Abstract

During industrial wood drying, extractives migrate towards the wood surfaces and make the material more susceptible to photo/biodegradation. The present work provides information about the distribution, quantity and nature of lipophilic substances beneath the surface in air- and kiln-dried Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) sapwood boards. Samples were taken from knot-free sapwood surfaces and the composition of lipophilic extractives, phenols and low-molecular fatty/resin acids layers at different nominal depths below the surface was studied gravimetrically, by UV-spectrometry and by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The concentration of total extractives was significantly higher in kiln-dried than in air-dried samples and was higher close to the surface than in the layers beneath. The scatter in the values for the lipophilic extractives was high in both drying types, being highest for linoleic acid and slightly lower for palmitic, oleic and stearic acids. The amount of fatty acids was low in kiln-dried boards, probably due to a stronger degradation due to the high temperature employed. The most abundant resin acid was dehydroabietic acid followed by pimaric, isopimaric, and abietic acids in both drying types. It is concluded that during kiln-drying a migration front is created at a depth of 0.25 mm with a thickness of about 0.5 mm.

Highlights

  • Wood is dried industrially to remove water to achieve a more durable and dimensionally stable light-weight material

  • The total extractives content in the three regions beneath the sapwood surface is shown in Fig 3A and 3B

  • The extractives content in the surface layers (i.e. 0–0.25 mm depth) of the boards was at the same level (32.2–56.6 mg g-1) as that reported by Dorado and Normark for the acetone extract from Scots pine sapwood [35,36,37]

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Summary

Introduction

Wood is dried industrially to remove water to achieve a more durable and dimensionally stable light-weight material. Drying and especially thermal modification influence the presence and structure of the constituents of the wood material, and subsequently the characteristics and service-life of the final wood products. One mechanism is a migration of non-structural wood-cell compounds such as polar and non-polar extractives.

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