BioResources (Feb 2012)

DENSIFICATION OF WOOD VENEERS COMBINED WITH OIL-HEAT TREATMENT. PART III: CELL WALL MECHANICAL PROPERTIES DETERMINED BY NANOINDENTATION

  • Cecillia Bustos Avila,,
  • William Gacitúa Escobar,,
  • Alain Cloutier,,
  • Chang-Hua Fang,,
  • Paulina Valenzuela Carrasco

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
pp. 1525 – 1532

Abstract

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Compression under the effect of heat and steam, also called thermo-hygromechanical (THM) densification, can increase wood density and therefore improve its strength, stiffness, and hardness. Oil-heat treatment (OHT) is also known to reduce wood’s hygroscopicity and improve dimensional stability. A combination of both treatments can therefore produce wood with improved mechanical properties and dimensional stability. The objective of this project was to determine cell wall mechanical properties of THM-densified and OHT wood. Trembling aspen veneers were densified by a THM process and subsequently treated in canola oil at 200 and 220°C. Nanoindentations were performed in earlywood cell walls. The results show that cell wall longitudinal modulus of elasticity increased significantly from 13.5 GPa for the control to a maximum of 18.2 GPa for THM densified wood with or without OHT. Cell wall hardness increased from 0.27 GPa to a maximum of 0.43 GPa. Both THM densification and OHT significantly increased cell wall hardness. Therefore, the increase in mechanical properties of THM-densified and OHT wood can be due to an increase in wood density resulting from a reduction in porosity but also to an increase in the mechanical properties of the cell wall.

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