4.8 Article

An Energy-Efficient, Wood-Derived Structural Material Enabled by Pore Structure Engineering towards Building Efficiency

Journal

SMALL METHODS
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smtd.201900747

Keywords

building efficiency; energy efficiency; lightweight; structural materials; wood-derived materials

Funding

  1. Maryland Nanocenter, its Surface Analysis Center
  2. AIMLab

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The development of high-performance structural materials for high-rise building applications is critical in achieving the energy conservation goal mandated by the Department of Energy (DOE). However, there is usually a trade-off between the mechanical strength and thermal insulation properties for these materials. Here, the optimization is demonstrated of natural wood to simultaneously improve the mechanical properties and thermal insulation for energy efficient high-rise wood buildings. The improved wood material (strong white wood) features a complete delignification followed by a partial densification process (pore structure control), which enables substantially enhanced mechanical properties (approximate to 3.4x in tensile strength, approximate to 3.2x in toughness) and reduced thermal conductivity (approximate to 44% decrease in the transverse direction). The complete delignification process removes all lignin and partial hemicellulose from the cell walls of the wood structure, leading to an all-cellulose microstructure with numerous aligned cellulose nanofibers. The partial densification optimizes the porosity of the delignified cellulose scaffold while enhancing the effectiveness of hydrogen bonding among aligned cellulose nanofibers. The simultaneously improved mechanical and thermal insulation properties of the wood material render it highly desirable for a wide range of modern engineering applications, especially as an energy-efficient, strong, lightweight, environmentally-benign, scalable, and low-cost building material.

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