| — | Italian. | Canadian. |
| Lime and magnesia | 38·0 | 33·0 |
| Silica | 42·0 | 41·0 |
| Oxides of iron and alumina | 5·0 | 12·0 |
| Total water | 13·0 | 12·0 |
| Traces of soda, etc | 2·0 | 3·0 |
| 100·00 | 100·00 | |
[CHAPTER IX]
THE PROCESS OF BEATING
Introduction.—The process of beating has for its object the complete breaking down of the bleached pulp to the condition of single fibres, and the further reduction of the fibres, when necessary, into smaller pieces. The disintegration of the material is essential for the production of a close even sheet of paper, and the amount of beating required varies greatly according to the nature of the raw material, and the class of paper to be produced.
The textile trade, on the other hand, depends on a raw material composed of strong fibres, or of filaments characterised by great length, and any processes of treatment which tend to reduce the length of such fibres are carefully avoided, and it is therefore obvious that fibres which are of no value for textile purposes can be appropriated for paper-making.
Condition of Fibres.—The great differences in the physical characteristics and structure of the fibres employed for paper-making suggest that the possible variations in the final product obtained by beating are very numerous. This is a well-known fact, and it is further to be noted that this mechanical operation brings about not merely alterations of a physical order, but introduces some interesting and important chemical changes.
Of the better-known materials linen, with an average fibre length of 28 mm., the structure of which lends itself to considerable alteration by beating, is in marked contrast to esparto, the fibre length of which is only 1·5 mm. If the process of beating a linen rag merely resulted in the cutting of all the fibres of 28 mm. long into short fragments of 1·5 mm., there would be nothing remarkable in it, but the changes which occur in reducing the long linen fibre to 1·5 or 2·0 mm. are of a far more important character than this.
Early Methods.—In the early days of paper-making the disintegration of the half-stuff was effected by a true “beating” process, the rags being subjected to the action of heavy stampers, which broke up the mass of tangled fibre into a uniform pulp. The fibres for the most part retained their maximum length in this operation, which was exceedingly slow and tedious, though at the same time giving a sheet of paper of remarkable strength.
The nearest imitation of these old-time rag papers is to be seen in the well-known Japanese papers, which are extraordinarily strong. Some of these the writer has examined in order to determine the length of the fibre. The sheets when held up to the light appear “cloudy” and “wild” owing to the presence of the long fibres, which have only been separated or teased out by the primitive methods of beating used, and not completely disintegrated.