Wood basic density effect of Eucalyptus grandis in the paper making

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Abstract

The basic density is the main technical property of the wood due to the fact of the easy determination and correlation with the others wood properties. In this article, it was evaluated wood chips from a five-years-old Eucalyptus grandis in three different silvicultural treatments for pulp and paper production. First, a conven-tional kraft pulping was executed in the same conditions and then submitted to some elemental chlorine free (ECF) bleaching process to achieve the target brightness of 88 ± 1% ISO. The bleached pulps were refined in a Jokro Mill at 0, 2250, 4500 and 6750 revolutions and their physical, mechanical and optical properties were analyzed. The statistical analysis indicated a difference in the wood basic density from the different silvicul-tural treatments. The yield of the pulping process was not affected by the variation of the wood basic density. The denser wood had the advantage of a lower specific wood consumption while the disadvantage was a greater difficulty in the delignification and a decrease in the selectivity of the pulping process. The denser wood was the one with the best bleachability and the one that most consumed chlorine in the bleaching pro-cess. The increase of the wood density caused gains in the fisical and optical properties of the bleached pulp and losses in the mechanical properties.The optical properties of the pulps from denser woods are more re-sistant than the negative effects of mechanical properties.

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Cremonez, V. G., Bonfatti Junior, E. A., De Andrade, A. S., Da Silva, E. L., Klitzke, R. J., & Klock, U. (2019). Wood basic density effect of Eucalyptus grandis in the paper making. Revista Materia, 24(3). https://doi.org/10.1590/s1517-707620190003.0735

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