Abstract

In practice, for the manufacture of plywood, the veneer is usually dried to a moisture level suitable for bonding. However, anatomical differences within and between veneer sheets are a significant factor and some of them may contribute to significant differences in moisture content (MC). The novelty of this work was to study the possibility of using wood veneers of different MC in adjacent layers in one structure of plywood panels and how this affects the physical and mechanical properties of the panels. The Norway spruce (Picea abies L. Karst) wood veneers with mean MC approximately of 2%, 5% and 7% and phenol-urea-formaldehyde (PUF) resin were used in the experiments. The five-layers plywood panels were manufactured at the two pressing pressures of 0.8 MPa and 1.2 MPa. There was no significant difference in the bending and bonding properties, but only wood failure as measured on bonding specimens which showed higher average values on specimens manufactured with high pressure during hot pressing. Higher differences in MC of each veneer with constant MC of the veneer stack didn’t worse bending and bonding properties of plywood.

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