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Journal articles
Open Access
Presentation of a dry black liquor gasification process with direct causticization, TAPPI Journal March 2006

Presentation of a dry black liquor gasification process with direct causticization, TAPPI Journal March 2006

Journal articles
Open Access
Effects of flame and corona treatment on extrusion coated paper properties, TAPPI JOURNAL October 2011

Effects of flame and corona treatment on extrusion coated paper properties, TAPPI JOURNAL October 2011

Journal articles
Open Access
Printing and finishing among hot roundtable topics, TAPPI JOURNAL, April 1992, Vol. 75(4)

Printing and finishing among hot roundtable topics, TAPPI JOURNAL, April 1992, Vol. 75(4)

Journal articles
Open Access
CorrPak 1991: worldwide participation of integrated and independent corrugated converters, TAPPI JOURNAL, April 1992, Vol. 75(4)

CorrPak 1991: worldwide participation of integrated and independent corrugated converters, TAPPI JOURNAL, April 1992, Vol. 75(4)

Journal articles
Open Access
Direct barcode printing on corrugated, TAPPI JOURNAL, April 1993, Vol. 76(4)

Direct barcode printing on corrugated, TAPPI JOURNAL, April 1993, Vol. 76(4)

Journal articles
Magazine articles
Open Access
Assessing variation in package modeling, TAPPI Journal April 2021

ABSTRACT: Predictions from empirical models are affected by variability in the input parameters for the data set used to build the models. For corrugated boxes, the difference between actual and modeled compression strength creates a real cost associated with box production, often resulting in boxes that may need to be over-designed to compensate for a lack of model precision. No work to date has attempted to assess the limitation in these compression estimates due to input parameter testing variability. In this paper we approach that problem, initially for the McKee equation and then conceptually for other box models. For our industry to do a better job at meeting the needs of our corrugated packaging customers, we need to reduce the variation in the tests we all rely on, particularly for evaluating material strength (edge crush test [ECT]) and package compression performance (box compression test [BCT]).

Journal articles
Magazine articles
Open Access
Effects of preincubation on the gelatinization of cassava and corn starch suspensions containing sodium hydroxide as a main component of corrugating adhesives

ABSTRACT: Effects of the preincubation temperature and the caustic-ratio, the molar ratio of sodium hydroxide to starch glucose residue, on the gelatinization of cassava starch and corn starch suspensions were studied using differential scanning calorimetry in view of utilization for corrugating adhesives. The gelatinization temperature and enthalpy change of cassava starch suspensions after the preincubation at 30°C decreased as the caustic-ratio increased, similar to those of corn starch ones: The gelatinization starting temperature (Ts) decreased considerably more than the peak temperature and the conclusion temperature (Tc). Although Ts lowered and the width of gelatinization temperature expanded, compared with those of corn starch suspensions, the two starch suspensions with the same half gelatinization transition temperature showed similar gelatinization characteristics of almost the same Ts and Tc. During 1 h-preincubations at 30°C•50°C, the starch granules with Ts that were lowered considerably below each preincubation temperature by sodium hydroxide showed limited gelatinization. The gelatinization transition did not rapidly spread over the whole suspension, but progressed stepwise in response to the increase of the causticratio and the rise of the preincubation temperature. In a prolonged preincubation at a constant temperature, Ts gradually rose at higher caustic-ratios in which stepwise gelatinization commenced. Although the starch gelatinization was irreversible and not in a stable equilibrium state for a long time, we concluded that such stepwise gelatinization progress controlled the practical preparation and use of corrugating adhesives.

Journal articles
Open Access
Maintaining level and alignment on your corrugator, TAPPI JOURNAL, November 2004, Vol. 3(11) (227KB)

Maintaining level and alignment on your corrugator, TAPPI JOURNAL, November 2004, Vol. 3(11) (227KB)

Journal articles
Magazine articles
Open Access
Influence of pallet pattern on top-to-bottom compression performance of unitized loads, TAPPI Journal November 2021

ABSTRACT: Environmental scaling factors estimate a corrugated container’s ability to withstand various conditions it will encounter during the storage and distribution process. In this project, we examined the compressive resistance of unitized loads using differing pallet stacking patterns. To simulate real-world failure scenarios in our laboratory tests, we used two different nominal board grades of single-wall C-flute regular slotted containers loaded with a plywood panel and bagged salt to direct the failure location to the bottom of the stack. Our results showed that the columnar aligned pattern provided the greatest compressive resistance and the interlocked stacking arrangement yielded the lowest of the patterns evaluated. Based on the study results, we calculated box compression retention multipliers for each pattern and compared them to scaling factors published by the Fibre Box Association.

Journal articles
Magazine articles
Open Access
Edge crush testing methods and box compression modeling, TAPPI Journal August 2022

ABSTRACT: While multiple test procedures have been developed to assess the inherent compressive strength of corrugated materials (edge crush test, ECT), limited work has explored the appropriateness of each in the context of box compression modeling. This study incorporates a variety of real-world samples, highlighting the varying challenges different ECT methods face in measuring the intrinsic compressive resistance of combined corrugated board. We examine each of these methods as inputs for different types of models, as well as discuss the propagation of measurement variation through the modeling effort. By highlighting the cases in which a given ECT method no longer proves to be an optimal parameter in box compression strength modeling, we explore how we might better measure this material property.