Subject: Fax paper
Karen, Your question is a bit ambiguous: are you interested in faxes or in thermofax, which is not a facsimile transmission process but a copying process? On the off chance that you actually are interested in the latter: "Thermo-Fax is a trade name of the 3M Company for a thermographic copying process.... In this process, the sensitized material consists of a thin sheet of paper containing certain chemical compounds which, when subjected to heat of an appropriate temperature, form colored substances. When a sheet of this material is placed in contact with a document and exposed to infrared (heat) radiation, the infrared rays pass through the non-infrared absorbing sensitized material to the document, where they are absorbed by the metallic or carbon content of the text. The text is thus actually heated up to a temperature high enough to convert the chemical compounds in the sensitized layer to coloured substances to form a visible image." [Hawken, William R. _Copying Methods Manual_. LTP Publications, No. 11, Library Technology Program, American Library Association. Chicago, 1966] "Thermofax [note spelling variant -wh] is a single step, dry method of producing copies.... The material used in this process is a thin, heat-sensitive paper, which is not sensitive to normal light and can therefore be operated in any room.... To produce a copy, this paper is placed in contact with the original and exposed to infra-read light.... The white parts of the original reflect most of the heat but the black parts absorb and re-radiate the heat, which penetrates through to the heat-sensitive coating of the paper and so produces a positive copy. [Verry, citation on request] "The process was refined and later marketed in 1950 by 3M Company under the name Thermo-Fax.... The process used heat-sensitive paper. Exposure to infra-red radiation was by the reflex method. The black portions of the original reflected the heat radiation and darkened the corresponding portions of the paper in contact with the original." [Nadeau, Luis. _Encyclopedia of Printing, Photographic, and Photomechanical Processes_., 2 vols. Atelier Luis Nadeau. New Brunswick, 1989.] *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:1 Distributed: Wednesday, June 9, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-1-005 ***Received on Wednesday, 9 June, 1993