Philip Morris
Reconstituted Tobacco Sheet A Safe Cigarette?
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- Mushinski, M.
- Metscher, B.
- Author (Organization)
- Banbury Report
- Hri, Health Research Inst,Roswell Park
- Kimberly Clark
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Document Images
Firu row: L. GaTlinkel; C. Keith. S. Baniw; D. Hoffmann.
Second row: L. Diraand, T. Eicber, E. LaVoie; F. Bock; G. Cori.
Tqir4row: B. VanDuurcn; M. Guedn, T.C. Tsa, P. Astmp.
Fourth row: E.C. Hammond; C. ScAw.rez; J. Jaffe; E. Wynder,
ae~/--C-
_
A SAFE CIGARETTE?
Edited by
GIO B. GORI
National Cancer Institute
FRED G. BOCK
Roswell Park Memorial Institute
COLD SPRING HARBOR LABORATORY
1980
csZgTSEzoz

The Banbury Editors gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Margaret Mushinski, Ilse
Hoffmann, and Bill Metscher.
Banbury Report 3
A SAFE CIGARETTE?
° 1980 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
Cover and book design by Emily Harste
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Main entry under title:
A Safe cigarette?
(Banbury report ; 3)
Proceedings of a meeting held at the Banbury Center, Cold Spring
Harbor, N.Y., Oct. 14-16, 1979.
1. Tobacco-Toxicology-Congresses. 2. Cigarette manufacture
and trade-Congresses. 3. Cigarette habit--Congresses.
4. Smoking--Congresses.
I. God, Gio B. 11. Bock, Fred G.
Ill. Series: Banbury Center. Banbury report ; 3
RA1242.-T-6S16 615.9'52379 79-47999
ISBN 0-87969-202-2
Participants
Poul Astrup, Department of Clinical Chemistry, Rigshospitalet Copen-
hagen, Denmark
Mario C. Battigelli, Division of Pulmonary Medicine, University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Sam P. Battista, Arthur D. Little, Inc.
Fred G. Bock, Roswell Park Memorial Institute, New York State De-
partment of Health
William S. Cain, John B. Pierce Foundation Laboratory, Department of
Epidemiology and Public Health and Psychology, Yale University
School of Medicine
Louis Diamond, College of Pharmacy, University of Kentucky
Theo Eicher, Bayer AG, Dormagen, West Germany
Lawrence Garfinkel, American Cancer Society
Gio B. Gori, Division of Cancer Cause and Prevention, National Cancer
Institute
Michael R. Guerin, Analytical Chemistry Division, Oak Ridge National
Laboratory
E. Cuyler Hammond, American Cancer Society
Naomi H. Harley, Institute of Environmental Medicine, New York Uni-
versity Medical Center
Dietrich Hoffmann, Division of Environmental Carcinogenesis, sis, Ameri-
can Health Foundation
Jerome H. Jaffe, Department of Biological Psychiatry, ychiatry, New York State
Psychiatric Institute
Charles H. Keith, Celanese Fibers Company
Michael Kunze, Department of Social Medicine, Institute of Hygiene,
University of Vienna, Austria
Edmond LaVoie, Division of Environmental Carcinogenesis, Ameri-
can Health Foundation
Cornelius Lynch, Enviro Control Incorporated
V
tsi9zsCzaz

204 1 M.R. Guerin
cles in cigarette smoke. As combustion yields water and the pnxfucts,o('
destructive distillation of tobacco yield water-soluble constituents, it is
difficult to conceive of a process to significantly change the solubility
characteristics of the resulting smoke particles. Increased lipophilicity
may actually be a disadvantage in that it may produce a carrier for
compounds such as 13lu (P to provide a mechanism for slow release of the
carcinogen to a small region of tissue.
6ATTtGEI-I-I: That is unless the particulate is deposited early in the course of the
airways penetration where the clearance mechanism can expel it and dispose
of it.
GUERIN: Yes.
GoRf: I asked Mike IGuerinj that question mainly to indicate some of the
problems that we do face when establishing an experimental system that tries
to mimic what happens in man. After all, we are trying to mimic what
happens in man in these tests and not necessarily just aiming at producing
some biological effect, whatever it is. I think, uw, that many complications
become clear from what he's saying here, for example, the complications
that derive from the physical properties of smoke, the dynamics of aging
and of particulate aggtegation, and the necessity of diluting the smoke
only enough to keep the particle size down and not too much so that the
dose is affected. It's an exceedingly interesting subject to those of us who
are interested in bioassay at this time.
HOFFMANN: First let me congratulate you, Mike. Certainly you have done
beautiful work in this area. There is one point though. When you add up
those cigarettes with high CO (Table 4) and the percentage they take on
the U.S. market, it's a very sizable percentage. Our best-selling filter
cigarettes are high in CO, and I think we should not downplay this point
because the more noise we continue to make, the more the CO is
decreased in these leading filter cigarettes.
s9T9TSEZOz
Reconstituted Tobacco Sheet
WILLIAM A. SELKE
Research Department, Schweitzer Division
Kimberly-Clark Corporation
Lee, Massachusetts 01238
Reconstituted tobacco, or tobacco sheet as it is sometimes called, is a paperlike
sheel material approximating the thickness of natural lamina and comprised
either wholly or principally of tobacco. Altliuugh laymen are sometimcs quite
unaware of it, reconstituted tobacco is widely used as a component of the blend
of cigarettes and as underwrap, or hinder, and sometimes as lhe outer wrapper
of cigars. Reconstitution permits lhe use of tobacco fines and the midrihti of the
leaves, which are of improper dimensions for incorporation in cigarettes. It is
of particu_ lar importance in the manufacture of cigars, since the tobacco sheet is
provided in the lorm of rolls that can be handled by automatic machinery much
more easily than irregular natural leaves.
Although the impetus for the commercial introduction of reconstituted
tobacco has been the reduction of cost, the reconstitution process also alters the
tobacco physically and chemically. Reconstituting tituting tobacco thus can play a role
in changing the nature of cigarettes to help meet such demands as lower
particulate delivery.
COMMERCIALIZATION
Although patents on reconstituting tobacco were issued in the Iast century, the
process was not used until the 1950s, first in cigars and subsequently in
cigarettes. The concept met rapid acceptance throughout the American cigarette
industry, and in 1964 it was e+timated that the production in the United States
had reached a r,He between 175 and 2(X) tuilliun Iwunds per year (Moshy
1965). Currently the use in the United States is considerably more than a
quarter ul a billion pounds per year. Thus, it represents a minor hut significant
Iraction of the American cigarette blend. Moshy (1967) attributed some of the
reduction in particufate delivery being seen in the average American cigarettes
to the use of reconstituted tobacco.
Although adoption was not as rapid as in the United States, reconstituted
tobacco is now widely used in Canada, Europe, and Japan. It is now an
205

206 / W.A. Selke
established part of modern tobacco_ technology, with additional plant capacity
being added at a rate exceeding the increase in the world consumption of
tobacco products.
PROCESSES FOR RECONSTITUTION
Dozens of' processes have been patented for reconstituting tobacco, and plants
utilizing about a dozen different processes have actually been constructed, at
least on a pilot scale. All of those processes of current interest in North
America can be put into three general classes. Two of these are related to
papermaking and the third involves the casting of a sluny.
The most widely used process, referred to here as the paper process, is the
paper process with extraction and recombination. This process is shown
schematically in Figure 1. The tobacco, usually a mixture of leaf fines,
midribs, and possibly whole leaves, is first broken up and extracted with water.
The extract, which has been separated from the insoluble residue, is concen-
trated trated by evaporation and held for subsequent use. The other stream, the
insoluble residue, is macerated further, using equipment similar to that
employed in making paper. A slurry of the resulting somewhat fibrous material
is formed into a paperlike web by draining the liquid through an endless belt of
wire screen. That endless web is dried and then impregnated with the concen-
trated extract. The resulting impregnated web is dried further tx:fore being cut
into leaflets to blend with the natural leaf strips in making cigarettes.
The process can be operated so that no additives are required, and thus the
finished product is simply a reconstitution in sheet form of the original materi-
als. It offers opportunities for alteration of the product both in its physical lorm
and in its chemical composition. These possibilities will be discussed subse-
quently.
There are several processes in use that appear superticially to be quite
different from each other, but, in principle, can all be classed as single-step
paper processes. The generalized concept is shown schematically as Figure 2.
This differs from the paper process in that the extract is not separated from an
insoluble residue, but, instead, the fibers are suspended in a solution of the
water-soluble poriion of the tobacco. The web is then formed by the papermak-
ing process, and some of this solution is dried in the resulting sheet. Considcr-
able ingenuity for avoiding loss of the extract and in handling the sticky web is
displayed in the patents (Michels and Merritt 1968; FBlock et al. 1969; Arledter
and Marek 1975).
The slurry processes constitute a third class ol processes (Fig. 3). In these,
the tobacco is divided finely and is usually mixed with a small amount ol'.
adhesive as well as additives to enhance the strength or alter the density of the
product. In some cases the adhesive is derived from portions of the tobacco
plant, producing a product without additives. The resulting slurry flows on to a
long, endless metal belt, which passes through a drying section. Ultimately the
Reconstituted Tobacco Sheet /207
1N)ULLxIIE
FRACIILIN
IIAIACCU
ExTRAC/IuN
MIACERATIUN
1
PAPERMAKING
6ASE
SMELT
1 n~PREGryA Tl ON
DRYING
RECONSTIIVIED
10lACCO
?,4lu/ E
rRAC TI ON
CONCENTRATIOi,
Figure 1
Paper prLJCes+ with txlraclion vnd recombinaliun
resulting sheet is removed from the metal belt and is either rolled or is cut into
leaflet form. An embodiment in which a very concentrated slurry is used is
sometimes called an extrusion rather than a slurry process. In other variations,
sonie dry, powdered tobacco is incorporated into the web while it is moist. In
another version, nonaqueous solvents are used instead of water, and an appro-
priate resinous binder is employed Lrs the adhesive. The principal interest in this
discussion is in the use of an aqueous slurry. These processes are all described
by Moshy (1967).
RANGE OF MODIFICATIONS
'fhe composition ol the smoke can hy influenced by altering either the physical
form of the sheet or by altering its chemical composition. The physical form, or
more specifically the density or internal porosity of the sheet, has a strong
influence on combustion and thus the amount, as well as to a lesser degree, the
composition of the smoke. The composition ol' the tobacco sheet can be
chanb' cd by removing +
pc.cll'tc fractions of the tobacco material or by additions.
99Z9T6EZOZ

2061, W.A. Seiko
1C0ACCO
TOBACCO
SNEEI
Figure 2
Single-step paper process
iECYCLE
L I OUI D
In the paper process, the density can be controlled to some degree by
adjustment of the mechanical elements and, more profoundly, by the addition
of debonding and bulking fibers (Flaxman et al. 1971). In a variation ol' the
sluny process, surface-active agents are added and the slurry is whipped into a
foam that is then cast and dried (Halter et al. 1972). This results in a sheet of'
extremely low density.
Elimination of some specific constituents of the tobacco is possible with
any of these processes. The paper process is particularly advantageous for
selective removal, since chemical processes or physical operations can be
performed on either the liquid stream of the extract or on the insoluble residue,
free of the extract (Mattina and Selke 1975). In any of these processes,
additions can be made either of soluble materials or of tinely divided insoluble
materials. Introduction can be more homogeneous than when such materials are
added to leaf tobacco.
REDUCTION OF PARTICULATE DELIVERY
Even without deliberate modification, reconstituted tobacco generally produces
lower particulate delivery in the smoke than does natural leaf. In a test program
of the Forshungs Institut per Cigarettenindustrie, cigarettes of sheet made by
five different processes (or, by the definitions used in this paper, by one
example of the paper process and four slurry processes) were compared with
cigarettes made from natural tobacco blend (Dontenwill et al. 1972). The
average delivery from those made of reconstituted tobacco was 71% of that of'
the natural control, with the highest delivery being only 84% of that of the leaf
tobacco. The sheet made by the paper process had a particulate delivery of 51°k
of that of the control cigarette. In the first test series of the National Cancer
Reconstituted Tobacco SlEeet / 209
IINAI ~U
UILY I.RINU1Nl,
4
MIxINL
SLllbbl
CASTING ON
bELf
DNYING
-
1l'AAClC1
SNE! 1
Figure 3
Slurry process
wATEN Oi S(HVE1v~
PLI15 ADL/ESIVE
Institute (Guri 1976), the paper process sheet without additives yielded 18.4 mg
total particulate matter in comparison with the standard leaf blend, which
yielded 30.2 mg.
A correlation of the particulate delivery of cigarettes with the bulkiness of
the sheet was reported by Mattina and Selke (1975). Since a sheet of reconsti-
tuted tobacco has a rather irregular surface, Flaxman et al. (1971) introduced a
measurement of' pore fraction, determined by measuring the bouyancy of' the
sheet immersed in mercury as a precise and relevant indicator of the physical
structure. The particulate delivery of sheet made by the paper process was
shown to have an inverse linear relationship to this variable, being reduced 50%
when the pore fraction was increased from 35°h to 6217,.
It should be pointed out that the manipulation of the density of reconsti-
tuted tobacco has effects analogous to thuse of the expansion of leaf tobacco by
any of several patented processes described by Halter and Ito (1978) and
Thompson (1979). In these processes, the cells of the leaf tobacco, which are
normally collapsed in drying, are either maintained open through freeze-drying
or are reopened by expansion with volatile solvent. Thompson reporis that the
smoke delivery of the cigarettes is reduced directly as the weight of tobacco is
reduced and that a 7tY, reduction in cigarette weight is achieved by expanding
only I(Yti in the tobacco blend. Thus, expansion of leaf tobacco can effect a
strong inlluence on smoke yields.
tIGgT3T6EZOZ

2101 W.A. Setke
DILUTION OF TOBACCO
Sheet of extremely low density representti, in a sense, dilution uf thc .olid
tobacco mass with air. Hence, a somewhat analogous approach ts reducing the
weight of combustible tobacco in the sheet by incorporation of a substantial
fraction of inconlbustible mineral.
Selke (1966) proposed a variation ol" the paper process in which incont-
bustible material was substituted for most or all ot' the fibrous portion of the
tobaceo, but all of the soluble portion was used. While extremely low particu-
late deliveries were demonstrated, a cigarette composed entirely of such a sheet
produced an annoying amount of ash, which would be a problem to the smoker.
G.B. Gori (pers. comm.) has pointed out the potential of' reducing not
only the particulate delivery, hut, indeed, all components ol' the smoke by
substantial dilution of the tobacco. The results of the fourth test series of' the
National Cancer Institute (in prep.) showed examples produced by both the
slurry process and the paper process utilizing this concept.
An experimental diluted, or extended, tobacco sheet is described in Table
I (W.A. Selke, unpuhl. results). Condensate and nicotine deliveries were more
reduced relative to those of the starting tobacco than was the tobacco content of
the cigarette, because the combustion was altered by the physical structure of
the sheet. The delivery of isoprene, influenced in part by the concentration of
waxes in the tobacco, was reduced to an especially high degree. The ash
produced by cigarettes made entirely ot' this sheet appeared to be at the upper
limit of what could be accepted, although much higher levels of mineral filler
could be used it' the sheet is blended with natural leal' in the cigarette. The
amount of acceptable ash is also not clearly definable, but the maximum is
probably in the range of 300-400 mg.
Apart from the limitation of the amount unt ot' ash that could be tolerated by
the smoker, there is another limitation in the minimum number of' putl"s a
cigarette can provide and still be acceptable to the smoker. Reductions of more
than 25°h) from the puffs provided by current commercial cigarettes would be
conspicuous. While the thennochemical requirements are difficult to calculate,
it appears from a number of experimental examples that about 400 mg of'
organic material must be provided for the cigarette to bum for the requisite
time. These two figures, ash and fuel, set the limits on the extent to which
tobacco can be diluted and still produce satisfactory cigarettes, whether that
dilution be by mineral matter or, in the case of a bulky sheet, by air. Without
exceeding these limits, extended sheet can be used to effect substantial reduc-
tions in smoke delivery.
MODIFICATION OF SMOKE BY REMOVAL OF SPECIFIC CONSTITUENTS
One class of constituents that has been removed experimentally is volatile
bases. In the paper process, alkaloids can be removed by alkaline distillation of
the extract. Sheet produced in this way was evaluated in the fourth series of the
esT9TSEZOz
f:
Reconstituted Tobacco Sheet / 211
Table 1
Extended Tobacco Sheet
Initial tobacco Extended tobacco sheet
C'ompu.ition ('7 )
Tobacco
I(x)
62
Cellulu.re fiber 12
Mineral tiller - 26
Smukc d:no
Dry condensate (mg/cigt)
27
11
Nicuune /mg/cigt) 1.7 0.9
I+uprenc l Pg/putt ) 90 18
Cumparuun witlt Icat Iobaccu blend trum the paper pruxas sherl was made.
National Cancer Institute (in prep.), as was the selective removal of waxes.
Recent patents (Mattina and Sclke 1974; Kite et al. 1978) show processes
for the removal of potassium nitrate, a constituent present in burley tobacco,
particularly in the midribs (commonly referred to as stems). Also, Martina and
Selke (1975) pproposed the removal ot'the lead-210 and polonium-210.
MODIFICATION BY INCORPORATION OF ADDITIVES
Apart from the use of' inert additives to dilute and leaven the sheet is the
possibility of adding components that alter the sheet composition. Spears
(1974) showed that adding ammonium phosphate reduced the generation of
carbonyl compounds and other I;as-phase constituents. Mattina and Selke
(1975) showed that the addition of urea reduced carbonyl generation. The use
of additives to enhance flavor is, of course, of active interest.
NEW PROCESSES INVOLVING SHEET-FORMING
In current commercial practice, fines and midribs, which might otherwise be
discarded, are the principal material reconstituted. There is growing interest in
using the reconstitution process not simply for the processing of these wastes,
but instead as an integral step between the tobacco field and the cigarette-
making machine. The traditional agricultural pr-ocedurzs of' raising tobacco are
extremely labor-intensive; for example, Virginia leaves are picked one-by-one
and tied in bunches for flue-curing. Although mechanical picking machines and
bulk=curing baskets are obviating son)e of this laborious work on more ad-
vanced farms, even greater economy could conic from handling tobacco as bulk
material, as are forage crops. Since this would result in the destruction of the
leaf' integrity, and in some cases the leaf would not be separated from the plant
stalk, it would be necessary that the tobacco be formed into a sheet so that it
can be then shredded as is natural leaf.

212/,W.A. Seiko
Therc are several active programs for thc study of harvesting thc wholc
tobacco plant in bufk. In sonie of this work, the tobacco plants are spaced at
higher density in the field than normally. This is referred to as close-grown
tobacco. Walker and Zilkey (1975) reported on the characteristics of sheet
made from whole tobacco plant and the composition of the resulting smake.
Selke (unpubl. results) reported on making sheet from tobacco plants grown
experimentally at high density in Canada. Cigarettes made from this product
produced 19 mg of dry condensate and only 0.4 mg ol' nicotine. The nicotine
content of that sheet was lower than that ol' nornwl tobacco leaf bodi because of
cultural practice in the growth of the tobacco and the incorporation uf the stalk,
which is essentially devoid of nicotine.
A more radical departure from existing technology is homogenized leaf
curing, which has been proposed by Tso (1974). In this process, the tobacco,
after harvesting, is finely divided and treated with enzymes in a moist state to
achieve the curing. Then the nutritionally desirable fraction I protein can be
separated and recovered, and the remainder of the tobacco is formed into sheet.
Selke (unpubl. results) reponed that cigarettes made of homogeniced leaf-cura:d
tobacco produced only 14 mg of dry condensate and 0.8 mg of nicotine. In the
event that higher nicotine deliveries are desired tiom a sheet of' whole plant
tobacco, tobacco strains naturally high in nicotine could be chosen to enhance
the nicotine content.
CONCLUSION
Although the introduction uf reconstituted tobacco sheet has been propelled by
the economy it provides, its use has contributed in a small but significant way
to the general reduction oP particulate matter in American cigarettes. There is
considerable potential in application ol the basic technique beyond the upgrad-
ing of unusable portions of' tobacco. This would include exploiting the possi-
bility of modifying the composition of the smoke selectively, the removal of
specific chemical precursors, the blending in of modifiers or noncombustible
extenders, as well as the control of the physical structure to intluence combur
tion. These possibilities can be achieved by only minor modification of' the
established, efficient processes now'in use. In addition, the advances being
made e in the flavoring of cigarettes can have special importance in increasing
(lie acceptability of the neutral smoke now produced by tobacco.
REFERENCES
Ariedter, H. F. and J. Marek. 1975. 11.S. l at. 3,00,054.
Block, M.S., M.D. Sidhury, and M.F. Reich. 1969. U.S. Pal. 3,467,1O<l.
Dontenwill, W., H.1. Chevalier, H.P. Harke, H.1. Klemish, U. Lafrenz, and G.
Rcckcch. 1972. Experimental studies on the tumorigenic activity of cigarette
smoke condensates on mouse skin. F'art 4. Z. Arebafrirseb 78:236.
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Gori, G.t3., ed. 1976. Toward less huCUrdous riSareues. Report No. l. The f'irst set uf
Reconstituted Tobacco Sheet / 213
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t:.l.. Wynder and 1). Hottmann) p. 47. Academic Press, New York.
Sclkc, W.A. 1966. U.S. Pat. 3,?55,7(>t).
Slkar., A.W. 1974-special. 1'ttect cif m:mulacluring un crgarctlc smukc Cumlxrsitiun.
('Olt 1::1 T:1 Urdl. 65:65.
Thumpaun. C.U. 1979. I:xpandcd Tubaccu. 'I'rlbuk. April:345.
T.u, T.C'., R. I.uwc, and S.W. Dc 1omg. 1974. Humogcniicd I,cat Tuhacco Cunng 1.
9'hcuretical basis and suntc prelmtinary results. ('(1H[?STA ,SYmpuxilun. Mon-
treux, Swili.erland.
Walker, L-.W. and B. Zilkey. Whole plant Ilue-cured tobacco and tobacco sheet
cigarette smoke condensate characteristics. In Proceedings uJ the Third World
('un/ir«wr uu Smoking and llrulth, (ed. E_.L. Wynder, D. Huf(mann, and G.B.
Gori) vol. 1, p. 57. DHEW publication number (NIH) 76-1221. Government
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69Z916=02
