Abstract

Wood used in exposed exterior applications degrades and changes color due to weathering. Expanded use of mass timber is resulting in architects increasingly designing structures with wood in exterior exposure. Coatings can reduce the effects of weathering and prolong the visual characteristics of wood. However, coating performance depends on a variety of factors including the blend of resins, oils, pigments, and binders. Coating manufacturers often claim superior performance for products, but data directly comparing different coatings on different species is rarely publicly available. Premature coating failure increases long-term building maintenance expense while potentially enhancing biological degradation and reducing service life. This study compares the performance of 12 exterior wood coatings on 5 wood species. Performance was evaluated according to changes in the components in the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) L*a*b* color space of images taken at 6-month intervals over 18 months of the wood samples. The analysis was performed using Welch’s ANOVA, Games-Howell pairwise comparisons tests, and a clustering procedure using distances between each pair of groups means for the 18 months ΔL*, Δa*, Δb* values. Most of the coatings lost their protective effects within 1 year of exposure due to combinations of biological and ultraviolet radiation (UV) degradation illustrating the difficulty of protecting timber in exterior exposures. This study provides a guide for users wishing to specify coatings for exposed wood in mass timber structures.

Highlights

  • Wood used in exterior architectural and appearance applications weathers in four principal ways [1]: It can lose color and appear to turn silver or grey, mold fungi can grow on and disfigure the surface, it can decay from fungi growth when exposed to high ambient moisture, and/or it can split and warp due to repeated changes in moisture content

  • A single coating formulation should not be used for all applications and exposure conditions

  • No single coating was uniformly protective within the range of species tested nor was any coating completely effective over 18 months of exposure

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Summary

Introduction

Wood used in exterior architectural and appearance applications weathers in four principal ways [1]: It can lose color and appear to turn silver or grey, mold fungi can grow on and disfigure the surface, it can decay from fungi growth when exposed to high ambient moisture, and/or it can split and warp due to repeated changes in moisture content. Mold typically grows on the surface while decay fungi grow through the wood. The presence of mold is commonly referred to as mildew and can be accompanied by algae, contributing green discoloration to the surface of the material. Both mildew and algae are common where air movement is restricted, and moisture is common. Special consideration should be given to the use of mildew susceptible coatings for applications that likely to condense water in service

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