Search
Use the search bar or filters below to find any TAPPI product or publication.
Filters
Content Type
Publications
Level of Knowledge
Committees
Collections
Journal articles
The industry is entering a pivotal moment in which many of us find ourselves engaged in deep soul searching. Since the days of Francis Bacon when the illustrious triumvirate of gunpowder, the compass, and paper were the drivers of civilizations, our commu
The industry is entering a pivotal moment in which many of us find ourselves engaged in deep soul searching. Since the days of Francis Bacon when the illustrious triumvirate of gunpowder, the compass, and paper were the drivers of civilizations, our community has enjoyed a noble place at the table. Indeed, especially over the last 100 years, pulp and paper has quietly powered communication, commerce, and, more than ever today, packaging, thus representing a steady backbone for the continued stability of many global industries.
Journal articles
ABSTRACT: Laboratory experiments with bleached kraft furnish were carried out to quantify the effects of major differences in electrical conductivity of papermaking process water (due to the addition of sodium sulfate) on the performance of various paperm
ABSTRACT: Laboratory experiments with bleached kraft furnish were carried out to quantify the effects of major differences in electrical conductivity of papermaking process water (due to the addition of sodium sulfate) on the performance of various papermaking additives. Batches of refined pulp were prepared with conductivity levels of 168 (tap water), 1000, and 10,000 ìS/cm. The absolute values of the calculated zeta potential, in various cases, were shown to decrease with increasing logarithm of electrical conductivity. The performance of retention aid systems, including cationic polyacrylamide (cPAM), were not adversely affected by increased salinity, even up to an electrical conductivity level of 10,000 ìS/cm. In fact, treatment involving sequential addition of cPAM and colloidal silica showed superior retention of mineral filler at the highest conductivity level. Likewise, combinations of papermaking additives that promote the dewatering of paper continued to perform well in furnish prepared with increasing salinity. The ability of various chemical systems to induce flocculation among papermaking fibers decreased moderately at the highest level of salinity considered.
Journal articles
ABSTRACT: Water hardness, which can be defined as the concentration of calcium and magnesium ions, is known to vary greatly depending on geographical locations. Laboratory tests were carried out to evaluate effects of large differences in water hardness o
ABSTRACT: Water hardness, which can be defined as the concentration of calcium and magnesium ions, is known to vary greatly depending on geographical locations. Laboratory tests were carried out to evaluate effects of large differences in water hardness on the performance of certain wet-end additives to the paper machine process. Tests were carried out at hardness levels of 25, 125, and 225 ppm (as calcium carbonate equivalents). Increased water hardness was found to have a generally negative effect on the performance of a cationic acrylamide- type retention aid, although the extent of performance loss depended on experimental details. Likewise, rates of dewatering in systems containing cationic retention aid were adversely affected by increasing hardness, though the effects were not statistically significant in all cases considered. The tendency of bridge-forming flocculants (cationic retention aid or sequential addition of a cationic additive and then anionic retention aid) fell slightly with increasing water hardness.
Journal articles
Editorial: TAPPI Journal eBook version offers easy content, TAPPI Journal September 2025
Many readers of TAPPI Journal are familiar with accessing the PDF version of our published research papers, but not all are familiar with the availability and functionality of our eBook version. As opposed to the traditional PDF format, which is a static digital replica of the paper, the eBook version offers a range of additional benefits that make the content more dynamic, accessible, and user-friendly. In addition, you can more easily review all papers in a particular issue much as you could in a print version, as opposed to opening multiple PDFs. Below are some highlights on accessing and making the most of the eBook version.
Journal articles
Assessing lignin content in Nordic hardwood and softwood species using models based on near-infrared (NIR) spectral data and partial least squares regression (PLSR), TAPPI Journal September 2025
ABSTRACT: Continuous kraft cooking digesters face challenges affecting product quality, making it valuable to improve control through advanced techniques like near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy, model predictive control, and machine learning models. The primary goal of this study was to use NIR spectra to predict the amount of lignin in hardwood and softwood samples. This study investigated the correlation of NIR derivative spectra with the amounts of lignin relative to other constituents, namely cellulose, hemicellulose, and water, in wood chip samples of varying chip sizes and shapes from six Nordic wood species. It employed partial least squares regression (PLSR) on the NIR data to construct a model that predicted the lignin fraction and the relative fraction of acid-soluble lignin. When trained on a group of five wood species, the model achieved a satisfactory predictive ability, striking a balance between a wide range of lignin content and a consistent chemical environment. The accuracy increased further when the model was restricted only to spruce and pine, reflecting the benefits of a more homogenous dataset. Additionally, the optimal number of latent variables was identified as two, indicating that three distinct chemical components — cellulose, lignin and water — can be effectively differentiated using NIR.
Journal articles
Corrugated medium strength assessments in different flute structures, TAPPI Journal April 2026
ABSTRACT: Recent advancements in our ability to evaluate papers and our understanding of the mechanics of box failure have brought a renewed focus on measuring the performance of corrugated medium and an associated evolution of paper measurement approaches. This study evaluates the load curves, Hardness (where the fluted structure’s loading shifts away from an elastic response), and Concora medium crush test (CMT) values for a range of corrugated mediums in different common flute geometries. The shape of the load curve is a function of the geometry of the fluting profile and the relative stiffness of the paper, with smaller flutes and heavier papers reaching both the Hardness value and the ultimate load at lower deformation. Nonetheless, while the specific dynamics during the loading process vary, Hardness and CMT values correlate linearly between flute structures, even when testing specimens after different equilibration periods post-fluting. These correlations confirm the applicability of the standard A-flute CMT test to a broad range of papers and potential combined board flute structures, supporting quality assurance processes for medium production and optimization in corrugated board manufacturing.
Journal articles
Optimization of energy efficiency and condensate production in evaporation plants for a modern softwood pulp mill, TAPPI Journal April 2026
ABSTRACT: To meet the need to further improve thermal efficiency and environmental performance of kraft pulp mills, new systems and techniques have been developed within the evaporation plant. This paper describes these novel approaches and how they were implemented in a project completed in 2018 for a new evaporator and condensate treatment system supplied by Valmet at the SCA Östrand market pulp mill in Sweden. This project was part of a stepwise upgrade of the complete mill to increase the production capacity of the mill from 430,000 to 900,000 air-dried metric tons/year (ADt/y). As part of this upgrade, the mill had the objectives to increase the energy efficiency of the pulp mill and to minimize the air emissions as much as possible, the effluent volume, and the water usage in the mill. The mill also wanted to have the disposal of the biosludge in the black liquor, and the production of tall oil from black liquor soap, liquid methanol, and turpentine. This required that the new evaporation and condensate treatment system be very closely integrated into the other process departments of the mill, including integration of the hot weak black liquor flash vapor from the digester directly into the evaporator train and the production of multiple streams of clean evaporation plant condensate at the correct temperature for the bleach plant. Heat and mass balance calculation values, which were found to do very well in predicting the effect on actual mill operation, are also presented in this paper.
Journal articles
A systems approach for process debottlenecking towards a sustainable pulp and paper industry, TAPPI Journal April 2026
ABSTRACT: Increasing the competitiveness of the pulp and paper industry requires an effective optimization of its existing assets in line with a long-term vision for process transformation, production upgrade, and product diversification. Currently, pulp production increase is one of the main sources of additional revenue for the kraft industry. Likewise, energy efficiency is often employed as a cost-effective approach to reduce operating costs, enhancing the possibilities to lower fossil fuel consumption and contributing to a low-carbon economy. On the other hand, reaching higher production targets and facilitating process transformation, such as biorefinery implementation, heavily depend on the status and performance of a mill’s current infrastructure; therefore, a system analysis is needed to assess the new production requirements, the bottlenecks, and the interactions across departments. In order to obtain practical improvement solutions, direct and indirect impacts on process performance and resource utilization should be considered. This work provides an overview of the key challenges that need to be addressed for production increase and energy efficiency improvement. The methodology starts by a scope analysis for debottlenecking and screening capacity limitations vs. mill targets, followed by their ranking (bottleneck ranking diagram). Benchmarking, gap analysis, and root-cause techniques are applied to diagnose system inefficiencies. This mill-wide debottlenecking assessment is then used to guide the selection of a long-term sustainable operation and design a portfolio of improvement projects by avoiding cross effects of the short-term projects on the long term. A case study of a kraft pulp mill is used to illustrate the proposed methodology.
Journal articles
Editorial: TAPPI Journal research themes in 2025 highlighted sustainability and process efficiency, TAPPI Journal February 2026
Each year, the pages of TAPPI Journal offer more than a collection of technical papers -- they provide a sanpshot of where our industry is appling its intellectual energy in research. Looking back at the January through November 2025 issues, there was a distant focus on improving materials performance, strenghtening process efficiency, and integrating sustainability considerations into existing manucaturing processes. A majority of this focus was centered on packaging for a variety of applications.
Journal articles
Beyond the machine: Decoding process water microbes behind odor in papermaking, TAPPI Journal February 2026
ABSTRACT: Paper manufacturing processes create an ecosystem conducive to microbial growth, characterized by abundant water, nutrients, and optimal temperatures, fostering diverse microbial habitats. With the increased use of recycled fibers and greater water system closure, the industry now faces amplified microbiological challenges, particularly odor generation. These odor problems have raised community concerns, as shown by resident com-plaints, and have led to significant economic impacts, including costly lawsuits against major paper manufacturers. Based on earlier studies showing that microbes in papermaking systems can generate odor-causing volatile com-pounds, this study is guided by the hypothesis that recycle paper mill process water harbors odor-causing microbial communities and thus represents a primary source of malodor. To test this hypothesis, process water samples from commercial recycle paper mills were analyzed using high-throughput Illumina sequencing to characterize microbial communities in one complete analysis. The study results revealed fifteen major microbial populations, dominated mainly by the genus Pseudomonas. The identified microbes were further linked to prior literature to determine their functional roles in odor generation, including the production of haloanisoles (2-monochloroanisole, 2,4-dichloroanisole, 2,3,6-trichloroanisole, 2,4,6-tri-bromoanisole), geosmin, 2-methylisoborneol, and volatile organic sulfur compounds such as dimethyl polysulfides, hydrogen sulfide, and methylmercaptan. This study introduces a microbiological community-profiling approach that enables papermakers to assess whether process water represents a potential source of malodor. Earlier studies have not examined microbial com-munities in recycle paper mill process water specifically from the perspective of identifying malodor sources, nor have they integrated such findings with an extensive literature-based assessment. The findings of this study advance both science and practice by offering a method that can serve as an early diagnostic tool for papermakers, supporting effective future odor management and deepening understanding of microbial ecology in paper mill environments.