Abstract: | Beating, a pulp treatment widely used in the paper industry, causes disruption of cell wall layers and fibrillation. Previous studies of the effects of beating on fibre morphology have used conventional methods of specimen preparation, with all the attendant problems of shrinkage and distortion during dehydration. Low-temperature scanning electron microscopy (LTSEM) therefore seemed to offer an ideal method for examining fully hydrated wood pulp fibres. Cryofixation of pulp followed by sublimation of superficial ice, however, is shown to generate artefacts indistinguishable from structures present in the samples. Fibrillar and membranous structures were generated in LTSEM-prepared sugar solutions; their presence in pulp samples was therefore attributed to the dissolved carbohydrates inherent in pulp suspensions. Since artefact and fact are currently impossible to distinguish in LTSEM-prepared pulp samples, it seems that the technique should be applied to wet paper or pulp samples with considerable circumspection. |