• Title/Summary/Keyword: pine wood

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Effect of Chestnut-shell Tea Waste and Castor Oil as an Additive on Fuel Characteristics of Pellets Fabricated with Pitch Pine and Mongolian Oak (첨가제로서 율피차 부산물과 피마자유가 리기다소나무 및 신갈나무 펠릿의 연료적 특성에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, HyeonJeong;Yang, In;Han, Gyu-Seong
    • New & Renewable Energy
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    • v.18 no.2
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    • pp.1-8
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    • 2022
  • This study aimed to determine the optimal conditions for fabricating pitch pine (PCP) and Mongolian oak (MOK) pellets using chestnut-shell tea waste (CSW) and castor oil (CSO) as additives. For pellets fabricated using a pilot-scale flat-die pellet mill, all moisture content (MC) was in line with A1 wood pellet standards for residential and small-scale commercial uses designated by the National Institute of Forest Science at the Republic of Korea (NIFOS), regardless of fabricating conditions; the durability of PCP pellets prepared using PCP particles with 10% MC, and CSW addition also satisfied these criteria. The moisture tolerance of PCP pellets improved with combination of 2 wt% CSW and 2-6 wt% CSO. Overall, use of 20 mesh CSW as an additive, PCP with 10% MC, and MOK with 12% MC was found to be optimal. Moreover, using CSO as an additive, high-quality PCP and MOK pellets can be fabricated by adjusting the particles to 12% MC. However, the durability of PCP and MOK pellets prepared using these conditions did not meet the wood pellet standards for residential and small-scale commercial use. Therefore, further research is needed to improve the durability of these pellets.

Analysis of Anatomical Characteristics for Wood Species Identification of Commercial Plywood in Korea (국내 유통 합판의 수종식별을 위한 해부학적 특성 분석)

  • LEE, Hyun Mi;JEON, Woo Seok;LEE, Jei Wan
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.49 no.6
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    • pp.574-590
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    • 2021
  • International efforts to prevent illegally logged wood are expanding around the world. The "Legal Wood Trade Promotion System" was enacted in Korea in 2019 to strengthen the legal import and distribution of commercial wood in Korea. Since then, this system has promoted and ensured that the imported wood and wood products are legal with respect to the country of origin, wood species, and harvested area. As verification methods, DNA analysis technology and anatomical analysis using a microscope are mainly used in conjunction. Therefore, in this study, wood species of plywood were identified by analyzing the anatomical characteristics of various wood products for the first time. Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco.) and larch (Larix kaempferi (Lamb.) Carriere) plywoods (7, 9 ply) were obtained from four companies that supply plywood in Korea. After cutting each company's plywood to a size of about 1 cm3, the layers from top to bottom were separated into single layers, and three sections were observed using an optical microscope. The results revealed that the plywood was composed of a mixture of softwood and hardwood wood species, pine wood species, poplar wood species, or a mixture of larch and pine wood species. Identification of wood species using microscopy is important and can enable the scientific analysis and verification of various wood products, including plywood, imported from countries where the likelihood of indiscriminate distribution of illegal wood and illegal logging is high.

Feasibility of Value-added Utilization of Ash Trees Infested with Emerald Ash Borer

  • Kim, Jae-Woo;Matuana, Laurent M.
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.34 no.5
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    • pp.79-87
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    • 2006
  • Value-added utilization of the disposed ash trees due to the infestation by Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) was explored by converting them into particleboards (PBs) and wood-plastic composites (WPCs). The experimental result showed that PB panels could be successfully manufactured from the ash wood but compaction ratio need to be higher than 1.3 in order to meet the standard requirements listed by American National Standards Institute (ANSI). Ash wood plastic composites with high density polyethylene (HDPE) and polypropylene (PP) were also prepared with additives by extrusion. Physical and mechanical properties of ash wood plastic composite compared favorably to those made of pine and maple.

Liquefaction of Wood and It's Application for Adhesives - Acid-Catalyzed Liquefaction of Wood with Phenol - (목재의 용액화와 접착제에의 응용 - 산촉매하에서 페놀에 의한 목재의 용액화 -)

  • Han, Gyu-Seong
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.88-93
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    • 1995
  • Acid-catalysts were used to accelerate the liquefaction of wood with phenol. Sulfuric acid was quite excellent as a acid-catalyst of liquefaction of wood. It's proper dose was 3% of oven-dried weight of wood to get the 10% of target degree of residue, when the reaction time was 2 hours. The liquefaction of wood catalyzed with sulfuric acid was easily carried out at low temperature of 140$^{\circ}C$, but the degrees of residue decreased gradually with the increase of reaction temperature. The behaviors of liquefaction of oak and radiata pine were nearly same.

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New Separation Technique of Crystalized Dihydroquercetin (결정성(結晶性) Dihydroquerceting의 새로운 분취방법(分取方法))

  • Song, Hong-Keun
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.72-76
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    • 1991
  • The new preparative separation techneque of dihydroquercetin (2, 3-trans-dihdroxy-3, 3', 4', 5, 7-pentahydroxydihydroflavonol) was investigated by liquid chromatography. Also some typical coniferous wood bark were examined for the sources of dihydroquercetin. The good sources of dihydroquercetin were Douglas-fir[Pseudotsuga menziesii] bark and pitch pine [Pinus rigida] bark. There is no dependance the produced place and species dihyroquercetin which is separated by silica-gel column chromatography was taken with white needle-like crystals. This crystals were very stable in the humidity and on the light. It also can stored very long without derivatives.

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Migrations and Multiplications of Bursaphelenchus xylophilus and B. mucronatus in Pinus thumbergii in Relation to Their Pathogenicity

  • Son, Joung A;Moon, Yil-Sung
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.29 no.1
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    • pp.116-122
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    • 2013
  • To evaluate the mechanisms of pathogenicity and nonpathogenicity of Bursaphelenchus xylophilus and B. mucronatus isolated in South Korea, we used 4-year-old P. thunbergii seedlings and 20-cm long one-year-old stem cuttings of 5-year-old Pinus thunbergii, and studied distributions and multiplications of pine wood nematodes after inoculation. The distributions of B. xylophilus in the 20-cm pine stem cuttings were not significantly different from that of B. mucronatus. Conversely, the proliferation rate of B. xylophilus on mycelial mats of Botrytis cinerea was significantly different from that of B. mucronatus. The study using 4-year-old P. thunbergii seedlings also showed that B. mucronatus can migrate to distal portions of the pine seedlings the same as B. xylophilus, but the populations of B. xylophilus remaining in the pine seedlings were relatively larger than those of B. mucronatus. Therefore, we concluded that the pathogenicity of B. xylophilus could be strongly influenced by its ability to multiply.

Utilization of Pyrolysis Oil from Pine Wood as Thermosetting Wood Adhesive Resins

  • Kim, Jae-Woo;Myers, Deland J.;Brown, Robert C.;Kuo, Monlin
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.51-60
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    • 2007
  • In this study, the possibility of using pyrolysis oil as wood adhesives was explored. Especially, adhesives were formulated by reacting pyrolysis oil and formaldehyde and also partially replacing phenol with pyrolysis oil in phenol-formaldehyde (PF) adhesive and soy hydrolizate/PF adhesive formulation. The pine wood was fast pyrolyized and the oils were obtained from a series of condensers in the pyrolysis system. The oils from each condenser were first reacted with formaldehyde to explore potential use of the oil itself as adhesive. The lap-shear bond strength test results indicated that the oil itself could be polymerized and form bonds between wood adherends. The oils from each condenser were then mixed together and used as partial replacement of phenol (25, 33, and 50% by weight) in phenol-formaldehyde adhesive. The bond strength of the oil containing PF adhesives was decreased as percent phenol replacement level increased. However, no significant difference was found between 25 and 33% of phenol replacement level. The oil-contained PF resins at 25, 33, and 50% phenol replacement level with different NaOH/Phenol (Pyrolysis oil) molar ratio were further formulated with soy hydrolizate to make soy hydrolizate/pyrolysis oil-phenol formaldehyde adhesive at 6:4 weight (wt) ratio and used for fiberboard manufacturing. Surface internal bond strength (IB) of the boards bonded with 33% replacement at 0.3 NaOH/Phenol (Pyrolysis oil) molar ratio performed better than other replacement levels and molar ratios. Thickness swelling after 24 hr cold water soaking and after 2 hr in boiling water was increased as % replacement of pyrolysis oil increased.

The Withdrawal Loads on The Effect of Dried Wooden Dowel (나무못 유지력에 나무못의 건조가 미치는 영향)

  • Cha, JaeKyung;Kim, Birm-June
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.45 no.5
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    • pp.613-621
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    • 2017
  • This study was performed to determine the withdrawal loads and strengths on the effect of dried wooden dowel. The test block was manufactured from 15 mm thick domestic wood and particleboard. Dowels of 6, 8 and 10 mm in diameter are made of korean castanea, korean pine and tulip wood. Research reported here indicates that withdrawal loads increase, but withdrawal strengths decrease, as the dowel diameter increases. This study also indicates that withdrawal load and strength of dried wooden dowel showed over 10% increase compared to those of normal conditioned dowel. However, there was an exception for the case of korean pine test block with dried tulip wood dowel. Meanwhile, the dried wooden dowel withdrawal loads and strengths for particleboard test blocks show 6~14.4% and 6.2~18.2% increase, compared to those of normal conditioned dowel, respectively.

Anatomical Studies on the Features of Rays in Compression Wood of Korean Red Pine(Pinus densiflora S. et Z.) (소나무(Pinus densiflora S. et Z.) 압축이상재(壓縮異常材)의 방사조직(放射組織) 특성(特性)에 관한 해부학적(解剖學的) 연구(硏究))

  • Chung, Youn Jib;Lee, Phil Woo
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.78 no.2
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    • pp.119-131
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    • 1989
  • This experiment was executed to investigate and compare qualitative and quantitative anatomical features in compression wood, opposite wood, and side wood formed in a bent stem, a straight branch, and an exposed horizontal root of Korean red pine(Pinus densiflora S. et Z.). The respective four discs containing compression wood taken at 20cm interval both in stem and branch as well as a disc containing well developed compression wood from horizontal root were analyzed. Percentage of compression wood and eccentricity showed decreasing tendency with the increasing distance in height direction of stem and length direction of branch. The qualitative anatomical features of compression wood appeared to differ from those of side and opposite wood in very gradual tracheid transition from earlywood to latewood, roundish tracheid shape on cross surface, tracheid distortion at tip on radial surface, existence of intercellular space, and helical cavity in tracheid wall. And the differences in these qualitative features among the compression wood, opposite wood, and side wood became less intensive with the decreasing trends in percentage of compression wood and eccentricity. The quantitative anatomical features in compression wood also appeared to be wider in that respective widths of fusiform and uniseriate ray than those of opposite and side wood, but the heights of fusiform and uniseriate ray in compression wood were smaller than in opposite and side wood. The number of horizontal resin canal(fusiform ray) and uniseriate ray, however, showed no differences among the compression wood, opposite wood, and side wood. And the number of vertical resin canal in unit area, $4{\pi}mm^2$ of compression wood was fewer than that in opposite wood, whereas numerous vertical resin canals contained in a growth ring. These rays of compression wood seemed to be characterized by smaller height and wider width than those of opposite and side wood.

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Decay and Termite Resistance of Yellow-Hearted Pine (Pinus densiflora for. erecta Uyeki) (황장목의 부후 및 흰개미 저항성)

  • Lee, Ae-Hee;Jang, Jae-Hyuk;Hwang, Won-Joung;Kim, Nam-Hun
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.45 no.1
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    • pp.12-19
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    • 2017
  • Yellow-hearted pine (YHP; Pinus densiflora for. erecta Uyeki) is one of the Red pine species and has extremely narrow growth ring and high ratio of heartwood growing in Korea. It has been used for valuable wooden constructions as palace and temple for royal family since the Joseon Dynasty period. However, scientific information on the wood properties of YHP is still very lacking. This study was carried out to investigate natural durability of YHP to fungi and termites attack. Examination of anti-fungal and anti-termite properties of YHP was performed at indoor condition using brown-rot fungi (Fomitopsis palustris), white-rot fungi (Trametes versicolor), and termite (Reticulitermes speratus). The results showed that weight loss of the heartwood in YHP after fungi and termite test was much lower than those of the sapwood in YHP. Furthermore, the highest mortality of termite was obtained from the heartwood of YHP. Consequently, it is clearly revealed that the heartwood of YHP has excellent durability against brown- and white-rot fungi and termite.