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Effect of Low-Thermal Treatment on the Particle Size Distribution in Wood Dust after Milling.
Júda, Martin; Sydor, Maciej; Rogozinski, Tomasz; Kucerka, Martin; Pedzik, Marta; Kminiak, Richard.
Affiliation
  • Júda M; Department of Woodworking, Faculty of Wood Science and Technology, Technical University in Zvolen, 960 01 Zvolen, Slovakia.
  • Sydor M; Department of Woodworking Machines and Fundamentals of Machine Design, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology, Poznan University of Life Sciences, 60-637 Poznan, Poland.
  • Rogozinski T; Department of Furniture Design, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology, Poznan University of Life Sciences, 60-637 Poznan, Poland.
  • Kucerka M; Faculty of Natural Sciences, Matej Bel University, 974 01 Banská Bystrica, Slovakia.
  • Pedzik M; Department of Furniture Design, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology, Poznan University of Life Sciences, 60-637 Poznan, Poland.
  • Kminiak R; Center of Wood Technology, Lukasiewicz Research Network-Poznan Institute of Technology, 60-654 Poznan, Poland.
Polymers (Basel) ; 15(4)2023 Feb 20.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36850342
ABSTRACT
The thermal treatment of wood can improve the appearance of the wood product's surface, its dimensional stability, and resistance to fungal attacks. However, the heat treatment changes the technological properties of wood, making it a new engineering material. This work investigates the effect of the low-thermal treatment of birch wood (Betula pendula Roth.), European beech wood (Fagus sylvatica L.), and alder wood (Alnus glutinosa L.) on the fine dust particles creation during woodworking. The samples of thermally treated wood with temperatures commonly used for the change of wood colour (105, 125, and 135 °C) were compared with reference samples made of natural wood. All 12 variants of the tested woods were milled using the 5-axis CNC machining center (20 mm diamond cutter, rotational speed 18,000 rev·min-1, the depth of cut 3 mm, feed rates of 2, 4 and 6 m∙min-1). A sieving analysis method allowed measuring the dust particle size distributions in all dust samples. The experiment's result analysis points out that wood type, thermal treatment, and feed rate meaningfully affect the size distribution of dust particles. Compared to birch wood and beech wood, the milling of alder wood samples created a much higher content of the finest dust particles, with particle sizes smaller than 0.032 mm. Increased temperatures in thermal treatment increase the share of fine dust particles with sizes smaller than 0.125 mm, compared to wood in its natural state. Milling with a lower feed rate (2 m·min-1) creates finer dust than processing with higher feed rates (4 and 6 m·min-1). Generally, the milling of alder in a natural or thermally treated state is a source of fine dust particles, particularly at low feed speed-rate milling, compared to birch and beech wood. In general, these results indicate that the low temperature thermal treatment parameters attribute new technological properties to all thermally modified types of wood tested.
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Polymers (Basel) Year: 2023 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Slovakia

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Polymers (Basel) Year: 2023 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Slovakia