4.5 Article

Do Novel Wooden Composites Provide an Environmentally Favorable Alternative for Panel-type Furniture?

Journal

BIORESOURCES
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages 2740-2758

Publisher

NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIV DEPT WOOD & PAPER SCI
DOI: 10.15376/biores.14.2.2740-2758

Keywords

Wooden furniture; HMAL/WF composites (HWC); Medium-density fiberboard (MDF); Life cycle assessment (LCA); Sustainability

Funding

  1. Special Fund for Forest Scientific Research in the Public Welfare [201504501-1]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31801313]
  3. University Nursing Program for Young Scholars with Creative Talents in Heilongjiang Province [UNPYSCT-2018085]
  4. Open Foundation of the Heilongjiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Environmental Microbiology and Recycling of Argo-Waste in Cold Region [201708]
  5. Doctor Initial Foundation of Heilongjiang Bayi Agricultural University [XYB 2015-10]

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The environmental performance was assessed for a wardrobe made from hybrid modified ammonium lignosulfonate/wood fiber composites (HWC). The HWC wardrobe system involved four subsystems, namely the raw materials supply, energy consumption, wardrobe manufacturing, and transportation. A comparative life cycle assessment of a wardrobe built from conventional medium-density fiberboard with three primary damage categories was also performed. The results suggested that the HWC composites were a more sustainable material compared with conventional boards. The raw materials supply and energy consumption influenced the three primary damage categories. Climate change on human health, particulate matter formation, fossil depletion, and human toxicity had a dominant contribution to the overall environmental impact. Also, a sensitivity analysis was performed with a focus on using wood waste as a raw material and on the different conditions for the modification of lignosulfonate for manufacturing HWC. The results indicated that the use of wood waste and an appropriate amount of unmodified lignosulfonate as a binder aids in efficient HWC production for wardrobes. These results can help to improve HWC wardrobe technology and in choosing the appropriate wardrobe system.

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