Wheat Straw as Base Paper for Barrier Coating

Authors

  • Mohammed Ahmed Sustainable Materials and Product Design, Munich University of Applied Science HM, Lothstrasse 34, 80335 Munich, Germany
  • Anke Lind Sustainable Materials and Product Design, Munich University of Applied Science HM, Lothstrasse 34, 80335 Munich, Germany
  • Sven Sängerlaub Sustainable Materials and Product Design, Munich University of Applied Science HM, Lothstrasse 34, 80335 Munich, Germany https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4916-9240
  • Emanuele Martorana Sustainable Materials and Product Design, Munich University of Applied Science HM, Lothstrasse 34, 80335 Munich, Germany https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5580-6082

Keywords:

Wheat straw, Eucalyptus, Flexible packaging, Base paper, Barrier, Precoating, Strength properties, Surface properties

Abstract

A smooth and dense surface of the base paper is advantageous when the goal is to apply a liquid coating as a barrier layer. For such a base paper, non-wood fibers derived from wheat straw could be an alternative to wood fibers. In this research paper, wheat straw pulp was refined with different beating levels (up to 600 revolutions) followed by different calendering pressure loads (up to 50 N/mm) to test its influence on mechanical and surface properties. Alkyl ketene dimer (AKD) was used as sizing agent with concentrations up to 0.2 wt% followed by a mineral-based precoating to test its influence on the smoothness. Eucalyptus pulp was chosen as a benchmark. After beating, the initial Schopper-Riegler degrees of 28 °SR increased to 56 °SR. Beating also increased the tensile index from 24 to 49 Nm/g, the burst index from 1.2 to 2.8 kPa·m²/g, and the tear index decreased from 3.3 to 2.8 mN·m2/g. Calendering reduced the initial roughness of 370 mL/min to 30 mL/min. When precoated and calendered again, the value was lowered to 15 mL/min. In summary, wheat straw paper is a relevant alternative to wood-derived base paper to produce barrier papers. Compared to eucalyptus, wheat straw paper showed better smoothness and much lower air permeability indicating excellent suitability for barrier coating.

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Published

2024-05-28

Issue

Section

Research Article or Brief Communication