Internal sizing agents make it possible to prepare water-resistant paper from an aqueous suspension comprising water-loving fibers and an emulsified hydrophobic agent. Why doesn't the hydrophobic treatment get in the way of inter-fiber bonding? The answer appears to involve the order in which nano-scale events happen during the manufacture of paper. It appears that the inter-fiber bonded areas develop first. Molecular distribution of the hydrophobic agents appears to happen later, especially during the later stages of evaporative drying. The topic seems to be crying out for someone to carry out appropriate experiments to shed more light on the mechanism.
CITATION STYLE
Hubbe, M. A. (2014). Puzzling aspects of the hydrophobic sizing of paper and its inter-fiber bonding ability. BioResources. North Carolina State University. https://doi.org/10.15376/biores.9.4.5782-5783
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