Pulp Drying and Baling

Some pulp mills are not integrated with papermaking operations, so they produce market pulp and sell it to papermaking facilities. Market pulp is dried and then cut into sheets that are stacked into bales so they can be transported. Most market pulp is dried to about 10% moisture, but pulp that will only travel a short distance might be dried to about 50% moisture. The higher moisture pulp is known as “wetlap.” Pulp drying machines are similar to paper machines and typically include the following processes: forming, pressing, drying, cutting, and baling. This module describes each of these processes in detail.

Request a demo

Course Details

Learning Objectives

• List the processes that produce market pulp bales • Describe the impact each pulp drying process has on fiber properties/characteristics • Describe the purpose or goal of the forming section of a pulp dryer • Explain why pulp is pressed • Identify the goal of pulp drying • Describe airborne pulp drying process and equipment • Identify and describe the key processes or steps for forming pulp bales • Identify and describe pulp baling equipment • Identify and describe typical pulp bale labeling and dimensions • Identify and describe pulp drying and baling safety hazards and guidelines

Specs

Course Level Intermediate
Languages English
Compatibility Audio, Video

Author

Vector Solutions

With over two decades of experience designing advanced 3D animated courseware and developing our proprietary learning management software, we pride ourselves by having developed over 1,000 safety and operations training modules, which have helped train over 250,000 workers worldwide. Our highly experienced team provides the industry with a simple and high-quality means of training their workforce. Whether your team consists of 25 people or an enterprise with thousands, we’re here to help.

Course Applies To

Demos + Pricing

Learn more about our courses, get pricing, and see our platform.

Trusted by 24,000+ Industry Leaders