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Paper Money
Paper Money
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Paper
Paper_450x450.jpg
Paper is a thin, flat material produced by the compression of fibres. The fibers used are usually natural and based upon cellulose. The most common material is wood pulp from pulpwood (largely softwood) trees such as pines, but other vegetable fiber materials including cotton, linen, and hemp may be used.
Because paper is usually made with wood pulp, paper documents (especially ones that are simultaneously or even previously published in electronic form) are sometimes referred to as dead tree documents.
A group of paper sheets is called a ream. Paper sheets can act as very sharp razors, leading to paper cuts.
Manufacture
Whether done by hand or with a
Fourdrinier Machine, the paper making process has four simple steps:
Preparation of the fibres
The material to be used for making paper is first converted into pulp, a concentrated mixture of fibers suspended in liquid. As many of these fibres are derived from natural sources, this process often requires many stages of separation and washing. Once the fibers have been extracted, they may also be bleached or dyed to alter the appearance of the final product.
Forming into sheets
The pulp mixture is then further diluted with water resulting in a very thin slurry. This dilute slurry is drained through a fine mesh, moving screen forming a fibrous web. A
watermark may be impressed into the paper at this stage of the process. This moving web is pressed and dried into a continuous sheet of paper.
In the case of the mould process, a quantity of the pulp is placed into a form, with a wire-mesh base (or other draining device), such that the fibres are left coated on the mesh, and excess water can drain away. At this time pressure may be applied to remove more water through a squeezing action. The paper may then be removed from the mould, wet or dry, and go on to further processing.
Most mass produced paper is made using a continuous (Fourdrinier) process to form a reel or web. When dried,this continuous web may be cut into rectangular sheets by slitting the web vertically and then cutting it horizontally to the desired length. Standard sheet sizes are proscribed by governing bodies such as the International Standards Organization (ISO).
Further additives
Raw paper that contains only pressed and dried pulp is very absorbent (for example, blotting paper), and does not provide a good surface upon which to write or print. Thus, a huge variety of additives are employed to add desired properties to the paper. These are applied in a coating called the size.
Sizing agents are often polymers designed to provide a better printing surface. Starches are very commonly used, as is
polyvinyl acetate (PVA), but there as many types of polymer employed as there are types of paper.
Sizing agents can also improve the printing surface by smoothing it. The texture of raw paper is rough, and so to achieve greater smoothness, sizing agents such as (Kaolin) clay are used. Smooth, matte finish papers such as magazine paper (for the inside pages) are made in this way. The glossy effect (for example on the covers of fashion magazines) is achieved at the end of the printing process, by adding a clear layer (like varnish) over the printing, and so is not a property of the paper.
Other additives are employed to enhance various properties of the paper, the most common of which are
optical brighteners.
Drying
The paper may actually be dried several times during its manufacture (dry paper is much stronger than wet, so it is best to keep the paper dry to prevent it breaking and stopping the production line).
Applications
- to
write or
print on: the piece of paper becomes a
document; this may be for keeping a record (or in the case of printing from a computer or copying from another paper: an additional record) and for
communication; see also
reading. Also a paper may represent a value:
--
bank note--
check--
security--
voucher--
ticket:In such cases making a copy that can not easily be distinguished from the original should be very difficult, to avoid abuse, see
counterfeit.
Mooreburster.jpg for such an edition is
"dead tree edition", as opposed to alternatives such as a file on hard disk (locally or accessed remotely through internet), CD-ROM, diskette, etc.
:A computer file can be converted to a paper document by
printing, using a
computer printer, the converse can be done by
scanning, possibly followed by
OCR.
- for
packaging:
--
envelope--
wrapping tissue--
wallpaper - for
cleaning (see also
tissue,
Kleenex):
--
toilet paper--
handkerchiefs
--
paper towels
-- miscellaneous
cleaning in the
kitchen, etc.
- for construction
--
papier-mâché--
origamiHistory
The word
paper comes from ancient
Egyptian writing material called
papyrus, which was woven from
reeds. It was produced as early as 3000 BC Egypt, and then in ancient
Greece and
Rome.
Eventually,
parchment or
vellum, made of processed sheep or calfskins, replaced papyrus. In China, documents were ordinarily written on
bamboo, making them very heavy and awkward to transport.
Silk was sometimes used, but was usually too expensive to consider. Most of the above materials were rare and costly.
The Chinese court official
Ts'ai Lun discribed the modern method of papermaking in AD
105; he was the first person who mentioned the method to make paper out of
cotton rags.
Other scources date back the invention of papermaking in China to 150 BC.
It spread slowly outside of China: other East Asian cultures, even after seeing paper, could not figure out how to make it themselves; instruction in the manufacturing process was required, and the Chinese were reluctant to share their secrets. The technology was first exported to Japan in
610, where fibres (called
bast) from the
mulberry tree were used. After commercial trades and the defeat of the Chinese in the
Battle of Talas, the invention spread to the
Middle East, where it was adopted by the
Indians and subsequently by the
Italians in about the
13th century. They used
hemp and
linen rags.
Some historians speculate that paper was the key element in global cultural advancement. According to this theory, Chinese culture was less developed than the West's in ancient times because bamboo (although abundance of materials is generally the primary reason for the use of bamboo as opposed to scientific prowess) was a clumsier writing material than papyrus; Chinese culture advanced during the
Han Dynasty and preceding centuries due to the invention of paper; and Europe advanced during the
Renaissance due to the introduction of paper and the
printing press.
Paper remained a luxury item through the centuries, until the advent of steam-driven paper making machines in the 19th century, which could make paper with
fibres from
wood pulp. Although older machines predated it, the
Fourdrinier paper making machine became the basis for most modern papermaking. Together with the invention of the practical
fountain pen and the mass produced
pencil of the same period, and in conjunction with the advent of the steam driven rotary
printing press, wood based paper caused a major transformation of the 19th century economy and society in industrialized countries. Before this era a
book or a
newspaper was a rare luxury object and illiteracy was the norm for the majority. With the gradual introduction of cheap paper, schoolbooks, fiction, non-fiction, and newspapers became slowly available to nearly all the members of an industrial society. Cheap wood based paper also meant that keeping personal diaries or writing letters ceased to be reserved to a privileged few in those same societies. The office worker or the
white-collar worker was slowly born of this transformation, which can be considered as a part of the
industrial revolution.
Unfortunately, the original wood-based paper was more acidic and more prone to disintegrate over time. Documents written on more expensive rag paper were more stable. The majority of modern book publishers now use acid-free paper.
The pulp and paper industry has been accused of being instrumental in
forest destruction. Several major Asian producers, for example, with strong connections to their respective Governments and bureaucracy have been systematically stripping rainforest for many years. Often the logs are
transhipped to other countries to disguise the damaging trade.
The Indonesian, Malaysian, Cambodian, Amazon
rainforests are currently being subject to some of the worst excesses of
environmental vandalism.
The
processes by which paper is rendered white, in most cases, is also a source of concern. Many rivers have been badly damaged by the
discharges from mills processing the
wood pulp. These concerns are not merely
side issues but rather display the comprehensive problems that occur when production dominates thinking. As in many problems over the years the mistaken belief is, and has
traditionally been, that nature can cope. The short answer now is that nature cannot and increasingly the state of the
ecosystems has been rendered such that the position has, and is becoming, terminal. The flow-on effect compounds and already disastrous position as in (for example)
water quality.
See also
-
cardboard-
illegal logging-
ISO 216-
newsprint-
paper sizes-
paper mill-
paper recycling-
pulp and paper industry-
stationery-
substrate (printing)-
washiExternal links
-
Indonesian Paper Trade -
No End to Paperwork-
History of Paper and Papermaking-
Paper Onlineca:Paperda:Papirde:Papieres:Papeleo:Paperofr:Papierhe:ניירnl:Papier
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