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Bond quality of soy‐based phenolic adhesives in southern pine plywood
Author(s) -
Yang In,
Kuo Monlin,
Myers Deland J.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of the american oil chemists' society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.512
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1558-9331
pISSN - 0003-021X
DOI - 10.1007/s11746-006-1198-7
Subject(s) - soy flour , adhesive , glue , extender , soy milk , formaldehyde , materials science , soy bean , bond strength , food science , pulp and paper industry , composite material , chemistry , organic chemistry , polyurethane , layer (electronics) , engineering
Increased demand for wood adhesives, environmental concerns, and the uncertainty of continuing availability of petrochemicals have led to recent attention on protein‐based adhesives. This study was conducted to investigate the glue bond qualities of soy‐based phenolic adhesive resins for southern pine plywood. Two types of soy‐based resins were formulated and tested. The first was made by cross‐linking soy flour with phenol‐formaldehyde (pf) resins at neutral pH. The second type was obtained by cross‐linking soy flour hydrolyzates with pf resin under alkaline conditions. Plywood bonded with the neutral phenolic soy resins containing 70% soy flour and 30% 1.6 g/cm 2 pf without the use of extenders and fillers compared favorably with the traditional southern pine pf glue mixes. Plywood bonded with alkaline phenolic soy resins, containing 40 or 50% 0.5 g/cm 2 PF with the addition of extender (19% corn‐cob powder), provided better adhesive glue bond properties than traditional southern pine pf glue mixes. These results suggest that soy‐based phenolic adhesive resins have potential for the production of exterior southern pine plywood.