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  2. Kraft process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraft_process

    The kraft process (also known as kraft pulping or sulfate process) is a process for conversion of wood into wood pulp, which consists of almost pure cellulose fibres, the main component of paper. The kraft process involves treatment of wood chips with a hot mixture of water, sodium hydroxide (NaOH), and sodium sulfide (Na 2 S), known as white ...

  3. Kraft paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraft_paper

    Wood pulp for sack paper is made from softwood by the kraft process. The long fibers provide the paper its strength and wet strength chemicals are added to even further improve the strength. Both white and brown grades are made. Sack paper is then produced on a paper machine from the wood pulp. The paper is microcrepped to give porosity and ...

  4. Paper chemicals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paper_chemicals

    Chemical pulping involves dissolving lignin in order to extract the cellulose from the wood fiber. The different processes of chemical pulping include the Kraft process, which uses caustic soda and sodium sulfide and is the most common; alternatively, the use of sulfurous acid is known as the sulfite process, the neutral sulfite semichemical is treated as a third process separate from sulfite ...

  5. Mechanical pulping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanical_pulping

    Mechanical pulping is the process in which wood is separated or defibrated mechanically into pulp for the paper industry.. The mechanical pulping processes use wood in the form of logs or chips that are mechanically processes, by grinding stones (from logs) or in refiners (from chips), to separate the fibers.

  6. Pulp mill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulp_mill

    Brown stock washers, using countercurrent flow, remove the spent cooking chemicals and degraded lignin and hemicellulose. The extracted liquid, known as black liquor in the kraft process, and red or brown liquor in the sulfite processes, is concentrated, burned and the sodium and sulfur compounds recycled in the recovery process.

  7. Sulfite process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulfite_process

    This, along with the ability of the kraft process to accept a wider variety of types of wood and produce stronger fibers [4] made the kraft process the dominant pulping process starting in the 1940s. [3] Sulfite pulps now account for less than 10% of the total chemical pulp production [3] and the number of sulfite mills continues to decrease ...

  8. Brown Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_Company

    The Brown Company, known as the Brown Corporation in Canada, [1] was a pulp and papermaking company based in Berlin, New Hampshire, United States. They stopped trading during the 1980s. They stopped trading during the 1980s.

  9. Black liquor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_liquor

    A black liquor sample. In industrial chemistry, black liquor is the by-product from the kraft process when digesting pulpwood into paper pulp removing lignin, hemicelluloses and other extractives from the wood to free the cellulose fibers.