4.2 Article

Mechanical and Physical Properties of Thermally Modified Plywood and Oriented Strand Board Panels

Journal

FOREST PRODUCTS JOURNAL
Volume 64, Issue 7-8, Pages 281-289

Publisher

FOREST PRODUCTS SOC
DOI: 10.13073/FPJ-D-14-00037

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Partnerships for Innovation Building Innovation Capacity (PFI: BIC) subprogram [1237798]
  2. Directorate For Engineering [1237798] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  3. Div Of Industrial Innovation & Partnersh [1237798] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Thermal modification can increase resistance to biological degradation, reduce equilibrium moisture content, and improve the dimensional stability of solid wood. In this study, oriented strand board (OSB) and two types of plywood were thermally modified as a posttreatment at 140 degrees C, 150 degrees C, 160 degrees C, 170 degrees C, and 180 degrees C. Plywood moduli of rupture (MOR) and elasticity (MOE) decreased up to 54 and 22 percent, respectively, at the 180 degrees C treatment, while OSB MOR and MOE decreased up to 25 and 4.3 percent, respectively. Internal bond strength of plywood decreased with increasing temperature, while OSB experienced minimal change. Screw-holding strength of all panels was more adversely affected by increasing temperatures than nail-holding strength, with OSB experiencing 17 and 27 percent maximum reductions in nail-and screw-holding strengths, respectively. Thickness swell performance of all panels improved with increasing temperature, with plywood exhibiting 41 and 77 percent improvements at the 160 degrees C and 180 degrees C treatments, respectively. Mass increase (when subjected to a water soak) of OSB decreased 12 percent at the 150 degrees C treatment, after which it increased. These results suggest that thermal modification posttreatments can improve the thickness swell and water absorption performance of plywood and OSB panels. However, some mechanical properties decreased significantly at treatment temperatures exceeding 160 degrees C. The results provide a technical baseline that may help advance thermal modification technology from primarily solid-wood-only applications toward new, high-volume engineered wood markets. With further research, it may be possible to optimize the treatment technique(s) to ensure that the panels retain sufficient mechanical strength for the desired end-use applications.

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