Abstract

The orthotropic and temperature-dependent nature of the mechanical properties of wood is well recognized. However, past studies of mechanical properties at elevated temperatures are either limited to temperatures below 200 °C or focus only on the direction parallel to grain. The effect of time-dependent pyrolysis during measurement is often neglected. This paper presents a novel method for determining elastic modulus at high temperatures and thermal expansion coefficient in different orthotropic directions via Dynamic Mechanical-Thermal Analyser (DMTA). The method allows for drying, drying verification, and measurement in one chamber, eliminating the possibility of moisture reabsorption from ambient air. The repeatable measurements can be carried out in temperatures up to 325°C, adequate for observing time-dependent pyrolysis during measurement. Results of the measurements of Norway Spruce provide data of its mechanical response at temperature range previously not explored widely, as well as in the orthotropic direction. Time-dependent behaviour was observed in the thermal expansion and shrinkage experiment, where above 250°C the amount of shrinkage depends on heating rate. At such temperature, elastic moduli measurement also shows time dependence, where longer heating at certain temperature slightly increases the measured elastic modulus. Additionally, bilinear regression of the relationship between elastic moduli and temperature shows quantitatively good fit. Numerical simulation of the DMTA temperature history and wood chemical components mass losses show the onset of shrinkage and onset of hemicellulose mass loss occurring at around the same time, while decomposition of cellulose correlate with the sudden loss of elastic moduli.

Highlights

  • The whole method consists of interconnected analyses but can be categorized into the main part that is the Dynamic Mechanical-Thermal Analyser (DMTA) experiment and two numerical simulations (Finite Difference Analysis and FDS (Fire Dynamics Simulator) analysis) which supports the experiment in terms of method optimisation and data interpretation

  • Fire Dynamics Simulator (FDS) simulation outputs decomposition history of wood primary components under temperature histories realized in the DMTA experiments

  • The kinetic parameters and the char yields for the pyrolysis reactions are estimated from Thermogravimetric Analysis (TGA) experiments in the work of Rinta-Paavola and Hostikka [18], including the description of the assumed pyrolysis reaction in the numerical model

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Values of the elastic modulus and tensile strength in the three orthogonal directions are reported in the literature [1, 2]. There is no consensus on the shape of the relationship between the elastic moduli in the L direction and temperature above 200°C [4,5,6,7,8,9]. The curves for those relationships are sometimes developed using a different sample for each temperature, in which case the sampling uncertainty propagates to the obtained temperature dependence. The assumptions of linear strength and moduli reductions, reaching zero at 300°C, are suggested for practitioners [10]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call