or
picked up by paper in recovery from solid waste
or recycle collection process.
Contaminants: ink, wax and clay coatings, non
fibre filler materials used in paper, adhesives,
tape, staples, pieces of plastic, metal, dirt etc
Ample supply
Available to pulp mill throughout the year
Should not deteriorate in storage
High yield of quality fibre
Capable of being collected and stored in a small
area and transported, if necessary at low cost
Cost of conversion to paper must be low
Quality of paper made must be competitive
Must not have a higher priority use
The largest paper producing countries like
China, US, Germany, Japan, Canada, use
predominantly wood.
Bamboo is an ideal raw material. India is the
first country in the world to use bamboo as
the basic raw material for making paper.
Bamboo and pulpable timber continue to be
the basic raw materials for the paper
industry in India.
Paper pulp: groundwood, chemical, semi
chemical pulps- bleached or
unbleached
Reuse pulp: recycled or repulped paper
products like newspapers, paperboard
etc..mixed with new pulp
Miscellaneous cellulose pulp:
straw, linen, cotton, jute, rags
Speciality pulp: inorganic fibres such as
For fillers, sizing and coating,
finishing processes
Inorganic:
Clay, talc, titanium dioxide, zinc sulfide,
calcium carbonate, calcium sulphate, barium
sulphate, alum etc..
Organic:
Rosin, glue, caesin, waxes, glycerol,
dyestuffs etc..
Pulp can be divided into two principal types:
chemical
mechanical pulp.
In fact there are more than two types of
pulp . Pulp from recovered paper poses a
different challenge for the papermaker as it
often has to be de-inked and other
contaminants removed.
Pulping processes
Pulping aims to separate cellulose fibers from
the wood structure.
Possible types of pulp production
are:
Kraft (68%)
mechanical (22%)
semi-chemical (4%)
sulphite
(4%)
Chemical pulping uses chemicals to separate the cellulose from the
lignin. This creates pulps with different properties that can be used
for higher quality paper. The three types of chemical pulping are
Kraft, Sulfite, and semichemical.
The Kraft process, also called the sulfate process, involves an
alkaline treatment with solutions of sodium sulfide and sodium
hydroxide. In 1987 Kraft pulping was 95% of the total chemical
pulping.
Sulfite pulping began with the use of calcium as the sulfite liquor
base. Today the base has been changed to magnesium, ammonia, or
sodium. This allows for the recovery of spent liquor.
The semichemical pulping process involves cooking wood chips in a
neutral solution of sodium sulfite and sodium carbonate or sodium
hydroxide. Only some of the lignin is removed, and then the pulp
Kraft Pulping
Sulfate or Kraft pulping was invented in
Germany in 1884 and remains the dominating
technology today.
Advantages:
– higher pulp strength
– wider variety of wood species may be used
– more effective at removing impurities like resins.
Disadvantage:
– the pulp yield is low, less than 50%.
7
The two processes of mechanical pulping are stone
groundwood (fiber is torn from the side of short logs
with grindstones) and refiner groundwood (wood chips
are passed through disc refiners). Mechanical pulping
does not separate the cellulose fiber from the lignin in
the wood, while chemical pulping does.
In chemimechanical pulping, the wood is softened with
chemicals before grinding. There is also a process called
thermomechanical pulping, where the wood is softened
with heat and then disc-refined under pressure.
DE - CHIPPING SCREENING
BARKING
DRIED
pulp
Debarking is the process of
removing bark from wood. Debarking generally involves
the use of industrial machinery into which the log or
stake is placed. Generally they are powered by
hydraulic motors.
The wood chips are then cooked in pressurized vessels
called digesters. In a continuous digester, the materials
are fed at a rate which allows the pulping reaction to
be complete by the time the materials exit the
reactor. Is
iosodocn.heiptso +reNmaOveh t+heNali2gSnin--a-n-d-hemicellulose
content
W -> Black Liquor
• Reduces the pressure of steam from 80 to 10
atm before entering the blow
ank.t
Impurities
are washed
away in
this tank
after
clarifying.
Calcium
carbonate precipitates from
the white liquor and is
recovered and heated in
a lime kiln where it is
converted to calcium
oxide (lime):
CaCO3 → CaO + CO2
Calcium oxide (lime) is reacted
with water to regenerate the
calcium hydroxide used in
reaction :
CaO + H2O → Ca(OH)2
It precipitates lime mud.
Carbonate is causticized
by adding Ca(OH)2 .
An Overview
Definition
‘ fourdrinier ‘ method of
production
Finishing
Chemical additives
Paper is a thin material produced by pressing
together moist fibers- cellulose pulp , derived
from wood, rags or grasses, and drying them
into flexible sheets.
Basic raw materials include-
Fibrous : containing groundwood, paper products
(recycled) , asbestos and glass
Non-Fibrous: clay, talc ,glue , waxes , glycerol
,titanium dioxide , zinc sulfide , calcium
carbonate
The Fourdrinier
press
Wire
Fine mesh polyester fabric on which the paper sheet is formed by
stock draining through it
Suction boxes
is found in the press section; used to remove water from the
press felts.
Suction couch rolls
Suction rollers hold the furnish to the mesh and help remove the
water content.By the time the paper or web has reached the Wet
Press Section the consistency has gone from 0.5% pulp content to
The Wet Press Section carries the wet web between a series of
rollers under high pressure to squeeze more water from the paper,
much like a mangle. The Felts (polymeric fabrics) support the web and
also aid water removal by absorption. As the web enters the third
section the paper web consistency can be as high as 40%.
Wet web strength factors-
Fiber lengths
Moisture content
Latency(kinked,curled fibers)
Inter fiber friction (affected by refining , surfac
tants
Surface tension )
Process variations
Steam heated rollers in the Dryer Section cause further water
removal through evaporation . It is in the Dryer Section that the
web will be treated with Sizing to change the characteristics of
the paper and via a coating unit, the surface will be covered with
calcium carbonate or china clay for coated papers such as glass,
silks and velvet types. The stock usually about 95% solids by
is the
time it comes off the last dryers.
Calendering
A calender is a device with two or
more rollers through which the paper is
run. The compression of the rollers and
the application of heat give the paper
its smooth and glossy properties.
It also gives it a more uniform
thickness.
The pressure applied to the web by
the rollers determines the finish of
the paper.
After calendering, the web has a
moisture content of about 6% d
(depending on the furnish). It is
woun
onto a roll called a tambour or reel,
and stored for final
• Coating
Coating improves the opacity, lightness, surface smoothness,
lustre and color-absorption ability of paper.