4.5 Article

Effect of Microwave and Steam Treatment on the Thermo-Hygro-Plasticity of Beech Wood

Journal

BIORESOURCES
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages 8338-8352

Publisher

NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIV DEPT WOOD & PAPER SCI
DOI: 10.15376/biores.16.4.8338-8352

Keywords

Wood plasticization; Microwave treatment; Steam treatment; Bending strength; Bending stiffness; Deflection

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The study compared the effects of microwave and steam treatment on the immediate and permanent properties of wood, finding that microwave treatment increased wood plasticity similarly to steam treatment without causing permanent damage to wood structure. This suggests that microwave treatment is an efficient alternative to steaming for plasticizing moist wood.
The effects of microwave and steam treatment were analyzed relative to the immediate (thermo-hygro-plasticity) and post-assessed (permanent changes) properties of wood. The study was conducted using European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) standard and 1.5 times up-scaled (only for microwave-heated and reference samples) bending specimens tested in a static three-point loading mode. The specimens were plasticized by heat and moisture (1) separately and (2) simultaneously by heating moist specimens using (i) various microwave regimes in continuous mode, and (ii) heated saturated steam in discontinuous mode. Oven-dried specimens tested at 20 degrees C served as references. The thermo-hygro-plasticity was studied immediately after treatment, whereas the permanent changes were assessed after oven-drying of plasticized specimens to 0% moisture content. Permanent structural changes were analyzed using scanning electron microscopy. Microwave treatment increased the plasticity of wood (decreasing the modulus of elasticity by 70%) comparably to steam treatment, when the output moisture content was 30% or higher. A similar degree of plasticity was found in up-scaled specimens heated by microwaves. Further analyses confirmed that microwave treatment did not cause any permanent damage to wood structure or reduce mechanical performance. The results showed that microwave treatment is an efficient alternative to steaming when plasticizing moist wood.

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