BioResources (Sep 2024)

Adequacy of Larch Wood Treated with Wood Tar and Wood Vinegar as Erosion Control Wooden-Dam Materials

  • Se-Hwi Park,
  • Byantara Darsan Purusatama,
  • Yong-Rae Kim,
  • Jae-Hyuk Jang,
  • Won-Joong Hwang,
  • Kun-Woo Chun,
  • Jong-Ho Kim,
  • Nam-Hun Kim

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 4
pp. 7946 – 7962

Abstract

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The durability of small-diameter larch wood was studied with respect to its treatments with wood tar and wood vinegar in three environments—underground, underwater, and outdoors—for 53 months. This study involved assessing wood cell wall deterioration using optical microscopy, X-ray computed tomography imaging, and X-ray diffraction, along with evaluating various physical and mechanical properties using Korean standards. Severe deterioration was observed in vinegar-treated sapwood after being buried underground. Collapsed cells were often found in untreated and wood vinegar-treated wood buried underground. Noticeable decreases in the physical and mechanical properties were observed in the sapwood of wood vinegar-treated wood buried underground. The wood tar-treated wood buried underground remained relatively intact with minimal changes in its physical properties. No significant degradation was observed in the wood discs submerged in water, and there was no difference in density, shrinkage, hardness, and shear strength between the untreated and preserved wood submerged in water. Under outdoor conditions, wood vinegar-treated wood showed less degradation of the wood discs than untreated and wood tar-treated wood. In conclusion, wood tar enhanced the durability of the wood when it was buried in soil, whereas the wood vinegar treatment provides an advantage when exposed to outdoor conditions.

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