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Wood-fibre for future products from pulp Paul Kibblewhite

Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

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Wood-fibre for future products from pulp. Paul Kibblewhite. Wood-fibre for papermaking The next 10 – 20 years. Fibre property interrelationships. Wall area  Coarseness Number  1/(wall area x length) Width/thickness = Fibre collapse (in dried sheet) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Paul Kibblewhite

Page 2: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Wood-fibre for papermaking

The next 10 – 20 years

Page 3: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Wall area CoarsenessNumber 1/(wall area x length)

Width/thickness = Fibre collapse (in dried sheet)Perimeter/wall thickness 1/(Wood density) Collapse

Fibre property interrelationships

Page 4: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Softwood versus Hardwood fibres

Page 5: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Furnish mix components

• Softwood fibres for reinforcement, runnability and robustness

• Hardwood fibres for bulk, surface & optical properties, and formation

Page 6: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Eucalypt fibre selection for papermaking

• Plantation-grown species, hybrids and clones

• Short crop rotations at 5+ years• Chip density about 550 kg/m³• High kraft pulp yield• Target fibre coarseness, length and collapse

resistance• Target sheet bulk and tensile strength

Page 7: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Globulus a premium eucalypt fibre-type

Page 8: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Where to in short-term?

• Conventional breeding and propagation technologies

• Short crop rotations• High forest productivity and disease

resistance• Emphasis on low cost, rapid propagation

procedures, and screening tools • Genetic modification of lower priority

Page 9: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Softwood fibre-types

123 80 52

Page 10: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Softwood pulp uniformity by fibre-type

Page 11: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Northern is the premium softwood fibre-type

• Low coarseness

• long and slender

• High number

• Low MFA

• High hemicelluloses

• Low refining energy

• Long crop rotations

Page 12: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Northern fibre-type from radiata pineHow Do?

• Wood/chip segregation

• Pulp fractionation

• Conventional breeding, hybridisation and cloning

• Genetic modification

Page 13: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Market kraft categories through wood/chip segregation

125 110 100 76

Page 14: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

“Rods and Ribbons”Pulp fractionation by fibre collapse

Page 15: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Breeding for fibre quality

Select for

Low Fibre Coarseness

while

retaining or increasing

Density and Length

Page 16: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Coarseness

Wood-fibre number

Page 17: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Radiata pine fibre improvements in the short-term

Wood/chip segregation• Further advances limitedPulp fractionation by fibre collapse• Yet to be achievedGenetic modification, and breeding for low coarseness• Pulp mill is a residue user • “Change” required for pulpwood regimes and fibre

quality improvement

Page 18: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Pulp-fibre for papermaking 50 years on!Who Knows?

Today’s commodities

• Tissue, sanitary and packaging products, possibly OK

• Junk-mail, newsprint, communication and hard-copy, probably limited?

Today’s specialty cement reinforcement pulp?

Page 19: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Wood-fibre for future bio-products from pulp:A 50-year horizon

Page 20: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Softwood and Eucalypt-type pulp-fibre 50 years on

• Short rotation pulpwood regimes (5 – 10 years)• Highly uniform fibre property populations• Earlywood- and latewood-type pulps• Wide range of chemical and physical fibre-

property combinations

Page 21: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Many possible fibre property combinations1. Separate EW & LW fibre populations

Latewood Earlywood

Rod-like Ribbon-like Same coarseness

Thick wall Thin wall, Small perim Large perim Uncollapsed Collapsed

Page 22: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

2. Low or high coarseness rod-like fibre populations

High coarseness Low coarseness Few fibres Many fibres

Small surface cm²/g Large surface cm²/g Same Chip density

Wall thick/perim Collapse

Page 23: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

3. Four plus fibre-property combinations for future products from pulp

Rod-like populations Ribbon-like populations Low coarseness High coarseness Low coarseness High coarseness Many Few Many Few Low collapse Low collapse High collapse High collapse Low or high MFA Low or high MFA Low or high MFA Low or high MFA Long or short Long or short Long or short Long or short

Page 24: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Fibre property combinations

Designer fibres

through

Purpose-grown, short-rotation crops

for

Sustainable designer products

Page 25: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Fibre-property-combination research

Genetic modification

A critical success requirement

• Assay procedures to screen genotypes at the plantlet stage (3 months?)

Page 26: Wood-fibre for future products from pulp

Back to Reality!Who pays? • Fibre-property-combination research and development• Product identification processes • Fibre property combination selection and supply• Product development

Constraints• Costs• Sustainability, and product- and market-driven • Green-house effect