BioResources (Dec 2013)

Prospects for Maintaining Strength of Paper and Paperboard Products While Using Less Forest Resources: A Review

  • Martin A. Hubbe

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15376/biores.9.1.1634-1763
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1634 – 1763

Abstract

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Paper production requires large amounts of cellulosic fiber, whereas the world’s forested lands and croplands have a finite capacity to supply such resources. To deal with likely future pressure on forest resources, as well as to hold down costs of materials, publications examined in the preparation of this review suggest that the paper industry will need to implement several concurrent strategies. In particular, the industry can be expected to view recycling as a central part of its activities. Basis weights of various paper-based products can be expected to decrease over the coming decades, and more of the fiber content will be replaced with fillers such as calcium carbonate. Such trends will place intense demands upon chemical-based strategies to enhance the bonding within paper and paperboard. Based on the literature, further progress in reducing the amount of new forest resources used to meet a given set of paper product requirements will require a combined approach, taking into account various fiber attributes, nanostructures, novel concepts in bond formation, and advances in the unit operations of papermaking.

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