Abstract

Bamboo is much more easily attacked by fungus compared with wood, resulting in shorter service life and higher loss in storage and transportation. It has been long accepted that the high content of starch and sugars in bamboo is mainly responsible for its low mould resistance. In this paper, acetic acid, propionic acid, oxalic acid, citric acid, and hydrochloric acid were adopted to hydrothermally hydrolyze the starch in bamboo, with the aims to investigate their respective effect on the mould and blue-stain resistance of bamboo, and the optimized citric acid in different concentrations were studied. The starch content, glucose yields, weight loss, and colour changes of solid bamboo caused by the different acidic hydrolysis were also compared. The results indicated that weak acidic hydrolysis treatment was capable of improving mould-resistant of bamboo. The mould resistance increased with the increased concentration of citric acid. Bamboo treated with citric acid in the concentration of 10% could reduce the infected area ranging to 10–17%, the growth rating of which could reach 1 resistance. The content of soluble sugar and starch remained in bamboo decreased significantly from 43 mg/g to 31 mg/g and 46 mg/g to 23 mg/g, respectively, when the citric acid concentration varied from 4% to 10%. Citric acid treatments of 10% also caused a greatest surface colour change and weight loss. The results in this study demonstrated citric acid treatment can effectively reduce the starch grain and soluble sugars content and improve mould resistance of bamboo, which can be attributed to the reduction of starch grain and soluble carbohydrates (such as glucose, fructose, and sucrose, etc.) in bamboo.

Highlights

  • Bamboo is attacked by various fungi, among which the infection caused by mould fungi is the most common and serious

  • Mould resistance of bamboo strips treated with low-molecular-weight organic acids and inorganic acid were first tested, and effect of citric acid with different concentrations were studied

  • Bamboo treated with acetic acid, propionic acid, oxalic acid, citric acid, and hydrochloric acid in a low concentration could improve their fungus growth rating from 4 in control samples to 2 or 3 resistance

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Summary

Introduction

Bamboo is attacked by various fungi, among which the infection caused by mould fungi is the most common and serious. Mould fungi can infect bamboo during storage, transportation, processing, and utilizing, with notable appearance, and in some cases, it can cause illness to humans. This greatly limits the application of solid bamboo and bamboo-derived products. Few of them perform well as a bamboo-mould inhibiter [3]. This is because the majority of them were developed for wood materials. Wood furfurylation was found to be a highly efficient approach to deal with the mould issue on wood [8], but the colour of the treated wood was typically turned into black or brown, losing its original natural appearance

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