Cellulose fibers extracted from organic materials and used for the production of paper.
Cellulose fiber material produced by chemical or mechanical means from which paper and paperboard is manufactured. Origins of this cellulose fiber are many. Among the sources are wood, cotton, flax, esparto grass, straw, jute, bagasse, bamboo, hemp, various leaf fibers and reeds.
The transformation of raw wood fibres into cellulose fibres which can then be used as the base ingredient in paper production.
Mechanically or chemically produced mass of fibre for production of paper and/or board
Ground wood fiber used for the production of paper and certain engineered wood products.
Fibrous material produced by mechanically or chemically reducing woody plants to their component parts from which pulp, paper and paperboard sheets are formed after proper treatment.
Any cellulose plant fiber cleaned and beaten into a wet mixture used to form sheets of paper.
Material to be filtered. Also referred to as concentrate, feed, influent, intake, liquor, mud, prefilt, slimes or sludge. Also a material prepared by chemical or mechanical means chiefly from wood but also from rags and other materials and used in making paper and cellulose products.
A suspension of cellulose fibers in water
fibrous material prepared from wood, recovered paper, cotton, and grasses by chemical or mechanical processes; used in making paper or cellulose products
The raw material used in paper making consisting mainly of wood chips, rags or other fibers. Broken down by mechanical or chemical means.
The moist, wet mass that comes from a tree or from a plant like kenaf when it is ground up and moistened for the purpose of making paper.
The fibers that have been reduced and diluted with water to be form into paper.
Pulp is the material wood is made from. Wood chips are cooked in chemicals to break up the fibers. Water is used to clean the pulp to make paper.
wood and other vegetable materials that have been softened and are used to make paper ..... return
A mixture of wood and/or cotton fibres, chemicals and water which paper mills use to make paper.
a mixture of cellulose fibers
an inexpensive magazine printed on poor quality paper
reduce to pulp; "pulp fruit"; "pulp wood"
A product obtained from digesting wood in a slightly alkaline or neutral sodium sulfite cooking liquor.
The solution resulting from blending wood, recovered paper or, in some cases, cotton with water to break it down into individual cellulose fibers. This is the fibrous material used to make paper.
Material made up of separate fibres that is used to make paper.
the aqueous stuff containing disintegrated cellulose fibre from which paper is made.
Cellulose fibre that has been separated from a plant into a form suitable for the manufacture of paper.
Wood that is reduced to a slurry of wood fibers by mechanical or chemical processes. Pulp is most commonly used for paper and paper products production.
Cellulose fibers from trees, commonly used in tissue and other paper, which are very absorbent.
The mixture of wood fibers obtained by chemical cooking or by the mechanical treatment of wood consisting of cellulose with varying amounts of other materials found in wood.
Cellulose fibers used for making paper products. The process of breaking wood down into usable fibers.
Mixture of cellulose, water and chemicals. Basic ingredient used in paper manufacture.
The fibrous cellulose material which has been mixed, beaten and diluted, to which chemicals and fillers may be added in preparation for the papermaking process.
Fibrous material prepared from wood or recovered waste paper for use in manufacturing paper.
the materials used for papermaking when wet and unformed.
wood suitable for use in paper manufacturing. No glossary entries.
Cellulose fiber material extracted by chemical or mechanical means from wood, cotton or other organic or synthetic sources. Pulp provides the fiber content in the furnish, which is used to form paper.
A slime consisting of finely crushed ore and water. The material may be treated by cyaniding.
A wet slurry of fibers and water that is the basic ingredient of paper.
Cellulose fiber material produced by chemical or mechanical means from which paper and paperboard is manufactured. Origins of this cellulose fiber are many and can include wood, cotton, straw, jute, bagasse, bamboo, hemp, various leaf fibers, reeds, etc. There are many mechanical and chemical means of separating the fiber from its original sources.
Wood fibers, ground and suspended in water, from which paper is made. Note: Hardwood pulp makes the best paper.
Cheaply produced magazine made from low grade newsprint. The term comes from the wood pulp that was used in the paper manufacturing process.
Used to make paper, commonly made from bits of paper and water. Adhesives, colors or other objects (such as leaves) are sometimes added.
The raw material used for the production of paper made mechanically via a pulverizer or chemically by separating cellulose fibers from the other structures in wood or other materials such as used/recycled rags, recycled paper, bagasse and straw.
A slurry of cellulose fibers and water which is the basic ingredient for paper.
Suspension of vegetable fibres in water; fibrous material, which is used in the papermaking process to create sheet paper or other products; main component is cellulose; produced by chemical, semi-chemical, chemi-mechanical or mechanical pulping processes. See also: chemical pulp, mechanical pulp, chemi-mechanical pulp
Pulp obtained through the elimination of a large proportion of non-cellulose matter through a chemical treatment (ex. through boiling).
Pulp obtained from various raw materials, essentially from wood, entirely through mechanical means.
material consisting of separate fibres used to make paper.
The basic material used in papermaking, broken down mechanically or chemically.
Wood chips that have been ground mechanically into fibers and are used for the production of inexpensive paper, such as newsprint, or that have been chemically treated to remove the lignin and are used to manufacture higher quality papers. Pâte
The wet slurry of fibers and water-the basic ingredient of paper. EAM: 500 sheets
The raw material used for paper production. It can be manufactured from softwood or hardwood and depending on the process used may be chemical, mechanical and bleached or unbleached.
Wood fibre that has been chemically treated so that it can be made into cardboard or paper. Forestry Victoria
Raw material from which paper is made. Fibrous materials, generally from plant materials including trees, made ready for use in the manufacture of paper or board. Mechanically or chemically prepared mixtures obtained from wood or vegetable fibres to be used in the manufacture of paper and board. Groundwood pulp, which is produced by mechanical methods contains lignin and has poor durability. Chemical pulp has a considerable amount of non cellulosic material removed during processing, and paper made from it has, as a result has a higher durability than groundwood paper. Permanent papers and boards can be made from chemical pulp.
A fibrous material produced by mechanically or chemically reducing wood into their component parts from which pulp, paper and paperboard sheets are formed after proper slushing and treatment or used for dissolving purposes (dissolving pulp or chemical cellulose) to make rayon, plastics, and other synthetic products. Sometimes called wood pulp
A general term describing the beaten, wet mixture of stock used in making paper, whether its contents are wood, cotton or other fibers. Also called pulp furnish.
Fibrous material produced either chemically or mechanically (or by some combination of chemical and mechanical means) from wood or other cellulosic raw material. Pulp is the principal raw material for papermaking.
a mixture of fibrous material such as wood, rags, and paper, that is ground up and moistened to be used in making paper or cardboard.
A mixture of ground, moistened cellulose material, such as wood, linen or cotton linters, from which paper is made.
The wood fibers of trees, ground up for use in the manufacture of paper. A common use of those North Country trees which are logged but unsuitable, because of their size or species, for use as sawtimber. A compelling reason to recycle paper.