4.6 Article

Wood-water interactions of thermally modified, acetylated and melamine formaldehyde resin impregnated beech wood

Journal

HOLZFORSCHUNG
Volume 76, Issue 5, Pages 437-450

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/hf-2021-0164

Keywords

acetylation; dimensional stability; melamine formaldehyde (MF) resin; sorption isotherm; thermal modification; wood modification

Funding

  1. Czech Science Foundation (GACR) [19-25171Y]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The wood-water interactions of modified beech wood were studied, and the results showed that the extent of interaction depended on the thermal modification temperature and type of chemical modification. Thermally modified wood had lower water vapour absorption, with more severe treatments resulting in greater reduction. Acetylation had the greatest impact on water vapour absorption and dimensional stability. Modified wood also exhibited slower and gradual swelling compared to the reference specimens.
The wood-water interactions of modified beech wood (Fagus sylvatica L.) were studied. Specimens were thermally modified at 180 (TM1), 200 (TM2) and 220 degrees C (TM3), acetylated (Acet), and melamine formaldehyde (MF) resin (Mel) modified. Afterwards, the water vapour characteristics, i.e. water vapour sorption isotherms, equilibrium moisture content (EMC), dimensional stability of specimens conditioned at 30, 65 and 90% RH and liquid water characteristics, i.e. water absorption, maximum moisture content (MC), leachability and swelling kinetics, were determined and the results compared with reference (Ref) specimens. From the results, it is evident that the scale of wood-water interactions was highly dependent on the thermal modification temperature and type of chemical modification. The water vapour isotherms of thermally modified wood decreased, whereas more severe treatment exhibited more distinct reduction. The EMC values of the Mel and TM1 specimens decreased only at high RH, whereas the most significant decrease, within the whole range of observation, was found in the Acet group. The maximum MC reduction was achieved by acetylation. As a consequence of swelling reduction, dimensional stability expressed as anti-swelling efficiency (ASE) was considerably improved. A relatively high initial linear-phase swelling rate was found for the Ref specimens, whereas modified wood exhibited comparatively slow and gradual swelling.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available