enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cotton paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cotton_paper

    A worker feeding rags into the rag breaking machine in a paper factory in Scotland (1918) A trolley laden with boiled rags The paper being cut to size Cotton paper, also known as rag paper or rag stock paper, is made using cotton linters (fine fibers which stick to the cotton seeds after processing) or cotton from used cloth (rags) as the primary material.

  3. Paper chemicals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paper_chemicals

    Paper chemicals designate a group of chemicals that are used for paper manufacturing, or modify the properties of paper. These chemicals can be used to alter the paper in many ways, including changing its color and brightness, or by increasing its strength and resistance to water. [1] The chemicals can be defined on basis of their usage in the ...

  4. Pulp (paper) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulp_(paper)

    That means agricultural-based paper uses less energy, less water and fewer chemicals. Pulp made from wheat and flax straw has half the ecological footprint of pulp made from forests. [33] Hemp paper is a possible replacement, but processing infrastructure, storage costs and the low usability percentage of the plant means it is not a ready ...

  5. Paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paper

    The cellulose fibres that make up paper are hydrolyzed by acid, and the presence of alum eventually degrades the fibres until the acidic paper disintegrates in a process known as "slow fire". Documents written on rag paper are significantly more stable. The use of non-acidic additives to make paper is becoming more prevalent, and the stability ...

  6. History of paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_paper

    They invented a machine which extracted the fibres from wood (exactly as with rags) and made paper from it. Charles Fenerty also bleached the pulp so that the paper was white. This started a new era for paper making. By the end of the 19th-century almost all printers in the western world were using wood instead of rags to make paper. [119]

  7. Surface chemistry of paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface_chemistry_of_paper

    Printing quality is highly influenced by the various treatments and methods used in creating paper and enhancing the paper surface. Consumers are most concerned with the paper-ink interactions which vary for certain types of paper due to different chemical properties of the surface. [8] Inkjet paper is the most commercially used type of paper.

  8. Vulcanized fibre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulcanized_fibre

    The process started with paper made from cotton rags. Before the processing of wood pulp and chemical wood pulps in the mid-19th century, the dominant fibre source for paper making was cotton and linen rags. The cotton rag sheet produced for conversion to vulcanized fibre is made like a sheet suitable for saturating.

  9. Rag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rag

    The Rag, an underground paper in Austin, Texas, 1966–1977; Rag (student society), a student-run charitable fundraising group; Rag (typography), the ragged edge of a block of text; Recombination-activating gene, encoding enzymes RAG-1 and RAG-2; RAG rating (Red, Amber, Green), a traffic light rating system