How white can paper be?
October 23rd, 2009 - 4:01 pm ICT by IANS
- London, Oct 23 (IANS) Whiteness is a basic property of paper. How does it arise, and how do you measure whiteness? How difficult can it really be to produce good colour prints?
Per Edström of the Swedish Research Council (SRC), whose model is replacing an old model that has been used by the paper and printing industries since the 1930s, says “light that hits paper penetrates a bit. Some of it is absorbed and disappears, while some scatters in other directions.”
“This is affected by fibres and fillers in the paper, and by various additives and ink. This is a rather complex process that gives paper its visual appearance,” he adds.
“Tiny constituents in the paper provide the light with many surfaces to scatter against, and this helps create a lighter paper. Ink, on the other hand, absorbs light of different wavelengths, producing colour.”
“The total impression is also dependent on how all of the components in the paper are distributed, for example, how the ink penetrates into the paper,” he says.
Finally, the colour experience depends on how the eye and the brain interpret the visual impression, all of which means that it is not so simple to understand these phenomena in detail,” says Edström.
Sphere: Related ContentRelated Stories
- Magic ink to revolutionise full-colour printing - Aug 26, 2009
- Inkjet printer technology may be used to make toxin-detecting biosensors - Jul 14, 2009
- Soon, black and white e-readers to be replaced by colour version - May 18, 2009
- Global warming could make meat lose its juiciness - Sep 05, 2009
- Beetle shell inspires new way to make brilliant white paper - Jun 11, 2009
- Soon, solar cells might be printed like newspaper or painted on rooftops - Aug 25, 2009
- Limited prints help art lovers during economic meltdown (Rainbow Palette - Weekly Art Column, With Images) - May 08, 2009
- 2005 design of 500, 1000 rupee currency notes compromised: CBI - Aug 14, 2009
- What helps us see in bright or low light? - Oct 14, 2009
- Designer Suneet Varma's creations come alive on prints (With Images) - Sep 07, 2009
- Sci-Tech
- 1930s
- additives
- brain
- colour prints
- constituents
- fibres
- fillers
- london
- old model
- phenomena
- printing industries
- surfaces
- swedish research council
- visual appearance
- visual impression
- wavelengths
- whiteness
Posted in Sci-Tech, |