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Energy efficiency challenges in pulp and paper manufacturing: A tutorial review

Martin A. Hubbe

2021BioResources20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The pulp and paper industry is highly energy-intensive. In mills that use chemical pulping, roughly half of the higher heating value of the cellulosic material used to manufacture the product typically is incinerated to generate steam and electricity that is needed to run the processes. Additional energy, much of it non-renewable, needs to be purchased. This review considers publications describing steps that pulp and paper facilities can take to operate more efficiently. Savings can be achieved, for instance, by minimizing unnecessary losses in exergy, which can be defined as the energy content relative to a standard ambient condition. Throughout the long series of unit operations comprising the conversion of wood material to sheets of paper, there are large opportunities to more closely approach a hypothetical ideal performance by following established best-practices.

Topics & Concepts

Cellulosic ethanolPulp (tooth)Process engineeringRenewable energyExergyElectricityEfficient energy usePulp and paper industryWaste managementComputer scienceEnvironmental scienceEngineeringCelluloseMedicineChemical engineeringPathologyElectrical engineeringEnvironmental Impact and SustainabilitySustainable Industrial Ecology
Energy efficiency challenges in pulp and paper manufacturing: A tutorial review | Litcius