Hi All
How is cork made?

An incredibly versatile natural material, cork is harvested from living cork 
oak trees somewhat like wool is gathered from sheep. The trees are
unharmed
by the process, and they continue producing cork for an average of 150 
years.

Background

Cork is composed of dead cells that accumulate on the outer surface of the 
cork oak tree. Because of its honeycomb-like structure, cork consists 
largely
of empty space; its density (weight per unit volume) is one-fourth that of 
water. Unlike a
honeycomb,
however, cork consists of
irregularly
shaped and spaced cells having an average of 14 sides. With 625 million of 
these empty cells per cubic inch (40 million per
cubic centimeter),
cork is like many layers of microscopic Bubble Wrap, making it an effective 
cushioning material. Its low density makes cork useful in products like life
preservers and buoys. The large amount of dead-air space makes cork an 
effective
insulation
material for both temperature and noise. Furthermore, it is
fire retardant
; flames will only
char
the surface, and no toxic
fumes
are generated. Cutting the surface of cork turns many of the
microscopic
cells into tiny suction cups, creating an effective non-slip surface. In 
addition to being flexible, cork is highly
resilient.
After being crushed under a pressure of 14,000 lbs/in2 (96,000 kPa), cork 
will regain 90% of its original size in 24 hours. Cork absorbs neither dust 
nor
moisture,
and it resists both
rot
and insects. Highly resistant to wear, it is used for polishing diamonds.

Among the many products made from cork are flooring materials (e.g.,
linoleum),
shoe insoles, roofing panels, gaskets, safety helmet liners, bottle
stoppers,
dartboards, bulletin boards, and cores for golf balls and baseballs. 
Numerous artificial materials have been developed to substitute for cork in 
specific
applications (e.g., a synthetic
pea
in a referee's whistle,
foam
insoles for shoes, or Styrofoam life preservers). However, no general 
substitute has been developed for cork that can be used in diverse 
applications.

History

Cork bottle stoppers have been found in Egyptian tombs dating back thousands 
of years. Ancient Greeks used cork to make fishing net floats, sandals, and
bottle stoppers. Two thousand years ago, Romans widely used cork in variety 
of ways, including life jackets for fishermen. For hundreds of years, 
Mediterranean
cottages have been built with cork roofs and floors to keep out summer heat 
and winter cold-and to provide a soft walking surface.

Glass bottles were invented in the fifteenth century, but their use did not 
become widespread until the seventeenth century. The popularity of cork as a
stopper
led to deliberate cultivation of cork trees, which prior to about 1760 had 
simply been harvested wherever they happened to grow. The revolutionary 
crown
cap-a metal
lid
lined with a disk of natural cork commonly known as a bottle cap-was 
invented in 1892.

A great deal of the cork harvest was wasted until around 1890, when a German 
company developed a process for adding a clay
binder
to cork particles and producing sheets of agglomerated (composite) cork for 
use as insulation. The following year, an American named John Smith 
developed
a technique for producing pure-cork
agglomeration
out of waste material by subjecting cork particles to heat and pressure 
without adding any binder. The next major development occurred in 1909 when 
Charles
McManus invented a type of agglomerated cork that could be used to line 
crown caps. Since then, many other techniques have been developed to produce 
cork
compounds with a variety of properties and uses.

Raw Materials

The raw material for cork products is harvested from the cork oak tree 
(either the evergreen Quercus suber or the deciduous-Quercus occidentalis). 
The trees
typically reach a height of 40-60 ft (12-18 m) and a trunk
circumference
of 6-10 ft (2-3 m). Virtually all of the world's commercial cork trees grow 
in the western Mediterranean region and the Iberian Peninsula. Portugal's 
cork
forests are the most productive. Accounting for 30% of the existing trees, 
they produce half of the world's harvested cork.

A cork tree is ready for its first harvest when it is about 20 years old. 
The first harvest is of poor quality, and can only be used to make 
agglomerated
cork products. Subsequent harvests occur at nine-year intervals, when the 
cork layer reaches a thickness of 1-2 in (2-5 cm). The harvest from a young 
tree
yields about 35 lb (16 kg) of cork, while the yield for an older tree may be 
500 lb (225 kg). Each tree has a productive life of about 150 years.

During the production of bottle stoppers, chemical baths are used to 
condition the corks. Among the more popular are a
chlorinated lime
bath followed by a neutralizing bath of
oxalic acid,
a
hypochlorite
bath neutralized by sodium
oxalate,
and a
peroxide
bath neutralized with
citric acid.

Production of compound agglomerated cork involves adding a binder or
adhesive
agent to cork granules. Different binders are chosen, depending on the 
qualities desired in the ultimate product (e.g., flexibility, softness, 
resistance
to wear). Among those frequently used are
asphalt,
rubber,
gypsum,
glue, and plastic.

The Manufacturing
Process
. Using a specially designed
hatchet,
the harvester slices through the cork layer on the trunk of the tree, taking 
care not to cut deep enough to damage the living portion of the trunk. 
Horizontal
cuts are made at the base of the trunk and just below the lowest branches. A 
few vertical cuts separate the circumferential cork ring into sections of
an appropriate size. Using the wedge-shaped handle of the hatchet, the 
harvester strips each panel of cork from the tree. On some large trees, cork 
is
also stripped from the lower branches.
. The cork planks are stacked outdoors and left to cure for a time ranging 
from a few weeks to six months. The fresh air, sun, and rain encourage 
chemical
changes that improve the quality of the cork. By the end of the curing 
process, the planks have flattened out and lost about 20% of their original
moisture content.
. The planks are then treated with heat and water to remove dirt and 
water-soluble components like
tannin,
and to make the cork softer and more flexible. This process typically 
involves lowering stacks of cork planks into large copper vats filled with 
boiling
water containing a
fungicide.
Heavy weights are placed on top of the cork to keep it submerged for 30-75 
minutes.
. When the planks are removed from the
vat,
a hoe-shaped knife is used to
scrape
off the poor-quality outer layer of cork, which amounts to about 2% of the 
volume of the plank but 20% of its weight. The planks are stacked in a dark
cellar
and allowed to dry and cure under controlled
humidity
for a few more weeks.
. The cork planks are trimmed to a uniform, rectangular shape and are sorted 
by quality. The finest quality material will be used to make natural cork 
products
like wine bottle stoppers. Poorer quality material will be ground and used 
to make composition or agglomerated cork.

Boffle corks
. Cork slabs of the desired thickness are placed in a steam chamber for 20 
minutes to
soften
them. The slabs are then cut into strips whose width corresponds to the 
intended length of the bottle stoppers. The strips are fed through a machine 
that
punches hollow metal tubes through them, removing cylinders of cork.
. Although some beverage bottlers want cylindrical corks, others want
tapered
ones. To achieve this shape, the cylinders are arranged on a slanted 
conveyor that carries them past a rapidly rotating circular knife. As they 
pass the
blade, the corks are also revolving on the conveyor, so they are trimmed to 
a taper.
. Both cylindrical and tapered corks are washed, bleached, and
sterilized
in large vats. Rotating wooden paddles continually push the corks down into 
first a washing solution and then a neutralizing solution.
. After being dried in a large
centrifugal
dryer, the corks may be marked with an identifying label (with ink or a 
hot-metal stamp). Some are also coated with a
sealant
such as
paraffin
or silicone. Then, they are packed in
airtight
bags in quantities of 1,000 or 1,500; the air is removed from the bags and 
replaced with
sulfur dioxide
(SO2) to keep the corks
sterile.

Agglomerated cork
. Waste cork is passed through a machine that breaks it into small pieces. 
The pieces are washed and dried, and then sent through two successive 
grinders
to further reduce the particle size. After another washing and drying 
process, the particles are screened for uniform size.
. Pure agglomerated cork is formed by packing cork particles into a
mold
and covering it securely. Superheated steam (600° F or 315° C) is passed 
through the mold. Alternatively, the mold is
baked
at 500° F (260° C) for four to six hours. Either process binds the cork 
particles into a solid block by activating their natural resins.
. Compound agglomerated, or composition, cork is made by uniformly coating 
the cork granules with a thin layer of an additional adhesive agent. The 
coated
granules are pressed into a mold and slowly heated (the temperature varies, 
depending on the adhesive used). When removed from the mold and cooled, the
blocks are stacked to allow air circulation and are allowed to season.
. The agglomerated cork is cut for its intended use. For example, sheets may 
be cut from rectangular blocks. Or if a
tubular
mold was used, the resulting cork rod may be sliced into discs. A large, 
cylindrical block might by revolved against a knife blade to
shave
it into a long, continuous sheet that is rewound into a roll.

Byproducts/Waste

Cork waste generated during the manufacturing process is ground and used to 
make agglomerated cork products. Cork powder that is generated by the
grinding
process is collected and burned to help fuel the factory. Chemical 
components removed from cork during its processing can be recovered as 
useful byproducts
and include tannin (used for curing leather), hard wax (used in products 
like paraffin, paint, and soap),
resinous
gum (helps
vanish
adhere to copper and aluminum), and
phonic
acid (used to make plastics and musk-scented toiletries). 

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