How Is Paper Made
How Is Paper Made
How Is Paper Made
1. Cellulose fibers are extracted from a variety of sources and converted to pulp.
2. Pulp is combined with water and placed on a paper making machine where it is
flattened, dried, and cut into sheets and rolls.
Forestry Products
Most paper is made from forestry products, usually trees. The most common of trees
that paper comes from are:
Spruce
Pine
Fir
Larch
Hemlock
Eucalyptus
Aspen
Birch
In most cases, the best parts of these trees are used for construction, and less
desirable portions are used in pulp.
Recycled Fibers
Many papers include different types of recycled content. These include:
Pre Consumer Waste (paper waste from the paper manufacturing and printing
processes)
Post Consumer Waste (paper waste that has already touched a consumer, like a
recycled newspaper)
Sawdust
Bark
Fiber
Lignin
The bark protects the fibers of the log, which are held together by lignin. The goal is to
extract the fibers, and this is accomplished either using a chemical or mechanical
process.
Paper mills all work a little bit differently, so please keep in mind that these are
generalizations
What is Mechanical Pulp?
Since most paper starts as logs, there is a significant amount of bark. Bark does not
work well for making paper, so the first step in the mechanical pulping process is to
remove the bark from the logs. This excess material becomes a biomass energy source
to help power the paper mill.
In most processes, the logs are ground up using a giant machine containing a rotating
disk and a fixed steel plate. Usually, heat and chemicals are used to aid in this process.
Due to the "brute force" nature of mechanical pulping, both whole and partial fibers are
created. In addition, the lignin is not removed from the paper. This gives the paper a
grey-yellow color.
Papers made from mechanical pulp, are also known as "groundwood" papers.
The mechanical pulping process uses significantly more energy than is produced by the
biomass power generated by the bark. The benefit however, is there is very little waste
as nearly 95% of the raw material is able to be converted to pulp.
Papers made from mechanical pulps are also known as "groundwood fiber papers" and
are typically very cost effective. An example of this type of paper is newsprint.
The wood chips are placed into a giant machine that combines them with really hot
water and chemicals. This helps remove air pockets so that the chips will break down
into fibers more easily.
Next, the wood chip and chemical mixture is moved into a pressure cooker. The wood
chips spend about two hours at nearly 350 degrees farenheit. The combination of
steam, chemicals, and pressure causes the chips to desintegrate. This leaves wood
fibers, and a liquid called "black liquor."
In the next step, the black liquor is removed. The remaining fiber is cleaned in a variety
of ways and sometimes bleached to ensure purity.
The majority of the waste in the process is black liquor - but these facilities typically
operate in a "closed loop" system. The inorganics (chemicals) are recovered and re-
used for the next batch of paper, while the remainder of the liquid (natural biomass) is
converted to energy to operate the plant. In most cases, these more power is generated
than is needed, so this creates an environmentally friendly power source for local
communities.
Papers made from chemical pulp are usually brighter, smoother, and higher quality than
their mechanically pulped counterparts.
Wet End
Wet Press Section
Dryer Section
Calender Section
The primary purpose is to take wet fibers, press them together, dry them, and then
make them smooth.
Wet End
Pulp is mixed with water as well as additional fillers and additives and then pumped
onto a belt. This belt is typically made of a mesh that encourages all of the fibers to go
in one direction. Much like wood, paper has a grain direction. The orentation of the
fibers on this belt dictates the "grain direction" of the paper.
This section of the paper making machine has at least one roller to push the fibers onto
the belt to help make sure that the paper grain goes in the right direction.
As the felt rotates, it will go through its own drying station to remove moisture.
Dryer Section
Once the pulp enters the "Dryer Section," it has started to take the shape of paper. This
part of the machine weaves the web of paper through a series of heated rollers. Felt
belts are also used in this part of the machine to give the moisture in the paper
somewhere to go.
Calender Section
The last part of the machine is called the "Calendar Section." It uses rollers mounted
opposite of each other to put pressure on the paper and create a smooth finish. The
more of these rollers there are, the smoother the paper will be.
How Do Paper Mills Make Paper
Glossy?
There are several ways to make paper glossy. These include supercalendering and
coatings. Supercalendaring is used to add gloss to less expensive papers made from
mechanical pulp, while coatings are used to add brightness and shine to higher quality
stocks.
China clay as well as synthetic materials are often added to papers in order to make
them glossy. This is done between the "wet-press" section and the "drying" section.
Not all coatings add gloss. Coatings also allow papers to be used in a variety of
production processes, resist moisture, and many other scenarios.
The final section in a paper machine is the "Calender Section." This is where paper
goes through a series of rollers that squeese the paper to make it really flat. What
makes a paper "supercalendared" are a series of chrome rollers that spin faster than
the paper is moving. If you can think of these rollers as tires on a car, and the paper as
a road, then the rollers are doing a "burn out" on the paper.