PERPERONLINE
PAPER GLOSSARY
http://www.paperonline.org/glossary/paperglossary/paperglossary_frame.html
A
Absorbency
The ability of paper to absorb fluids such as water or printing ink
Acidification
Decrease in the pH of soil and water due to precipitation containing dissolved
ammonium compounds, sulphur and nitrogen oxides; an indirect cause of forest
damage.
Activated sludge treatment
A biological method of cleaning up waste waters in three stages. Stage I
involves (anaerobic) equilibration. In stage II activated sludge containing
micro-organisms is led into an aeration basin to speed up oxidation of organic
matter and ammonia. In stage III the sludge is allowed to settle and the
treated waste water is run off. Some sludge is removed and a portion is
returned to the aeration basin.
Aerated lagoon
A biological waste water treatment method in which air (oxygen) fed into an
aeration basin reduces the effluent load
Air drying
Method of drying the paper web on the paper machine by blowing air along the
direction of the web
Air mail paper
Light weight, thin and mainly woodfree writing papers for air mail. Anaerobic
treatment Process employing micro-organisms to reduce organic matter in waste
water in the absence of oxygen
AOX
Absorbable organic halogens. AOX is a sum parameter measuring total
concentration of chlorine bound to organic compounds in waste water. AOX
measures all chlorine compounds both harmful and harmless (a sum parameter)
Art paper
High quality and rather heavy two-side coated printing paper with smooth
surface. The reproduction of fine screen single- and multicolour pictures
("art on paper") re-quires a paper that has an even, well closed
surface and a uniform ink absorption.
Artificial parchment
Woodfree paper that is produced by fine and extended grinding of certain
chemical pulps and/or the admixture of special additives. As a result of the
"smeary" grinding, the fibre structure closes homogeneously. It is
used e.g. for wrapping meat and sau-sages or as corrugating medium for biscuit
packaging.
B
Back-pressure power
Generation of both heat and electricity from fuel; gives greater efficiency
than condensing power
Bale
Solid, compressed stack of pulp or paper sheets
Banknote paper
Highly resistant, age-resistant, suitable for 4-colour printing, with watermark
and other falsification safeguards such as embedded metal strip. Often
containing cotton fibres (See "Rag paper").
Basis weight
See Grammage
Beatability
The ease with which pulp can be beaten to achieve the desired properties
Beating
Mechanical treatment of fibres to improve fibre bonding.
Bible paper
Woodfree, sometimes rag-containing speciality printing paper with a low
grammage, mostly with a high filler content.
Biodegradation
Breakdown of organic matter by micro-organisms into carbon dioxide and water or
into less harmful compounds
Biological waste water treatment
A method of cleaning up waste water using living micro-organisms such as
bacteria. See: Activated sludge treatment, Aerated lagoon, Anaerobic process
Biosludge
Sludge formed (in the aeration basin) during biological waste water treatment
or other biological treatment process
Black liquor
Mixture of cooking chemicals and dissolved wood material remaining after
sulphate cooking; recovered during pulp washing, concentrated by evaporation
and burned in the recovery boiler to regenerate the cooking chemicals and
generate energy
Bleach plant
Department of a pulp mill where pulp is bleached
Bleached lined folding boxboard
Bleached lined folding boxboard is a multi-layer paperboard that has a bleached
woodfree liner on one or both sides. Between two liners there are intermediate
layers and middle layers of mechanical or waste paper pulp.
Bleached pulp
Pulp whose natural brightness has been improved using chemicals
Bleaching
Removal or modification of coloured components in pulp to improve brightness.
Bleaching is normally carried out in several consecutive stages
Blotting paper
Bulky, highly absorbent, filler-free paper which is mostly produced from pure
cotton in the form of bleached linters and from chemical pulp.
Board
Generic term for stiff paper usually made in several layers with a substance
normally varying from 160 to 500/g/m2, for certain grades even higher; widely
used for packaging (e.g. folding cartons) and graphic applications.
Board
Thick and stiff paper, often consisting of several plies; widely used for
packaging purposes. Its grammage normally is higher than 150 g/m2.
Book paper
Woodfree or mechanical paper used for printing books.
Brightening
Addition of optical brighteners to the stock to make the pulp/paper appear
whiter Brightness
A measure of the whiteness of pulp and paper
Broke
Papermakers own waste paper created during papermaking process it is usually
repulped.]
Brush glazing
Glazing of coated paper with the aid of brushes Bulk product A mass-produced
product sold in large volumes without individual specifications, usually in
compliance with a standard. For example, newsprint
C
Cable paper
See "Electrical insulating paper".
Calcium carbonate
Used in papermaking as a filler or coating pigment
Calender
Machine in which paper is given a glazed finish by passing it between two or
more rolls, either on or off the paper machine
Calendered paper
Paper that has been smoothed and compacted between the rolls of a calender and
is thus more or less glossy (sharp or matt calendered). The effect produced in
the calender unit is the result of friction combined with temperature and
pressure.
Caliper
Thickness of paper, usually measured in nanometers
Capacitor paper
See "Electrical insulating paper".
Capacity utilisation rate
Indicates the efficiency (%) at which a mill or machine is operating
Carbon dioxide (CO2)
Produced by burning coal and other carbon containing products. Burning fossil
fuels or wood based products raises atmospheric carbon dioxide levels.
Carbon paper
Carbon paper is a thin paper with a waxy coating, that is used to produce
carbon copies on typewriters or other office equipment. Carbon base paper is
made from chemical pulp.
Carbonless copy paper
Paper that permits making multiple copies without intervening layers of carbon
pa-per. The paper translates pressure into a dye reaction which transfers the
image to the copy. Carbonless copy papers are mainly used for continuous form
sets, for cov-ered pay slips, for vouchers to be dispatched by post and for
payment forms. In the US and some other countries, carbonless copy paper is
also called NCR paper (= Non Carbon Required).
Cast-coated paper
Cast-coated papers are coated papers that have obtained their high gloss by moulding
on a highly polished, chromium plated drying cylinder.
Causticizing
Process by which green liquor from sulphate pulping is converted to white
liquor, thus allowing the cooking chemicals to be re-used
Cellulose
Structural material giving strength to wood cells
Chemical oxygen demand (COD)
The amount of oxygen consumed in complete chemical oxidation of matter present
in waste water; indicates the content of slowly degradable organic matter
present.
Chemical pulp
Pulp in which wood fibres have been separated by chemical, rather than
mechanical, means
Chemicals recovery
In chemical pulping, the recovery, treatment and regeneration of cooking
chemicals
Chemi-thermomechanical pulp (CTMP)
Chemi-mechanical pulp produced by treating wood chips with chemicals (usually
sodium sulphite) and steam before mechanical defibration
China clay
Mineral (kaolin) used in papermaking as both filler and coating pigment
Chipboard/Grey board
Paperboard made from waste paper pulp, rough or machine glazed, also lined on
one or two sides or unlined.
Cigarette paper
This light weight, unsized paper (grammage 18 to 24 gsm), converted to improve
glowing. It normally has a filler content of approx. 30 %.
Clarification
Separation of a solid component from a solution
Clarifier
Basin where sludge is removed from treated effluent by settling; see Activated
sludge treatment
Coated paper
The uniform application of a coating yields a more even and more closed surface
of printing papers, which is suitable for the reproduction of fine screen
artwork. The coating is applied in separate coaters or in the paper machine.
Coating
Process by which paper or board is coated with an agent to improve its
brightness and/or printing properties
Coating colour
Mixture used to coat paper and board: contains pigment, binder, special
additives and water. Also coating slip
Coating colour kitchen
Department where coating colour is prepared and mixed
COD
See Chemical oxygen demand
Combined deinking
Deinking process combining flotation and washing; cf. flotation deinking,
washing deinking
Condensing power
Power generation in which fuel is burned for electricity production only
Consistency
Dry solids content (%) of pulp present in a pulp slurry
Continuous cooking
A method used in chemical pulping in which raw material is fed continuously
into the digester, while at the same time pulp and black liquor are removed
(cf. batch cooking)
Cooking
A process for producing chemical pulp by treating wood with a cooking liquor at
a certain temperature and pressure
Cooking liquor
Liquor made up of selected chemicals and used for cooking pulp
Copying paper
Copying paper is an uncoated paper in woodfree or mechanical grades, white or
col-oured in A4 and A3.
Core
The tube, usually made of paperboard, on which a paper roll is wound
Corrugated board
Corrugated board is produced by guiding a paper web, the corrugating medium or
fluting, through a slit between two corrugated rolls and pressing it into a
waveform through a combination of pressure and heat. In the same machine, an
even paper web (facing or liner) is then glued on to this corrugated paper on
one or both sides. See "Kraftliner".
Corrugating medium
Papers used as fluting for the production of corrugated board.
Critical load
Highest pollutant load that, in the long term, does not damage essential
characteristics in an ecosystem
CTMP
See chemi-thermomechanical pulp
D
Dandy roll
A cylinder on a paper machine used to improve formation; also wire roll
Decor paper
Woodfree, white or single-colour paper, often printed with various patterns,
e.g. wood grains. The final product consists of laminated boards or directly
coated parti-cle boards used for furniture production.
Defibration
Separation of wood fibres by mechanical and/or chemical means
Deinkability
Suitability of recovered paper for deinking; depends on paper grade, printing
process used, age of paper, and other factors
Deinked pulp (DIP)
Paper pulp produced by deinking of recovered paper.
Deinking
Removal of printing ink and impurities from recovered paper; to produce
recycled fibre pulp with maximum whiteness and purity.
Deinking loss
Unwanted loss of solid material from pulp during deinking (usually 10-40%)
Delignification
The removal of lignin, the material that binds wood fibres together, during the
chemical pulping process.
Deposit
Mass of airborne pollutants deposited on a unit area of land or water in a
given time, e.g. grams per square metre per year (g/m2/a)
Deresination
Reducing the resin (pitch) content of wood prior to cooking either by storage
or using bleaching chemicals to reduce the resin content in pulp
Digester house
That part of a chemical pulp mill where cooking takes place
Direct cooking
Cooking in which heating is achieved by blowing steam into the cooking liquor
Dispersion
The separation of a substance into the smallest possible particles using
another substance (the medium). Used in papermaking to homogenize pulp
properties and remove impurities
Dissolving pulp
A chemical pulp grade used, for example, in the production of acetate and
viscose fibres and cellulose films
Document paper
Document paper is paper with a high ageing resistance. It is woodfree but may
also contain rags or be fully made from rags and is used for documents that
have to be preserved for a longer period.
Double coating
Coating of paper or board twice on one or both sides
Drainage
Formation of a paper or board web on the wire by removing water at the paper
machine wet end
Drawing paper
The range of drawing papers includes woodfree and mechanical grades with
proper-ties that are tailored for specific drawing techniques. They have a low
opacity and are erasure proof and often also wash-fast.
Dry coating
Coating method in which a binder is applied to the paper surface followed by
dry coating pigment
Dry creping
Creping of a dry paper web
Dry end
Final part of the paper machine from the drying section onwards
Dry solids
Mass of dried sample as a percentage of mass of original sample
Dry strength
Mechanical strength of a dry paper sheet (includes tensile strength, tearing
resistance and folding endurance)
Duplex board
Duplex board consists of two layers, mostly made from waste paper pulp. It is
used for packaging purposes.
E
Elastic strength
The ability of paper or board to resist stress acting in the plane of the
sample
Electrical insulating paper
Strong, pore-free paper, sometimes impregnated with synthetic resins, made from
chemical pulp. Electrical insulating paper must neither contain fillers nor
conductive contaminants (metals, coal, etc.) nor salts or acids. Cable papers,
that are wound around line wires in a spiral-like fashion, are electrical
insulating papers with a par-ticularly high strength in machine direction.
Electrical insulating papers also include electrolytic papers and capacitor
paper.
Electrostatic precipitator
Used to clean up flue and process gases. Removes 99.5-99.8% of dust particles
emitted from recovery boilers, lime kilns and bark-fired boilers
Emulsion coating
Coating of paper with an emulsion containing plastic or resin
Envelope paper
Envelope paper can be woodfree or wood-containing, machine glazed or
calen-dered, white or in colour and is used for envelopes. It must be opaque,
writable, and printable and must have a high folding strength.
Enzyme bleaching
Bleaching technique in which cooked and oxygen-delignified chemical pulp is
treated with enzymes prior to final bleaching. Allows pulp to be bleached
without chlorine chemicals
Evaporation plant
Unit used at pulp mills to concentrate spent liquor to make it suitable for
burning and chemicals recovery
Extended cooking
Method of cooking pulp to low lignin content, thereby reducing the need for
bleaching chemicals
F
Fibre loss
Loss of fibre material in pulp and paper processing
Fibreboard
Board made from defibrated wood chips, user as a buildning board.
Fibrillation
A structural change occurring in the walls of chemical pulp fibres during
beating
Filler
Pigment, added to papermaking stock to improve properties such as opacity and
smoothness, and often to reduce cost
Filler content
Percentage of filler in a paper
Filter paper
Unsized paper made from chemical pulp, in some cases also with an admixture of
rags, sometimes with a wet strength finish. Filtration rate and selectivity, which
are both dependent on the number and the size of the pores, can be controlled
by spe-cific grinding of the pulps and creping.
Fine paper
High-quality printing, writing or copy paper produced from chemical pulp and
usually containing less than 10% mechanical pulp
Fine paper
Quality term for a large number of woodfree printing papers, based on chemical
pulp with usually less than 10 % mechanical pulp. Sometimes fine paper also is
made with an admixture of rags or wholly from rag pulp.
Flame resistant paper
Flame resistant paper may ignite but must extinguish immediately so that it
chars. This property is imparted to the paper by impregnation with certain
chemicals.
Flotation deinking
Deinking process in which air is blown into a dilute fibre suspension. Ink
particles adhere to the air bubbles and rise to the surface, where they are
removed
Flue gas scrubber
Equipment for removing impurities from flue gases by dissolving them in aqueous
solution
Fodder pulp
Protein produced from pulp mill spent liquors and sometimes mixed with animal
feeds
Folding boxboard
Single or multilayer paperboard made from primary and/or secondary fibres,
some-times with a coated front, used to make consumer packaging (cartons).
Fourdrinier wire
Horizontally moving metal or plastic mesh belt (wire) on which the paper web is
formed
Fraction
A component of a mixture that can be separated on the basis of some property or
properties
Fully bleached pulp
Pulp that has been bleached to the highest brightness attainable (> 90 ISO)
G
Glassine paper
Paper made from finely ground chemical pulp that is largely greaseproof but
does not have wet strength. Its high transparency is achieved by very intense
calendering (smoothing between rolls). Used as chocolate wrapping, in photo
albums, wrapping for fish preservatives, protective covers for leaflets,
envelope windows etc.
Glazing
First calendering, in which paper is passed through a roll nip to give it a
smoother surface
Grammage
Weight in grams of one square metre of paper or board; also basis weight
Gravure paper
Mostly mechanical, highly calendered (smoothed) paper with a high ash content,
which is produced as coated or uncoated grade (See "Coated paper").
It must ensure uniform ink trap-ping at high printing speeds. In order to
accept the ink from the deep etched or en-graved ink cells of the gravure
cylinders, gravure paper must have a certain degree of softness and suppleness.
Applications: magazines and reviews, mail-order and travel catalogues,
brochures and inserts with high print runs.
Greaseproof paper
Greaseproofness is either achieved by grinding of the pulp and pore-free web
for-mation or by special additives.
Grinder
A machine in which logs are defibrated against a revolving grindstone
Groundwood mill
An installation for producing mechanical pulp by grinding
Groundwood pulp
A fibrous slurry produced by mechanically abrading the fibres from barked logs
through forced contact with the surface of a revolving grindstone. It is used
extensively in the manufacture of newsprint and publication papers.
Gumming
Paper with a coating of an adhesive which becomes sticky when wet
H
Hard pulp
A commonly used term to describe chemical pulp with a high lignin content
Hardwood chemical pulp
Chemical pulp made from hardwood
Headbox
Chamber at the beginning of a paper machine that dispenses pulp stock evenly
onto a moving wire
Hood
A hood covering the paper machine drying section and designed for moist air
removal
Hot screening
Pulp cleaning at elevated temperature using pressure screens
Hot-ground wood pulp
Mechanical pulp produced by grinding logs that have been pre-treated with steam
Humus
Dead organic material derived from decomposition of plant and microbial wastes
I
Immission
The level of a particular pollutant in the environment. Widely used for air
emissions and noise
Impregnation
The absorption of an impregnating agent into paper; in pulping, wood chips are
impregnated with cooking liquor; timber is impregnated with preservative
Impressed watermark
Semi-genuine watermark made in the paper machine press section using engraved
rolls while the web is still wet
Index board
Woodfree and mechanical board for office and administration purposes.
Integrated Mill
Mill where timber is pulped and then made into paper.
ISO brightness
The brightness of paper and board measured at a wavelength of 457 nanometres
under standard conditions
J
Jumbo roll
Large roll of paper coming off the paper machine before cutting; a large
customer roll
K
Kappa number
Measure of the amount of lignin remaining in pulp after cooking
Kitchen wipes
Kitchen wipes consist of creped paper made from chemical or waste paper pulp.
They are used in private households or in trade and industry.
Knotter pulp
Pulp made from the rejects from chemical pulp screening
Kraft paper
High-strength paper made almost entirely of unbleached kraft pulp. Kraft paper
is suitable for the production of paper sacks and paper bags.
Kraft pulp
Chemical wood pulp produced by digesting wood by the sulphate process (q.v.).Originally
a strong, unbleached coniferous pulp for packaging papers, kraft pulp has now
spread into the realms of bleached pulps from both coniferous and deciduous
woods for printing papers
Kraftliner
Paperboard of grammages of 120 gsm and more, generally made from bleached or
unbleached sulphate pulp and used as an outer ply in corrugated board.
L
Label papers
Mostly one-side coated papers which must be printable in 4-colour offset and
gra-vure printing. These papers are usually suitable for varnishing, bronzing
and punch-ing and sometimes also feature wet strength and alkali resistance
(See "Wet strength and alkali resistant paper") in order to en-sure
the removal of the labels e.g. in the bottle rinsing machines of breweries.
Lacquering
Application of lacquer to give paper greater gloss and stiffness (brochures and
some magazine covers)
Laminate
Material used to bond together two or more layers of paper, board, etc.; also a
laminated product
Lamination
Laminating paper or board with foil, plastics etc.
Lightweight coating
Coating applied at 7-10 g/m2 on one or both sides of the paper
Light-weight printing paper
Light-weight paper has a low grammage and is made from rags and bleached kraft
pulp and is used e. g. for advertising material (catalogues, leaflets, mailings
etc.), commercial and/or jobbing work (magazines, brochures, instruction
leaflets, forms etc.).
Lignin
Natural "adhesive" which binds wood fibres together in the tree and
imparts rigidity. Pulp brightness depends on the amount of lignin remaining in
the pulp. Paper containing high content will "yellow" in sunlight.
Lime kiln
Used to reburn lime sludge (CaCO3) to form calcium oxide (CaO), which can be
re-used
Lime sludge
Sludge of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) formed during preparation of white liquor
in the chemical pulping process
Linen finish
Imitation linen texture impressed onto the paper surface
LWC
Lightweight coated. See Lightweight Coated Printing paper
LWC paper
Light weight, two-side coated mechanical reel printing paper with a grammage of
less than 72 gsm. It is used for magazines, mail-order catalogues etc. that are
mostly produced in gravure or web offset printing (See "Coated
paper").
M
Machine creping
Creping of paper on the paper machine using a large drying cylinder known as a Yankee
Machine roll
See Jumbo roll
Machine stack
Used for first calendering (glazing) of paper on the paper machine
Machine width
Width of the paper web in the paper machine
Magazine paper
The selection of the magazine printing paper is mainly dependent on the print
run and the demands on the print quality (image reproduction, outer appearance,
adver-tising appeal). High runs are mostly produced in rotogravure, rotary
offset printing or rotary letterpress printing on uncoated or coated reel
printing papers (mainly SC and LWC. See "SC" and "LWC").
Magazines with medium or smaller circulation are generally produced in
sheet-fed offset or sheet-fed letterpress printing.
Marbling
Addition of strongly stained fibres to the stock to give the paper a marbled
appearance
Market pulp
Pulp produced for sale on the market or for the producer's units abroad rather
than for own use.
Matt finish
A dull finish given to the surface of paper and board
Mechanical paper
This paper contains mechanical pulp, thermomechanical pulp (TMP) or
chemithermo-mechanical pulp (CTMP) and also chemical pulp. The shares of
chemical and mechanical pulp vary depending on the application. Highly
mechanical papers such as newsprint tend to yellow more rapidly if exposed to
light and oxygen than woodfree papers so that they are mainly used for
short-lived products. In print-ing papers the mechanical pulp improves opacity.
Mechanical pulp
Pulp consisting of fibres separated entirely by mechanical rather than chemical
means
MF
Machine finished. Smooth paper calendered on the paper machine
MG
Machine glazed. Paper with a glossy finish on one side produced on the paper
machine by a Yankee cylinder
Micro-creping
A way of improving the extensibility of paper by pressing a wet mesh against
the paper web
Multi-layer web forming
Usually applied to a board machine on which several webs are combined into one
Multi-stage cooking
Chemical pulping process in which the alkalinity of the cooking liquor is
varied by charging the alkali in several stages
N
NCR paper
See "Carbonless copy paper"
Newsprint
Newsprint is a highly mechanical, machine-finished or calendered rotary
printing pa-per (40 - 56 gsm) mainly made from mechanical and increasingly waste
paper pulps. In line with its intended use as a short-lived information medium,
the demands on newsprint in terms of optical properties or printability are
lower than those on other, e.g. coated printing papers. Newsprint must have a
very good runnability: today's state-of-the-art printing techniques require a
paper with a good tear strength so that the uninterrupted production on
high-speed rotary presses is ensured. Newsprint is used for dailies, weeklies
and free journals produced in letterpress or offset printing.
Nitrogen emission
Emission of nitrogen compounds which, as nutrients, cause eutrophication and
acidification in water systems
Non-Wood Pulp
Pulp made from materials other than wood, for example straw, grasses, bogasse
etc.
Nutrients
Generally refers to nitrogen and phosphorus compounds, which act as fertilisers
in water systems
0
Off-machine coating
Coating of paper on a separate coating machine
Off-machine creping
A method whereby paper is creped in a separate operation rather than by the
paper machine's Yankee cylinder
Offset paper
Collective term for printing papers with special properties for offset
printing. For in-stance, the paper must not emit dust during processing and
must be pick resistant. Offset paper may be woodfree or mechanical, coated
(matt, glossy, embossed) or uncoated and is processed in sheets as well as in
reels.
On-machine coating
Coating of paper on the paper machine
Optical characteristics
Characteristics of the appearance of paper or board. Most important are colour,
brightness, opacity and gloss
Oxygen bleaching
A process in which pulp is initially treated with oxygen followed by 4-5
bleaching stages
Ozone bleaching
Pulp can be treated with ozone at the start of the bleaching sequence to lower
its lignin content. Ozone allows bleaching to high brightness without chlorine
chemicals
P
Packaging paper
Collective term for papers of different pulp composition and properties,
sharing only the application. Selection and mixture of the pulps depend on the
demands made on the paper. Important are tear strength, bursting strength,
creaseproofness, abrasion resistance as well as elasticity and stiffness. Often
also good printability is demanded (packaging as advertising medium). For
special purposes packaging paper can be imparted wet strength or water
repellent properties or made impermeable for aromas or water vapour. For these
purposes either special additives are admixed to the pulp or the paper is
coated, impregnated or combined with plastic and/or metal film.
Paperboard
Monolayer paperboard is basically thicker paper, frequently used in
multilayers.
Parchment paper
See "Vegetable parchment"
Particulates
Airborne solid impurities such as those present in gaseous emissions (sodium
sulphate, lime, calcium carbonate, soot)
Peroxide bleaching
Method of bleaching pulp with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) to remove lignin;
reduces or avoids the need for chlorine dioxide in final bleaching
PGW
See Pressurised groundwood pulp
Photographic paper
The base paper used for the production of photographic papers is a
dimensionally stable, chemically neutral chemical pulp paper with wet strength
properties, that must be free from contaminants. Today papers are coated on
both sides with a thin polyethylene film. The cooking prevents chemicals and
water entering the paper during development. This also permits shorter rinsing
and drying cycles.
Picking
Removal of particles from the paper surface during printing when ink tack is greater
than surface strength
Picking resistance
Ability of a paper surface to resist picking by tacky printing inks
Pick-up
Roll which lifts the wet paper or board web off the wire before the drying
section
Pigmentizing
Coating of paper with a chemical agent (pigment) to reduce surface porosity and
increase opacity
Plasticizer
Agent mixed into coating colour to give a more flexible coating
Porosity
A structural property of paper reflected by the size distribution of pores
Postcard board
Postcard board is either slightly mechanical or woodfree and calendered.
Poster paper
Poster paper is a highly mechanical, highly filled, mostly coloured paper that
has been made weather resistant by sizing.
Press nip
On a paper machine, a pair of rotating rolls between which the paper web passes
Pressurised groundwood pulp (PGW)
Mechanical pulp produced by treating logs with steam before defibration against
a grindstone under externally applied pressure
Primary fibre
See Virgin fibre
Printability
Describes how smoothly paper runs in a printing press and the quality of the
printed image
Printing paper
Printing paper is a collective term for all printable mechanical or woodfree
papers that may serve as the medium for printed information. In addition to
uniform and fast ink trapping and drying (printability) as well as dimensional
stability, sufficient opacity (no show through of the back print) and
smoothness, such papers require a certain degree of strength and stiffness, so
that the paper may run through the printing ma-chine fast and without any
problems (runnability). Many printing papers are coated to improve printability
(See "Coated paper").
Process flowchart
Layout showing process equipment and material flows
Pulper
Unit for defibrating (slushing) pulps and paper machine broke, usually at the
wet end of the paper machine
Puncture resistance
Force acting perpendicular to a paper or board surface needed to puncture the
sheet
Q
R
Rag paper
Today rag paper is mostly made from vegetable fibres consisting of cellulose,
such as cotton, linen, hemp and ramie. Rags are the most precious raw material
for the papermaker. Rag papers and rag-containing papers with admixtures of
chemical pulp are used for banknotes, deeds, documents, books of account, maps
and cop-perplate engravings and as elegant writing papers. They are also used
for special technical applications.
Rag pulp
Papermaking pulp made from textile waste, cotton, hemp or flax
Ream
Unit consisting of 500 identical sheets of paper
Recovered paper
Paper recovered for recycling into new paper products. Recovered paper can be
collected from industrial sources (scraps, transport packaging, unsold
newspapers...) or from household collections (old newspapers and magazines,
household packagings)
Recovered paper
Name for graphic papers, paperboards and sanitary papers made from 100 % waste
paper pulp.
Recovered Paper Base
Solid, compressed stack of recovered paper, sorted by grades, intended to be
recycled by some papermills, to produce paper and board.
Recovered Paper Grades
Recovered paper sorted by types in order to be recycled by paper mills.
Specific grades are used by paper mills, in order to produce different types of
paper and boards.
Recovery boiler
Boiler used to burn black liquor from chemical pulping for recovery of
inorganic chemicals as well as for energy production
Recovery rate
Volume of paper recovered as a percentage of volume of paper consumed
Recycled fibre
Fibre obtained from recovered paper; also secondary fibre (cf. virgin fibre)
Recycled fibre pulp
Pulp produced from recovered paper to be used in papermaking.
Recycling
Use of recovered waste paper and board by paper mills to produce paper and
boards.
Refiner
A machine containing rotating disks between which wood chips are broken down into
fibres for pulp making
Refiner mechanical pulp (RMP)
Mechanical pulp produced by passing wood chips between the plates of a refiner
Refiner sawdust pulp
Mechanical pulp produced from sawmill dust
Reflectivity
Ability of paper or board to reflect light; a measure of gloss
Reinforcement
Method for strengthening paper with an insert or surface layer of glass or
other synthetic fibre or metal
Reinforcement pulp
Softwood chemical pulp added to give paper greater strength and to improve
runnability on the paper machine or printing press
Reject
Material removed and discarded during the cleaning of pulp/stock
Relative density
Mass of a unit volume of a particular substance
Release paper
Release paper is used to prevent the sticking of glue, paste or other adhesive
sub-stances. Coating paper with silicone yields papers with a surface that
prevents ad-hesion of most substances. Application: cover material for
self-adhesive papers or films, e.g. in label production.
Retention
Proportion of fibre and filler retained on the paper machine wire
Roofing paper
Board that is impregnated with tar, bitumen and/or natural asphalt.
Runnability
How smoothly paper runs through a paper machine or printing press (also how
well cartons run on an automatic packaging line)
S
Sack paper
See "Kraft paper"
Safety paper
Papers with a special protection against abusive imitation. The safeguards used
during the production of the paper - some of them chemical - are secret.
Sanitary papers
The group of sanitary papers includes cellulose wadding, tissue and crepe
paper, made from waste paper and/or chemical pulp - also with admixtures of
mechanical pulp. As a consequence of the importance of tissue today, this name
is now used internationally as a collective term for sanitary papers. These
grades are used to make toilet paper and numerous other sanitary products such
as handkerchiefs, kitchen wipes, towels and cosmetic tissues.
Sanitary tissue paper
Tissue is a sanitary paper made from chemical or waste paper pulp, sometimes
with the admixture of mechanical pulp. It has a closed structure and is only
slightly cre-ped. It is so thin that it is hardly used in a single layer.
Depending on the require-ments the number of layers is multiplied. Creping is
made at a dryness content of more than 90 %. The dry creping (unlike with
sanitary crepe papers) and the low grammage of a single tissue layer result in
a high softness of the tissue products. For consumer products it is normally
combined in two or more layers. The flexible and highly absorbent product [is
mainly produced from chemical pulp and/or DIP - some-times also with admixture
of groundwood pulp] can also be provided with wet strength. Applications:
facial tissues, paper handkerchiefs, napkins, kitchen rolls, pa-per towels,
toilet paper.
SC
See Supercalendered
SC paper
SC stands for supercalendered. This is a calendered, uncoated mechanical paper
with fillers.
Secondary fibre
See Recycled fibre
Security paper
Woodfree, sometimes rag-containing but always high quality paper with a genuine
multistage water mark to avoid falsification.
Semi-alkaline pulp (SAP)
Sulphite pulp cooked at slightly alkaline pH (normal sulphite pulp is cooked at
acid pH). SAP is superior in strength to normal sulphite pulp. Used mainly in
printing papers
Semi-bleached
Pulp bleached to a brightness somewhere between that of unbleached and fully
bleached pulp
Semi-chemical pulp
High yield pulp in which the fibres have been separated mechanically after a
preliminary chemical treatment; e.g. NSSC pulp
Settleable solids
Suspended solids that will settle out of an effluent during mechanical
treatment
Sheeter
Machine for cutting the paper web into sheets
Short fibre
Applies to paper or pulp containing a high proportion of short wood fibres
Sized paper
Sizing reduces the water absorbency of the paper and thus creates the condition
for the writability with ink. Sized paper is also used for many other purposes
(printing, coating, gluing, etc.), and the sizing agents must fulfil a wide
range of tasks. For in-stance, they control the water absorbency and increase
the ability to retain water and ink (pick resistance).
Sizing
Treatment of either stock or paper surface with size to improve strength and
reduce absorbency of water
Sludge handling
Compaction and dewatering of sludge separated from treated effluent
Softboard
Softboards are soft, bulky boards with a felt-like character. They are used for
protec-tive covers, roofing papers, beer mat boards, packaging boards and
flongs.
Solid fibre board
Collective term for all solid board grades.
Special pulps
Chemical pulps used for purposes other than ordinary papermaking (e.g. in
textile production)
Speciality paper
The group of speciality papers comprises numerous paper grades, each
character-ised by particular properties. These properties often require special
raw materials.
Spent liquor
Waste liquids from pulping and washing (cf. black liquor)
Steam calendering
See steam finishing
Steam finishing
A way of treating paper before calendering to improve its density and surface
smoothness
Steaming
Wood chips are often treated with steam prior to pulping; used in
thermomechanical pulping
Stock
Suspension in water (slurry) of fibres and other components for papermaking
during the period between defibration and web formation
Strength
Ability of paper or board to withstand mechanical stress
Suitcase board
Sized, high-density and strong board which generally is water repellent on both
sides as a result of surface finishing. It may be pressed, folded, moulded,
bent, riveted and sowed. Thickness 1 - 3 mm.
Sulphate pulp
Chemical pulp produced by cooking wood in a liquor containing sodium hydroxide
and sodium sulphide
Sulphite pulp
Chemical pulp produced by cooking wood in a liquor containing sodium,
magnesium, ammonium or calcium bisulphite
Supercalendered (SC)
Paper treated in a supercalender, usually separate from the paper machine;
uncoated magazine paper
Supercalendering
Treatment of paper on an off-machine supercalender to improve smoothness and
gloss
Surface treatment
Treating the surface of paper or board with size or coating colour
Surface-sized paper
Paper that has been sized on the surface, generally using a size press inside
the paper machine.
Suspended solids
Bark, fibre and other wood-based material released into water during debarking
and pulping; filler and coating colour residues from paper mills; solid
impurities formed during waste water treatment. Solids can be removed from
waste water by settling or filtration
Synthetic fibre paper
Papers made from synthetic fibres such as polyamide and polyester, from viscose
staple fibre or sometimes also with fillers. The fibres are mainly held
together by binders. The durable synthetic fibre papers are used for maps and
highly important documents such as driving licences or vehicle registration
books.
T
Talc
Mineral used in papermaking as a filler and coating pigment
Tearing resistance
Force needed to tear a sheet of paper under specified conditions
Testliner
Mainly produced from waste paper used as even facing for corrugated board or as
liner of solid board. They are often produced as duplex (two-layer) paper. The
grammage is higher than 125 gsm.
Thermal papers
One-side coated thermoreactive papers used for printing text and illustrations
on telefax machines, thermoplotters (e.g. for technical drawings) and
thermoprinters (e.g. for labels, tickets, sales slips and other vouchers).
Three-layer paperboard
Paperboard consisting of three layers: front liner made from chemical pulp
and/or waste paper pulp, middle made from waste paper pulp and back made from
me-chanical and/or chemical and/or waste paper pulp.
Tissue paper
Collective term for papers of a grammage of less than 30 gsm that differ in
applica-tion and composition but have the common feature of being thin. They
are mainly used to wrap delicate items, as tissue for bottle wrapping, as fruit
tissue wrappers for oranges or as wet strength flower tissue. They are also
used as base paper for the carbon paper production, as lining tissue for
envelopes and as lining paper (e.g. as a composite with aluminium foil in
cigarette packaging). The extremely thin Japanese tissue papers are sometimes
produced in grammages as small as 6 to 8 gsm.
Toilet papers
See "Sanitary tissue papers" and "Sanitary crepe papers".
Totally chlorine-free (TCF)
Pulp bleached entirely without chlorine chemicals
Totally Chlorine-free paper (TCF)
Abbreviated used for papers made from pulps that were not bleached with
chlorine compounds. The paper itself is not bleached.
Transparent paper
Extended and particularly careful grinding of high quality fibres (hard
chemical pulps, rags) yields a raw material permitting the production of
transparent paper.
Trimmings
Paper or board left over from web or sheet cutting operations
Twin-wire machine
Paper or board machine in which the web is formed and partially dewatered
between two wires
Typewriter paper
Typewriterpaper (bank paper) is often woodfree, usually sized, erasure
resistant and in rare cases coloured. It can be both with and without watermark
and can also be embossed. Typewriterpaper (bank paper) is often woodfree,
usually sized, erasure resistant and in rare cases coloured. It can be both
with and without watermark and can also be embossed.
U
Unglazed (UG)
Uncalendered paper
V
Vegetable parchment
Vegetable parchment, often also called parchment paper, is a highly pure
packaging material that is impermeable for grease and has a particularly high
dry and wet strength. It is made from an absorbing, pure, bleached chemical
pulp in a special process using concentrated sulphuric acid.
Veining
Uneven colouring of pulp
Virgin fibre
Wood fibre never before used to make pulp, paper or board. Also primary fibre
(cf. secondary fibre)
Viscose pulp
Dissolving pulp intended for the manufacture of viscose
W
Wall base paper
Collective term for papers that are suitable for wallpaper production. These
papers may be monolayer or multilayer (simplex/duplex), woodfree or mechanical,
uncoated or coated, and can also be laminated, pre-pasted or peelable.
Washer room
Pulp mill department where pulp is washed free of cooking chemicals
Washing deinking
Deinking in which solid particles are separated on the basis of their size by
washing
Waste paper
Paper after it has been used. Most can be recycled into new paper products.
Known also as recovered paper and secondary fibre.
Water colour paper
Woodfree (See "Woodfree paper") drawing paper with a rough or
structured surface, sometimes also rag-containing or pure rag paper. Sizing is
adapted to ensure that the water colours are well accepted by the paper but do
not strike through. The pa-per must be erasure resistant. If they are
hand-made, water colour papers have the additional advantage that they expand
evenly in all directions when they are mois-tened.
Watermark
A localised modification of the formation and opacity of the sheet, so that a
pattern or design can be seen
Waxed paper
Nearly woodfree papers that are impregnated with paraffin, wax or
wax/paraffin/plastic mixtures. With the appropriate saturation agent and
process the product may be tai-lored for specific applications, e.g. packaging
of bread or sweets or wrapping razor blades.
Waxing
Coating or impregnating of paper or board with paraffin or wax
Web
Continuous sheet of paper formed on the paper machine wire
Web glazing
Imparting a gloss to the paper web; calendering
Wet end
First part of the paper machine up to the drying section
Wet strength
Mechanical strength of paper when wet, measured under specific conditions
Wet strength and alkali resistant paper
Adding alkali resistant wet strength agents to the fibre suspension yields
papers that have a remarkable strength even when wet.
Wet tensile strength
Ability of wet paper to resist tension in the plane of its surface
White water system
Flow circuit for paper machine white water (includes pipes, storage tanks,
cleaning equipment, water from forming section and return feed)
Winder
Machine for cutting the paper web longitudinally into narrower webs, which are
then wound to reels; also slitter-winder
Winding
Operation whereby a web of paper or board is wound into one or more reels
Wire
Flat belt of metal or plastic mesh on which the paper or board web is dewatered
Wood containing
Paper containing a certain proportion of mechanical pulp
Wood pulp
Mechanical or chemical pulp made from wood (cf. Non-wood pulp)
Woodfree
Paper made using the chemical rather than the mechanical pulping process.
Woodfree paper
Paper consisting of chemical pulp fibres. It does not contain any mechanical
pulp beyond a permissible content of 5 % by mass.
Writing paper
Uncoated paper that is suitable for writing with ink on both sides. The writing
must neither bleed nor strike through. Writing paper is always fully sized (See
"Sized paper") and also suit-able for printing. It can be woodfree or
mechanical, depending on the intended pur-pose. The admixture of fillers makes
it less translucent.
X
Y
Z