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Below is a diagram of the papermaking process, followed by a detailed
description.

The basic raw material for the papermaking process is wood. To begin the
process, pulpwood logs must be reduced to chip form. Prior to chipping, logs
are passed through a debarking drum (large, open-ended cylinder). Within the
drum, logs collide with one another and rub together removing the bark. The
bark falls through slots in the cylinder walls and is collected and burned
as fuel in the power boilers. The debarked logs are conveyed to a chipper,
which reduces them to small 1.5- to 2-inch squares with a 0.25-inch
thickness.
Softwood and hardwood chips are kept separate until the pulp is blended at
the paper machine since each has its own physical properties. Wood is made
up of small cellulose fibers, bound together by a glue-like substance called
lignin. In the pulping process, these fibers are separated by cooking the
wood with chemicals to dissolve the lignin.
To accomplish this, the chips are loaded into large vessels called digesters
on either a batch or continuous basis. Digesters are designed on the same
principle as a kitchen pressure cooker. The chips and chemicals are steamed
under pressure for 1.5 to 4 hours until the mixture is reduced to a wet,
oatmeal-like mass. The cooking frees the fibers so they can be suspended in
water.
The pulp is blown from the digesters under pressure to separate the fibers.
It is then washed to remove the cooking chemicals and dissolved lignin and
then bleached to the proper shade of whiteness. From there, the pulp is
passed through refiners. These refiners roughen the surface of the
individual pulp fibers by loosening the threadlike elements from the fiber
wall so they cling together when formed into a sheet. Added after refining
are dyes and other additives to give the finished paper the desired
properties.
Water is then added to the pulp in a ratio of 200 parts water to one part
fiber. This furnish, as it is called, is then run onto the forming fabric or
wire of the paper machine. The forming fabric is an endless mesh screen that
circulates at the wet end of the paper machine. There the fibers become
interlaced, forming a mat of paper, and much of the water is extracted.
Traveling at speeds of more than 3,000 feet per minute, the paper is pressed
between water-absorbing fabrics and wound through a series of steam-heated
cylinders called dryers, where the last of the water in the sheet is
removed. At this point, the paper passes through a size press that applies a
starch solution to both sides of the sheet. Sizing seals the surface so ink
cannot soak into the paper during printing. Since sizing wets the paper, the
paper must again be dried by traveling through another series of
steam-heated drums.
After drying, the paper goes through a calendaring process that provides a
smooth finish by ironing the sheet between heavy, polished rollers. At the
dry end, the paper is wound onto spools to form a machine reel and then
rewound and slit into smaller rolls on a winder. Some of these rolls are
sent for sheeting and packing into cartons. Others are rewound to
smaller-sized rolls and wrapped for shipment.
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