Journal
HOLZFORSCHUNG
Volume 56, Issue 4, Pages 348-354Publisher
WALTER DE GRUYTER & CO
DOI: 10.1515/HF.2002.055
Keywords
birch; discolouration; drying; environmental factors; wood location in trunk
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Birch wood discolours during artificial drying, which is it considerable problem or the use of birch as raw material in the mechanical wood industry. In this investigation sample boards of Betula pendula were sawn to the dimensions used as raw material for parquet billets. The variables studied were those that may affect wood discolouration: growing, site, telling date, length of the storage period for logs and location of the wood in the trunk. Discoloration of birch wood was studied in conventional and vacuum drying processes. The wood layer of about 2-5 mm under the yellow surface of conventionally dried boards remained light-coloured, while the inner wood of the boards became discoloured. During vacuum drying, however, the inner wood of sample boards clearly became discoloured. The radial location of the wood in the trunk affected the colour of dried wood more than the longitudinal location did. To keep the colour of dry wood its light its possible, it may he best to fell birch in winter and store the wood for several weeks before conventional drying. On the other hand. the lightest Coloured wood obtained during vacuum drying was from autumn-felled five weeks stored birches. which may indicate differences in the process of discoloration in these two drying methods.
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