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A comparative study of preservative treatment of selected woods from Ghana and the United States

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title A comparative study of preservative treatment of selected woods from Ghana and the United States
Names Oteng-Amoako, Andrews (creator)
Krahmer, Robert L. (advisor)
Graham, Robert D. (advisor)
Date Issued 1976-04-02 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1976
Abstract The response of three hardwoods from Ghana and a hardwood and
three softwoods from the United States to liquid and gas-phase impregnation
was investigated. Impregnation with liquids included a sink-float
test in a water-glycerine solution and pressure treatment with a copper
sulphate solution and creosote under identical treating conditions.
Flow of gases through wood was measured with an air permeability
test and by the movement of chloropicrin vapour, an agricultural
fumigant, through the samples. The effect of physical and anatomical
characteristics of each species on its treatment was investigated.
Penetration and retention of treating solutions in wood samples
immediately after the time of removal from the treating cylinder
followed nearly identical trends for the copper sulphate and creosote.
That is, a particular species of wood would have large penetration
and retention of both preservative solutions compared to other species
of wood, although the values for each preservative solution differed.
The sapwood and heartwood of Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum Marsh)
from the United States gave highest penetration and retention among
the hardwoods. Among the woods from Ghana, highest retention
and penetration were in the sapwood and heartwood of Subaha
(Mitragyna stipulosa [De Candole] 0. Kuntze). Low penetration and
retention were found in Dahoma (Piptadeniastrum africanum [Hook f.]
Brenan), and very low retention and penetration were present in Kaku
(Lophira alata [Banks] Gaertner). Of the softwoods, the heartwood
of redwood (Sequoia sempevirens [D. Don] Endl.) retained the greatest
amount of preservative and was also the best penetrated sample.
Sapwood of Ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Laws) was penetrated
better with preservatives and retained more preservatives than sapwood
and heartwood of Douglas-fir (Pseudotsup menziesii [Mirb]
Franco) but the heartwood of Ponderosa pine was the least penetrated
sample and retained the smallest amount of preservative. Retentions
in samples treated with copper sulphate solution were higher than
retentions in creosote treated samples. Loss of preservative solvent
by evaporation or bleeding of preservative solution from treated
samples 7 days after treatment was directly related to the amount of preservative retained in the sample immediately after withdrawal
from the treating cylinder.
Retention of preservative solutions in the heartwood of hardwood
species was directly related to the distribution of vessels but
indirectly related to the diameter of the vessel lumen. Gum was the
most important inclusion which influenced penetration and retention
in the hardwood species. Retention among the softwood species was
directly related to the diameter of the tracheid lumen.
The release rate of chloropicrin vapour from a vial attached to
the treated specimen and the subsequent time taken by the vapour to
diffuse through the length of the specimen were the two treating variables
measured in vapour-phase treatment. These two variables
were interdependent, and their values followed almost the same pattern
as the air permeability measurements in hardwoods and softwoods.
Longitudinal permeability (liquid and air flow) was the only
physical property of the species which was related to their preservative
treatment. The extent of the relationship between values for air
permeability and values for retention, penetration and vapour release
was tested by applying linear regression analyses. The results
showed that air permeability correlated better with the release of
chloropicrin vapour than it did with preservative retention or penetration.
Air permeability was a better indicator of the treatability
of softwoods from the United States than the hardwoods from Ghana.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Wood -- Preservation
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/16684

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