Research Library

open-access-imgOpen AccessShrinkage of poplar and radiata pine wood after treatment with sodium silicate and sodium hydroxide
Author(s)
Nguyen Thi Tham,
Tran Cong Chi,
Khanh Nguyen Thi Vinh,
Nguyen Trong Kien,
Xiao Zefang,
Xie Yanjun
Publication year2024
Publication title
holzforschung
Resource typeJournals
PublisherDe Gruyter
Chemical modification is an efficient strategy for improving wood quality; however, for some fast-grown wood species unwanted shrinkage occur upon treatment with alkaline solution. This study was devised to reveal the shrinkage behavior of poplar and radiata pine woods treated with 5, 10, 15 and 20 % alkaline sodium silicate (SS) solutions. Wood treated with sodium hydroxide (SH) solution adjusting to the same pH as the specific SS solution was used as a reference sample. The weight loss, chemical components analysis, and confocal microscopy revealed that treatments with SS caused considerable reductions in hemicellulose and acid-insoluble lignin (AIL) of poplar wood up to 51 % and 21 %, respectively. In contrast, such reductions of the SS-treated radiata pine wood were only 13 % and 2 %, respectively. Consequently, shrinkage of poplar wood in the tangential- and radial-directions reached up to 22 % and 11 % respectively. However, such shrinkage for radiata pine was less than 2 % in either direction. The crystallinity index of poplar and radiata pine woods after treatment increased up to 35.3 % and 4.8 %, respectively, attributable to removal of the amorphous fraction. The scanning electron microscopy displayed that treatments had minor effect on the cell structure of radiata pine, but brought about significant collapse of poplar cells. The above results show that radiata pine is more chemically stable to alkaline treatment than poplar.
Keyword(s)cell wall component, degradation, poplar and radiata pine, sodium hydroxide, sodium silicate, shrinkage
Language(s)English
SCImago Journal Rank0.518
H-Index75
eISSN1437-434X
pISSN0018-3830
DOI10.1515/hf-2023-0097

Seeing content that should not be on Zendy? Contact us.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here