4.7 Article

Use of wood elemental composition to predict heat treatment intensity and decay resistance of different softwood and hardwood species

Journal

POLYMER DEGRADATION AND STABILITY
Volume 95, Issue 12, Pages 2255-2259

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.polymdegradstab.2010.09.010

Keywords

Elemental composition; Decay; Durability; Heat treatment; Thermo-degradation; Wood

Funding

  1. CPER

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Heat treatment is an attractive alternative to improve decay resistance of low natural durability wood species. Decay resistance is strongly correlated to thermal degradations of wood cell wall components. Some recent studies proposed the use of wood elemental composition as a valuable marker to predict final properties of the material. These results, initially obtained with pine, have been extended to different softwood and hardwood species to check validity of the method using equipment specially designed to measure mass losses during thermal treatment. Heat treatment was performed on two softwood species (pine and silver fir) and three hardwood species (poplar, beech and ash) at 230 degrees C under nitrogen for different times to reach mass losses of 5, 10 and 15%. Heat-treated specimens were exposed to fungal decay using the brown rot fungus Poria placenta and the weight losses due to fungal degradation determined as well as initial wood elemental composition. Correlations between weight losses recorded after fungal exposure and elemental composition indicated that carbon content and O/C ratio can be used to predict wood durability conferred by heat treatment. Moreover, it was observed that for given curing conditions thermo-degradation patterns differed considerably according to the wood species. The sole analysis of wood physical properties like its density, thermal conductivity and diffusivity cannot allow explaining the observed differences, which should also depend on thermally activated chemical processes depending on wood chemical composition. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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