Phil Pascoe
Established Member
An extract from an article in today's Times -
A technique for crushing wood to a fifth of its natural thickness has resulted in a material strong enough to hold up skyscrapers and tough enough to stop a speeding bullet.
Scientists say that the “densified” wood has superior properties to steel and metal alloys. It is also light and cheap enough to be forged into a form of body armour.
Its most important use, however, is likely to be in building the cities of the future. Wood has obvious virtues for construction: it does not cost much, does not weigh much and does not do much damage to the environment compared with other materials.
Wooden skyscrapers have begun to spring up, including an 18-storey dormitory in Vancouver, Canada, a planned high-rise that would be the tallest building in Stockholm, and a 300m tower proposed as an addition to the Barbican complex in central London.
Yet wood’s usefulness to architects is limited by its structure, which is riddled with pores that compromise its strength. Researchers led by Jianwei Song at the University of Maryland made it three times denser but 12 times stronger by getting rid of the holes.
The first step involves treating the wood with caustic soda and sodium sulphite, much as a paper manufacturer might. This banishes much of the lignin and hemicelluloses that make up a lot of its bulk. The wooden blocks are then compressed at 100C, flattening their pores and raising their density from 0.43g per cubic centimetre to 1.3.
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I've cut it short as it is undoubtedly copyright, but more info. can probably found easily enough.
A technique for crushing wood to a fifth of its natural thickness has resulted in a material strong enough to hold up skyscrapers and tough enough to stop a speeding bullet.
Scientists say that the “densified” wood has superior properties to steel and metal alloys. It is also light and cheap enough to be forged into a form of body armour.
Its most important use, however, is likely to be in building the cities of the future. Wood has obvious virtues for construction: it does not cost much, does not weigh much and does not do much damage to the environment compared with other materials.
Wooden skyscrapers have begun to spring up, including an 18-storey dormitory in Vancouver, Canada, a planned high-rise that would be the tallest building in Stockholm, and a 300m tower proposed as an addition to the Barbican complex in central London.
Yet wood’s usefulness to architects is limited by its structure, which is riddled with pores that compromise its strength. Researchers led by Jianwei Song at the University of Maryland made it three times denser but 12 times stronger by getting rid of the holes.
The first step involves treating the wood with caustic soda and sodium sulphite, much as a paper manufacturer might. This banishes much of the lignin and hemicelluloses that make up a lot of its bulk. The wooden blocks are then compressed at 100C, flattening their pores and raising their density from 0.43g per cubic centimetre to 1.3.
...
I've cut it short as it is undoubtedly copyright, but more info. can probably found easily enough.