Synthesis of handmade craft-paper from agricultural waste

Authors

  • Yennam Rajesh Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India
  • Priyanka Shivde Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India
  • Gaurav Daware Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India
  • Venkat Mane Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India
  • Vijay Mawal Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India
  • Sandip Derle Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56042/ijct.v31i4.2667

Keywords:

Agricultural waste, Cost effective, Eco-friendly, Handmade craft paper

Abstract

The present work is to promote the use of agricultural waste (sugarcane bagasse, banana fibers, and rice husk) in the creation of handcrafted paper. This work alters the manufacturing process by utilizing various cellulose ratios derived from different agricultural residues. Craft papers have been made with the use of a fairly straightforward and environmentally benign process known as the handmade technique, which includes these raw residues in various ratios. The physico-mechanical properties are measured for synthesized sheets with an appropriate basis weight (63–80 g/m2), thickness (20–300 m), burst strength (58.9–105.2 kPa), burst index (1.03–1.67 kPa m2/g), and bulk (1.06 – 3.12 cm3/g), respectively. It is demonstrated that the used ingredients are cost-effective and eco-friendly. In addition, it is found that the quality of the handmade paper sample composition formed with a blend of 20% rice husk, 30% sugarcane bagasse, and 50% banana fiber, is relatively high. This study demonstrates that agricultural waste can provide viable alternatives for the industries that produce handmade paper.

Author Biographies

Priyanka Shivde, Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India

 

 

Gaurav Daware, Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India

 

 

Venkat Mane, Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India

 

 

Vijay Mawal , Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India

 

 

Sandip Derle, Department of Chemical Engineering, K. K. Wagh Institute of Engineering, Education and Research, Nasik-422003, Maharashtra, India

 

 

Published

2024-07-02