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Journal articles
Magazine articles
´We Must Grow—In All Areas’, Paper360º May/June 2020

´We Must Grow—In All Areas’, Paper360º May/June 2020

Journal articles
Magazine articles
Wireless Sensors Improve Toxic Gas Mitigation in P&P Mills, Paper360º May/June 2020

Wireless Sensors Improve Toxic Gas Mitigation in P&P Mills, Paper360º May/June 2020

Journal articles
Magazine articles
TAPPI Journal Summaries, Paper360º May/June 2020

TAPPI Journal Summaries, Paper360º May/June 2020

Journal articles
Magazine articles
How Strikes, Regulations and Disasters Impact Pulp and Paper Supply Chains, Paper360º May/June 2020

How Strikes, Regulations and Disasters Impact Pulp and Paper Supply Chains, Paper360º May/June 2020

Journal articles
12NOVPA04

SETPOINT: Actions from the heart, Paper360º November/December 2012

Journal articles
Magazine articles
Open Access
Quantification of vegetable oil in recycled paper, TAPPI JOURNAL September 2020

ABSTRACT: Vegetable soybean oil is commonly used in cooking foods that are packaged in takeaway paper-board containers. Vegetable oil is hydrophobic, and in sufficiently high concentration, could interfere with interfiber bonding and result in paper strength loss. In order to quantify the effect of oil on the resulting paperboard strength, it is necessary to quantify the oil content in paper. A lab method was evaluated to determine the soybean oil content in paper. Handsheets were made with pulps previously treated with different proportions of vegetable oil. Pyrolysis gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (pyGCMS) was used to quantify the amount of oil left in the handsheets. The results revealed a strong correlation between the amount of oil applied to the initial pulp and the amount of oil left in the handsheets.In addition, the effect of vegetable oils on paper strength may be affected by the cooking process. Vegetable oil is known to degrade over time in the presence of oxygen, light, and temperature. The vegetable oil was put in an oven to imitate the oil lifecycle during a typical pizza cooking process. The cooked oil was then left at room temperature and not protected from air (oxygen) or from normal daylight. The heated, then cooled, oil was stored over a period of 13 weeks. During this time, samples of the aged oil were tested as part of a time-based degradation study of the cooked and cooled oil.

Journal articles
Open Access
Case Histories of Three Yankee Cracking Incidents Associated

Case Histories of Three Yankee Cracking Incidents Associated with Shell Edge Extensions, 1991 Engineering Conference Proceedings

Journal articles
Open Access
Theoretical Drying Study of Single-Tier Versus Conventional

Theoretical Drying Study of Single-Tier Versus Conventional Two-Tiered Dryer Configurations, 1992 Engineering Conference Proceedings

Journal articles
Open Access
Static Control Methods in Hazardous Areas in Converting Oper

Static Control Methods in Hazardous Areas in Converting Operations, 1994 Polymers, Laminations & Coating Conference Proceedings

Journal articles
Magazine articles
Open Access
Can carbon capture be a new revenue opportunity for the pulp and paper sector?, TAPPI Journal August 2021

ABSTRACT: Transition towards carbon neutrality will require application of negative carbon emission technologies (NETs). This creates a new opportunity for the industry in the near future. The pulp and paper industry already utilizes vast amounts of biomass and produces large amounts of biogenic carbon dioxide. The industry is well poised for the use of bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), which is considered as one of the key NETs. If the captured carbon dioxide can be used to manufacture green fuels to replace fossil ones, then this will generate a huge additional market where pulp and paper mills are on the front line. The objective of this study is to evaluate future trends and policies affecting the pulp and paper industry and to describe how a carbon neutral or carbon negative pulp and paper production process can be viable. Such policies include, as examples, price of carbon dioxide allowances or support for green fuel production and BECCS implementation. It is known that profitability differs depending on mill type, performance, energy efficiency, or carbon dioxide intensity. The results give fresh understanding on the potential for investing in negative emission technologies. Carbon capture or green fuel production can be economical with an emission trade system, depending on electricity price, green fuel price, negative emission credit, and a mill’s emission profile. However, feasibility does not seem to evidently correlate with the performance, technical age, or the measured efficiency of the mill.