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Magazine articles
Reliability of stainless alloy equipment in chlorine dioxide bleaching, TAPPI JOURNAL, November 2000, Vol. 83(11)
Reliability of stainless alloy equipment in chlorine dioxide bleaching, TAPPI JOURNAL, November 2000, Vol. 83(11)
Magazine articles
What's new with tappi test methods?, TAPPI JOURNAL, September 2000, Vol. 83(9)
What's new with tappi test methods?, TAPPI JOURNAL, September 2000, Vol. 83(9)
Magazine articles
Laccase n-hydroxybenzotriazole full sequence bleaching with hydrogen peroxide and chlorine dioxide, TAPPI JOURNAL, September 2000, Vol. 83(9)
Laccase n-hydroxybenzotriazole full sequence bleaching with hydrogen peroxide and chlorine dioxide, TAPPI JOURNAL, September 2000, Vol. 83(9)
Magazine articles
Environmental issues continue to be a major industry concern, TAPPI JOURNAL, September 2000, Vol. 83(9)
Environmental issues continue to be a major industry concern, TAPPI JOURNAL, September 2000, Vol. 83(9)
Magazine articles
Taiwan holds first symposium on environmentally friendly and emerging technologies for a sustainable industry, TAPPI JOURNAL, September 2000, Vol. 83(9)
Taiwan holds first symposium on environmentally friendly and emerging technologies for a sustainable industry, TAPPI JOURNAL, September 2000, Vol. 83(9)
Journal articles
Magazine articles
Online measurement of bulk, tensile, brightness, and ovendry content of bleached chemithermomechanical pulp using visible and near infrared spectroscopy, TAPPI JOURNAL April 2018
Online measurement of bulk, tensile, brightness, and ovendry content of bleached chemithermomechanical pulp using visible and near infrared spectroscopy, TAPPI JOURNAL April 2018
Journal articles
Magazine articles
Enzymatic treated viscose fibers functionalized by chitosan, TAPPI JOURNAL August 2018
Enzymatic treated viscose fibers functionalized by chitosan, TAPPI JOURNAL August 2018
Magazine articles
Guest Editorial: Paul Wiegand: Environmental expert, TAPPI J
Guest Editorial: Paul Wiegand: Environmental expert, TAPPI JOURNAL August 2012
Journal articles
Magazine articles
Kraft pulp bleaching with a P-stage catalyzed by both bicarbonate and TAED, TAPPI Journal July 2019
ABSTRACT: Peroxide bleaching of softwood and hardwood (eucalypt) kraft pulps was performed in solutions of sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3), sodium carbonate (Na2CO3), and sodium hydroxide (NaOH). The conventional P stage (hydrogen peroxide + sodium hydroxide; H2O2 + NaOH) was the most effective brightening system without an additional activator. However, peroxide activation by bicarbonate anion (HCO3•) was obvious in all cases where NaHCO3 or Na2CO3 was used. When N,N,N’,N’-tetraacetylethylenediamine (TAED) was added to the bleaching sys-tem, Na2CO3 as the alkali source afforded equal or slightly higher bleached brightness compared to NaOH usage for both the softwood and hardwood pulps. This outcome is attributed to simultaneous peroxide activation by HCO3• and TAED. When applied to the eucalypt pulp, the H2O2/Na2CO3/TAED bleaching system also decreased the bright-ness loss due to thermal reversion.
Journal articles
Magazine articles
Fundamental molecular characterization and comparison of the O, D0, and E stage effluents from hardwood pulp bleaching, TAPPI Journal 2019
ABSTRACT: The present study characterized effluents from the O, D0, and E stages using nuclear magnetic reso-nance (NMR) and gel permeation chromatography (GPC) techniques to better understand the chemical nature of the dissolved organics formed from the bleaching of a high-yield hardwood kraft pulp. Understanding the structures and molecular weight distribution of these organics is the first step in developing methods to mitigate these contam-inates in the discharged effluents. The results indicated that the molecular weight distribution (MWD) of the dis-solved organics from oxygen delignification effluent is broader than those from D0 and E stage effluents. In addition, the O stage filtrate contained considerable amounts of lignin and xylan fragments, which showed its efficiency in removing such materials. The effluent from the D0 stage contained a lower amount of high molecular weight frag-ments and a higher amount of low molecular weight fragments versus the O-stage filtrate. Aromatic structures were nearly absent in the D0 stage filtrate, but the degraded organic material, presumably from oxidized lignin, contained olefinic (C=C) and carbonyl (C=O) functional groups. Furthermore, higher molecular weight fragments were detected in the E-stage effluent, presumably due to the extensive solubilization and removal of the oxidized lignin generated from the D0 pulp.