Generally, it is the chemical breakdown of compounds within paper that leads to the production of ‘old book smell’. Paper contains, amongst other chemicals, cellulose, and smaller amounts of lignin. Both of these originate from the trees the paper is made from; finer papers will contain less lignin than, for example, newsprint. In trees, lignin helps bind cellulose fibres together, keeping the wood stiff; it’s also responsible for paper yellowing with age, as oxidation reactions cause it to break down into acids, which then help break down cellulose.
via What Causes the Smell of New & Old Books? | Compound Interest.
Similar:
How do I cite a tweet in MLA Style?
According to the Modern Language Associa...
Academia
Yes, I spent the last hour designing this brutalist pen holder for a virtual production of...
Aesthetics
Family Business (#StarTrek #DS9 Rewatch, Season 3, Episode 23) Quark feuds with his mother...
Rewatching ST:DS9 The opening acts re...
Amusing
The #Blender3D #eevee denoising filter gives off a pretty amazing Caldecott prize-winning ...
The filter won't replace real hand-drawn...
Aesthetics
If You Check the Source of an Inspirational Prayer You Shared on Social Media, You Might B...
I needed this prayer yesterday. I checke...
Amusing
Children of Eden (Stage Right, April 2014)
My wife and I in Biblical costumes for C...
Culture



Karissa Kilgore liked this on Facebook.
RT @DennisJerz: What Causes the Smell of New & Old Books? http://t.co/c6BQbLlDVH