● Glossary 64 terms
Paper, defined.
Short, grounded, every claim cited to a grade.
- A fluteThe tallest standard flute profile (~4.7 mm high, 33 flutes per 30 cm). Gives the best cushioning and stacking strength for heavy, fragile goods.
- AKD (alkyl ketene dimer)A wax-like internal sizing agent that reacts with cellulose to create a water-repellent fiber surface. Works at neutral pH.
- AOXA regulatory parameter measuring chlorinated organic compounds in pulp mill effluent. Tracked to monitor ECF bleaching emissions.
- B fluteA medium flute profile (~2.5 mm high, 49 flutes per 30 cm). Common for retail-ready boxes and die-cut displays.
- BaleA compressed, wired bundle of recovered paper or market pulp, the standard shipping unit for bulk paper raw materials.
- Barrier coatingA thin functional coating that gives paper resistance to grease, moisture, or oxygen. A key enabler of paper-for-plastic replacement.
- Basis weightThe mass of a standard number of sheets at a reference size, used in North America alongside grammage (g/m²).
- BleachingChemical removal of residual lignin from chemical pulp to produce white pulp. ECF (chlorine dioxide) and TCF (oxygen, ozone, peroxide) are the two major systems.
- Brightness vs whitenessdeepTwo different measurements, two different standards, routinely conflated on datasheets. Here is what each number actually means.
- BulkThe volume per unit mass of a paper, calculated as caliper divided by grammage, reported in cm³/g.
- Burst strength (Mullen test)deepThe hydraulic pressure that punctures a sheet. Why corrugated liner grades are specified by burst index, and what the numbers actually mean.
- C fluteThe most common shipping-box flute (~3.6 mm high, 39 flutes per 30 cm). The default choice for general corrugated boxes.
- CalenderingA finishing step where the sheet passes through pressurized roll nips to smooth the surface and control caliper.
- Caliper (thickness)deepMicrometers, microns, and points. Why two papers at the same GSM can have completely different thickness, and why it matters.
- CMT (concora medium test)deepThe compressive strength test for corrugating medium. How the concora fluter works, what CMT values mean, and why flat crush resistance is the right metric for fluting grades.
- Cobb valueThe mass of water absorbed by a paper in 60 seconds (Cobb60) per square metre, a standard water resistance measurement.
- Corrugated boardA sandwich of paper liners bonded to a fluted medium, used to make shipping boxes. Single, double, or triple wall configurations are standard.
- CorrugatorThe machine that forms corrugated board by fluting the medium, applying starch adhesive, and bonding it to the liners in a continuous process.
- CrepingA tissue-making step where the dry sheet is scraped off the Yankee dryer with a doctor blade, creating fine longitudinal folds that produce softness and stretch.
- DeckleThe total producible width of a paper machine. Also a term for the uneven edge on handmade or mould-made paper.
- Deinked pulp (DIP)Pulp made from recovered printed paper where ink has been removed, used in newsprint, tissue, and graphic grades.
- Dryer sectionThe part of the paper machine where the sheet dries to final moisture by contact with steam-heated cylinders.
- E fluteA microflute profile (~1.5 mm high, 95 flutes per 30 cm). Used for small retail boxes, gift boxes, and printable packaging.
- Edge crush test (ECT)deepISO 3037 / TAPPI T811. The compression test for assembled corrugated board, not the individual liners or medium. Why ECT predicts box compression strength and what typical values look like.
- FEFCO codeA standardized four-digit code system identifying corrugated box styles, published by FEFCO (European Federation of Corrugated Board Manufacturers).
- Flute profiles (A, B, C, E, F, N)deepThe definitive reference for corrugated flute dimensions. A through N: what each profile is, how thick it is, how many flutes per metre, and what it's actually used for.
- FlutingdeepThe wavy inner layer of corrugated board. What fluting paper is, how it's made on a corrugator, and why the wave geometry, not the fibre density, provides structural strength.
- FourdrinierThe traditional single-wire paper machine design where stock drains through a moving mesh. Invented 1803, still dominant for many grades.
- Freeness (CSF)A measure of how readily a pulp dewaters, reflecting the degree of refining. Lower freeness means more refined, slower-draining pulp.
- Gap formerA paper machine forming section that sandwiches the stock between two converging wires, giving two-sided drainage and uniform formation at high speed.
- GCC (ground calcium carbonate)A paper filler and coating pigment made by grinding limestone. The most-used inorganic additive in paper worldwide.
- GlossThe fraction of incident light a paper reflects at a fixed angle, measured at 20°, 60°, or 75° in a gloss meter.
- GrammageThe international unit for paper weight, measured in grams per square metre (g/m²). Also called GSM.
- GSM (grams per square metre)deepThe single most important number on any paper spec sheet. What it measures, what it isn't, how to read it.
- Hardwood pulpPulp from broadleaf trees (eucalyptus, birch, aspen) with short fibers (0.8 to 1.2 mm) that provide smoothness and opacity.
- HeadboxThe component of a paper machine that deposits stock onto the forming wire at controlled consistency, flow, and width.
- IncotermsInternational commercial trade terms defining who pays shipping, insurance, and customs costs in a paper trade deal.
- Kaolin (china clay)A layered aluminosilicate clay used as a paper coating pigment, particularly for glossy and gloss-control coated papers.
- Kraft pulpChemical pulp produced by cooking wood chips with sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfide. The dominant pulp process globally.
- Latex binderA polymer dispersion that binds coating pigments to each other and to the paper surface. Styrene-butadiene is the dominant chemistry.
- LigninThe natural polymer that bonds wood cells together. Removed in chemical pulping, retained in mechanical pulping.
- Mechanical pulpHigh-yield pulp made by mechanically separating wood fibers, retaining lignin. Used in newsprint and magazine papers.
- Mullen burst testA hydraulic test that measures the pressure required to rupture a paper sample, reported in kPa.
- NSSC (neutral sulfite semichemical)Semichemical pulp made from hardwood with a mild sulfite pretreatment followed by mechanical refining. The standard furnish for virgin fluting.
- OBA (optical brightening agent)A chemical that absorbs UV light and re-emits visible blue light, making paper appear whiter and brighter than physics would allow without it.
- OCC (old corrugated containers)Recovered corrugated boxes, the primary feedstock for recycled containerboard (testliner and recycled fluting).
- Opacity (ISO 2471)deepHow much light passes through the sheet. Why show-through ruins thin paper. How it is measured and what ranges to expect.
- PCC (precipitated calcium carbonate)A synthesized calcium carbonate, chemically identical to GCC but with controlled particle size and shape. Used where optical performance matters.
- PorosityHow easily air passes through a paper, measured as time for a fixed air volume (Gurley) or as flow rate at fixed pressure (Bendtsen).
- Press sectionThe part of the paper machine after forming where water is squeezed from the wet sheet by passing it through pressurized roll nips with felts.
- Reel (paper reel)A large cylinder of paper wound onto a core at the end of the paper machine. The base unit of production and bulk shipment for most grades.
- RefiningA stock preparation step where pulp passes between rotating discs with bars, mechanically working the fibers to increase bonding and strength.
- Ring crush test (RCT)deepISO 12192 / TAPPI T822. A paperboard strip bent into a ring, then edge-compressed. Why RCT matters for both liner and medium, and how it relates to SCT as the industry convergence point.
- RSC (regular slotted container)The standard four-flap shipping box style: all four outer flaps meet at the centre when closed. The most produced box style globally.
- SCT (short span compression test)A test of compressive strength over a very short span (0.7 mm), now the preferred predictor of corrugated box compression strength.
- SizingThe treatment that makes paper resistant to water and aqueous inks. Internal sizing is added to the furnish; surface sizing is applied to the dry sheet.
- SmoothnessThe surface regularity of a paper, measured by air leak under a pressurized head (Parker Print Surf, Bendtsen).
- Softwood pulpPulp from coniferous trees (pine, spruce, fir) with long fibers (2 to 4 mm) that provide strength and tear resistance.
- StarchA polysaccharide used as internal strength additive, surface sizing polymer, and adhesive in coatings and corrugated bonding.
- StiffnessResistance to bending, measured by Taber stiffness tester or L&W 5° bending tester, reported in mN·m or Taber units.
- TEA (tensile energy absorption)The energy a paper absorbs before it breaks under tension, a key measure of toughness in sack kraft and other stretch-critical grades.
- Tear strength (Elmendorf)The force required to propagate a tear in paper, measured by Elmendorf pendulum tester in mN.
- Wet strengthThe fraction of a paper's dry strength retained when saturated with water, critical for food-contact and labeling papers.
- WhitenessA measurement of how white a paper appears, taking into account fluorescence from optical brighteners, distinct from brightness.