Moisture Content

Moisture Content

The percentage of water contained in paper or paperboard relative to its oven-dry mass. It is a key factor affecting dimensional stability, curl/warp, flatness, strength, and runnability during printing and converting.

Formula
Moisture Content (%) = (WetMass−Oven−DryMass)÷Oven−DryMass(Wet Mass − Oven-Dry Mass) ÷ Oven-Dry Mass(WetMass−Oven−DryMass)÷Oven−DryMass × 100

Typical Range
Most packaging and printing grades are shipped at ≈5–8% moisture, but the actual value varies with climate, grade, and storage conditions.

Measurement Methods

Oven-dry (gravimetric) method: Lab reference—dry at ~105 °C to constant mass, then calculate.

Electrical moisture meters (resistance/capacitance): Fast, convenient shop-floor checks.

Conditioned equilibrium: Condition samples at 23 ± 1 °C, 50 ± 2% RH before testing for comparable results.

 

Effects

Too low: Brittle edges, cracking at folds, increased static, upward curl/warp.

Too high: Soft sheet, lower strength, wrinkling, unstable print/cut dimensions, blocking.

 

Control & Best Practices

Match incoming paper to plant humidity; acclimate rolls/sheets before use.

Store in protective wrap; avoid direct heat, drafts, and damp floors.

Maintain stable pressroom conditions (commonly ~45–55% RH, ~20–24 °C).

For shipments across climates or seasonal changes, allow adequate acclimation time prior to converting to minimize curl and dimensional drift.

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