Drying
The paper may actually be dried several times during its manufacture (dry paper is much stronger than wet, so it is best to keep the paper dry to prevent it breaking and stopping the production line).
Applications
- to write or print on: the piece of paper becomes a document; this may be for keeping a record (or in the case of printing from a computer or copying from another paper: an additional record) and for communication; also a paper may represent a value:
In such cases making a copy that can not easily be distinguished from the original should be very difficult, to avoid abuse, see counterfeit.
official documents and private statements that are run through a computer are placed in individual letters by a "bursting machine".
- for packaging
- for cleaning:
History
A form of paper called papyrus, made from reedss, was made as early as 3000 BC in ancient Egypt, and then in ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The modern method of making paper from cotton rags was invented by Ts'ai Lun in AD 105. The Chinese technology was first exported to Japan in 610, where fibres (called bast) from the mulberry tree were used. From there the invention spread to India, where it was copied by the Arabs, who took it to Italy in about the 13th century.
Paper remained a luxury item through the centuries, until the advent of steam-driven paper making machines in the 19th century, which could make paper with wood fibres from wood pulp. Together with the invention of the practical fountain pen and the mass produced pencil of the same period, and in conjunction with the advent of the steam driven rotary printing press, wood based paper caused a major transformation of the 19th century economy and society in industrialized countries. Before this era a book or a newspaper was a rare luxury object and illiteracy was the norm for the majority of humanity. With the gradual introduction of cheap paper schoolbooks, fiction, non-fiction and newspapers became slowly available to nearly all the members of an industrial society. Cheap wood based paper also meant that keeping personal diaries or writing letters ceased to be reserved to a privileged few in those same societies. The office worker or the white-collar worker was slowly born of this transformation, which can be considered as a part of the industrial revolution and all of its phases.
See also: cardboard, ISO 216, paper sizes, paper mill, stationery.