Litcius/Paper detail

Hardness of Densified Wood in Relation to Changed Chemical Composition

Przemysław Mania, Miłosz Wróblewski, A. Wójciak, Edward Roszyk, Waldemar Moliński

2020Forests47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate some of the properties of densified poplar and birch wood earlier subjected to partial delignification of cell walls. The effects of delignification are presented as a comparison of the content of basic structural components in wood before and after chemical modification. In birch wood, the lignin content decreased by 20%, while that of cellulose decreased by 9.7% and that of hemicellulose decreased by 64.9%. In poplar, the lignin content decreased by 34.1%, that of cellulose decreaed by 13.5%, and that of hemicellulose decreased by 58.0%. The hardness of densified birch and poplar wood, after partial reduction of chemical components, was 147 and 111 MPa, respectively, and, compared with natural (non-densified) wood, was almost 4.5 times and 7 times higher, respectively. Poplar wood was more densified (without delignification 238% and after delignification 281%). In the case of birch wood, the density levels were 176% and 188%, respectively.

Topics & Concepts

HemicelluloseLigninCelluloseChemical compositionChemistryPulp and paper industryComposition (language)Raw materialComposite materialBotanyMaterials scienceOrganic chemistryBiologyLinguisticsPhilosophyEngineeringWood Treatment and PropertiesLignin and Wood ChemistryTree Root and Stability Studies