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Zibo City, Shandong Province

Have You Any Quires ?

10 PM – 6 PM

Have You Any Quires ?

The Corrugated Crush Test (CCT) is a highly specific and critical laboratory procedure designed to evaluate the compressive strength of the corrugating medium—the fluted paper layer that forms the structural core of corrugated board. Also known as the Vertical Crush Test, its primary function is to measure the edgewise crush resistance of this medium after it has been formed into flutes under controlled laboratory conditions . The test quantifies the maximum vertical load a strip of this laboratory-fluted paper can withstand before collapsing. This value, typically expressed in kilonewtons per meter (kN/m), serves as a direct and fundamental indicator of the medium’s potential contribution to the overall strength and performance of the final corrugated board .
The significance of the CCT lies in its predictive power. The structural integrity of a corrugated box, particularly its ability to resist crushing forces during stacking and transit (i.e., its stacking strength), is heavily dependent on the ability of the fluted medium to act as a series of load-bearing columns. A low CCT value in the corrugating medium is a strong predictor of reduced stacking performance in the finished box, increasing the risk of deformation and product damage . Therefore, the CCT is an indispensable quality control tool for paper mills producing corrugating medium and for corrugated board manufacturers selecting raw materials.
It is crucial to distinguish CCT from other related crush tests. While often discussed together, CCT, the Concora Medium Test (CMT), and the Edge Crush Test (ECT) measure fundamentally different properties.
This research report provides a comprehensive analysis of the CCT method. It will detail the standardized methodologies, investigate the myriad factors influencing test results—from material composition and process parameters to environmental and operational variables—and explore methodological advancements aimed at improving accuracy and efficiency. Furthermore, it will examine the critical correlation between CCT values and the performance of finished corrugated board and boxes, concluding with a summary of key findings and directions for future research.

The CCT methodology is designed to isolate and quantify the intrinsic edgewise compressive strength of the corrugating medium by simulating its formation and loading within a finished board. The procedure is governed by rigorous international standards to ensure consistency and comparability of results.
The CCT process involves three primary stages: sample preparation, laboratory fluting, and compression.
While the CCT is a specific test, its implementation is detailed in standards that must be understood in relation to similar tests, particularly the CMT. The primary standards bodies are TAPPI (Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry) and ISO (International Organization for Standardization).
The following table provides a detailed comparison of the key parameters differentiating the edgewise (CCT) and flat crush (CMT) test methodologies.
| Parameter | TAPPI T 824 / ISO 16945 (CCT) | ISO 7263 / TAPPI T 809 (CMT) | Key Differences & Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Test Orientation | Edgewise Compression (Force parallel to flutes) . | Flat Crush Compression (Force perpendicular to flutes). | This is the most fundamental difference. CCT measures column strength for stacking, while CMT measures flute rigidity for cushioning and flat crush resistance . |
| Sample Holder | A metal jig or holder that supports the fluted strip vertically to prevent premature buckling . | The fluted strip is typically affixed to a backing tape to simulate a single-faced board, then placed flat on the platen . | The apparatus is fundamentally different to accommodate the orthogonal force applications. |
| Post-Fluting Delay | ISO 16945 specifies two procedures: CCT₀ (test immediately, 20-25s after fluting) and CCT₃₀ (test after 30-35 min of conditioning) . | ISO 7263 also specifies testing immediately (15-25s) or after conditioning (30-35 min) . | This is a critical variable. The heat from fluting drives off moisture, temporarily increasing stiffness. Both standards acknowledge this, with immediate testing yielding significantly higher results. |
| Support Method | TAPPI standards for CCT include T 824 (flexible beam support) and T 843 (rigid support), which can yield different results . | A rigid platen is used for the flat crush test. | The type of support in the compression tester can influence the measured peak load and failure mode. |
| Reporting Units | kilonewtons per meter (kN/m) . | Newtons (N) . | The units reflect the test’s nature: CCT is a force per unit length of the edge, while CMT is a peak force over a defined area. |
The choice between CCT and CMT depends entirely on the performance characteristic being investigated.
In recent years, the Short Span Compression Test (SCT), defined by ISO 9895 and TAPPI T 826, has gained prominence as a strong predictor of ECT. The SCT measures the in-plane compressive strength of the paper over a very short span (0.7 mm), which minimizes the influence of specimen buckling. Some industry experts argue that SCT may correlate better with final board performance than CCT because it measures the “pure” compressive strength of the paper fibers without the confounding effects of heating and flute formation inherent in the CCT/CMT procedures.
The CCT value is not an absolute property but is highly dependent on both the intrinsic characteristics of the corrugating medium and the precise parameters of the laboratory fluting process. Understanding these influences is paramount for accurate material evaluation and quality control.
The fiber composition, or furnish, is the primary determinant of the medium’s mechanical properties.
The laboratory fluting process itself introduces critical variables that can significantly alter the measured CCT value. The test is highly sensitive to deviations from standard procedure, making strict process control essential.
Beyond the material and fluting process, the ambient environment and the operational execution of the final compression stage are critical sources of variability that can affect the accuracy and reproducibility of CCT measurements.
Moisture is the most significant environmental factor influencing the compressive strength of all paper-based materials.
The final step of applying the compressive load is subject to operational variables that can introduce significant measurement uncertainty if not properly controlled.
These operational factors highlight that the CCT measures the performance of a material-instrument system. A formal measurement uncertainty budget is required to properly account for these potential errors, quantifying the sensitivity of the CCT result to deviations in each parameter to understand the true confidence interval of a given measurement .
While CCT remains a cornerstone of medium testing, the industry is actively exploring advanced computational and non-destructive methods to enhance or supplement it. These advancements aim to provide deeper insights, improve predictive accuracy, and move towards real-time, in-line quality control.
Finite Element Analysis (FEA) has emerged as a powerful tool for simulating the structural behavior of corrugated materials under CCT loading, offering insights that are difficult to obtain through physical testing alone.
The ultimate goal for process control is to move from discrete, destructive lab tests to continuous, non-destructive, in-line measurements. Several NDT technologies show promise for predicting the properties related to CCT in real-time.
The future of medium evaluation likely involves a synergistic approach, integrating data from multiple NDT sensors (THz, ultrasonic, laser) into a sophisticated machine learning model. Such a system could provide a continuous, real-time prediction of compressive strength properties, relegating the traditional CCT to a role of periodic calibration and auditing rather than routine quality control.
The primary value of the Corrugated Crush Test (CCT) is not as a standalone metric but as a foundational input for predicting the performance of the final, assembled corrugated board and, ultimately, the stacking strength of a finished box. The correlation between the strength of the individual components (liner and medium) and the composite board is the cornerstone of modern packaging design and quality assurance.
The Edge Crush Test (ECT) of a combined board is the single most important predictor of a box’s final compression strength (BCT). Therefore, developing accurate models to predict ECT from component properties has been a major focus of the industry. While CCT is the direct test for the fluted medium’s contribution, the Short-span Compressive Test (SCT) of the liners and medium is now more commonly used in modern predictive formulas due to its higher accuracy and reproducibility .
A significant advancement over older empirical rules like the McKee formula is the Maltenfort equation, which provides a more robust, component-based model for predicting ECT. Research has refined this model by deriving specific linear regression constants based on extensive plant data. For a single-wall board, the models are:
These models have demonstrated extremely high coefficients of determination (R² > 0.96), confirming a strong, predictable conversion of paper strength to board strength .
Crucially, multiple studies have confirmed that using SCT data yields significantly more accurate ECT predictions than using RCT data. In one comparative study, the ECT predicted from SCT component data differed from the measured ECT by only 2-3%. In contrast, the prediction error using RCT data was as high as 13-21% . This large discrepancy is attributed to the inherent flaw in the RCT method, where the specimen is prone to buckling failure, which does not represent the true in-plane compressive strength of the paper. This leads to an artificially inflated component strength value and, consequently, an over-prediction of the final ECT . This evidence strongly supports the industry’s shift towards SCT as the preferred input for predictive models. The CCT, while conceptually sound, is subject to the process variabilities of lab fluting, whereas SCT provides a more “pure” measure of the material’s intrinsic compressive potential.
The final step in performance prediction is estimating the top-to-bottom compression strength of the finished box (BCT). The most widely known method for this is the McKee formula, which uses the predicted or measured ECT of the board and the board’s caliper (thickness) to estimate BCT.
$$ BCT = 5.87 \times ECT \times \sqrt{h \times Z} $$
Where $h$ is the board caliper and $Z$ is the box perimeter.
Thus, a clear and critical lineage exists: the compressive strength of the corrugating medium, whether measured by CCT or more commonly by SCT, is a direct input into the Maltenfort equation to predict the board’s ECT. This ECT value is then a primary input into the McKee formula to predict the final BCT of the box. This hierarchical relationship underscores the immense importance of accurately characterizing the corrugating medium’s strength, as any error or variability at this foundational level will be propagated and potentially magnified in the final performance predictions for the entire package. Advanced packaging design software now integrates these models, allowing for the simulation of box performance under various climatic conditions based on the fundamental properties of the raw materials .
The Corrugated Crush Test (CCT) is a foundational and indispensable method for quantifying the edgewise compressive strength of corrugating medium, a critical parameter that directly influences the stacking performance of finished corrugated boxes. This report has established that while the CCT principle is straightforward, its results are highly sensitive to a wide array of variables. The accuracy and reproducibility of the test depend critically on the intrinsic material properties of the furnish, strict control over laboratory fluting parameters like temperature and pressure, rigorous adherence to environmental conditioning protocols to manage moisture content, and precise operational execution of the final compression phase to avoid errors from misalignment or improper loading rates.
The practical utility of CCT is realized through its integration into predictive models, such as the Maltenfort equation, which correlate component properties with the Edge Crush Test (ECT) of the combined board. Research has conclusively shown that models based on the Short-span Compressive Test (SCT) offer superior accuracy over those based on the Ring Crush Test (RCT), solidifying SCT’s role as a key predictor of board performance. This entire framework highlights a clear, quantitative link from raw material quality to final package integrity.
Looking forward, the field is moving towards more sophisticated and efficient evaluation techniques. The rise of computational modeling with Finite Element Analysis (FEA) and the development of in-line Non-Destructive Testing (NDT) technologies—including terahertz imaging, ultrasonic velocity measurement, and laser profilometry—signal a paradigm shift. These advancements promise a future of real-time, data-driven quality control, potentially evolving the role of CCT from a routine test to a higher-level auditing and calibration tool.
To further refine the method and expand its utility, the following areas for future research are proposed:
Bridging Lab and Field Performance: Further research is required to understand the fatigue, creep, and mechanosorptive behavior of corrugated board under dynamic loading and cyclic environmental conditions. This work is essential for closing the gap between standardized, static laboratory tests like CCT/ECT and the actual, complex stress-life of a package in the distribution environment.
Quantitative Sensitivity Analysis: A formal Designed Experiment (DOE) should be conducted to create a response surface model that quantitatively maps the sensitivity of CCT results to systematic deviations in fluter roll temperature and nip pressure. This would allow for a better understanding of inter-laboratory variability and the establishment of more robust process control limits.
Advanced Failure Mechanics Investigation: The use of high-speed imaging and Digital Image Correlation (DIC) during CCT compression would provide invaluable full-field strain data. This would allow for a detailed investigation into the initiation and propagation of failure, distinguishing between pure compressive failure and various buckling modes under different loading conditions.
Integrated Multi-Physics Modeling: Development of advanced FEA models that couple the thermo-mechanical effects of the fluting process with the hygro-mechanical effects of moisture content and cyclic humidity. Such models would provide a more holistic and accurate simulation of CCT and its relationship to real-world performance.
Fusion of NDT and Machine Learning: A focused effort is needed to integrate data from multiple in-line NDT sensors (e.g., THz, ultrasonic, laser) and use machine learning algorithms to build a robust, real-time predictive model for compressive strength. This represents the most promising path toward replacing discrete, destructive testing with continuous, predictive process control.
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