Understanding Extensibility of Paper: Role of Fiber Elongation and Fiber Bonding, 19PaperCon
The tensile tests of individual bleached softwood kraft pulp fibers and sheets, and micromechanical simulation of fiber network suggest that only a part of the elongation potential of individual fibers is utilized in the elongation of sheet. The stress-strain curves of two actual individual pulp fibers and one classic fiber were applied to a micromechanical simulation of random fiber networks. Both the experimental results and the micromechanical simulations indicated that fiber bonding has an important role not only in determining the strength but also the elongation of fiber networks. Additionally, the results indicate that the shape of the stress-strain curve of individual pulp fibers may have significant influence on the shape of the stress-strain curve of a paper sheet. A large increase in elongation and strength of paper can be reached only by strengthening fiber-fiber bonding, as demonstrated by the experimental handsheets with starch and cellulose microfibrils and by the micromechanical simulations. The key conclusion related to this investigation was that simulated uniform inter-fiber bond strength does not influence the shape of the stress-strain curve of the fiber network until the bonds fail, whereas the number of bonds has an influence on activation of the fiber network and on the shape of stress-strain curve.
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