Assessment of the Combined Charring and Coating Treatments as a Wood Surface Protection Technique

Flame treatment is an ancient technique for surface protection of wood. Further processing of charred wood elements depends on aesthetic and protective requirements. This study presents some general properties and weathering behaviour of the Norway spruce (<i>Picea abies</i> (L.) Karst.)...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jure Žigon, Matjaž Pavlič
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-02-01
Series:Forests
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/14/3/440
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Summary:Flame treatment is an ancient technique for surface protection of wood. Further processing of charred wood elements depends on aesthetic and protective requirements. This study presents some general properties and weathering behaviour of the Norway spruce (<i>Picea abies</i> (L.) Karst.) and the European larch (<i>Larix decidua</i> Mill.), protected by variations of sanding, charring, charring + brushing, and coating treatments. Charring and charring + brushing reduced the original mass of the samples by up to 8% and notably changed their colour (Δ<i>E</i>* ≤ 75). A study of chemical properties showed that charring dehydrated the wood and degraded lignin and hemicelluloses. The surface roughness of the wood after charring and charring + brushing increased by as much as 560%, while coating with waterborne acrylic high build stain had no effect on the roughness of these surfaces. The type of surface treatment of the wood did not affect the uptake of the coating in the wood samples, but the uncoated and coated spruce wood absorbed more water than larch wood. Higher water absorption was observed in the samples treated by charring, and it decreased when the char layer was removed by brushing. The film of a waterborne high build stain reduced water uptake only for surfaces treated by sanding and charring + brushing. Larch wood exhibited higher surface hardness (<i>E</i><sub>Hz</sub> ≤ 1.70 MPa) than spruce wood (<i>E</i><sub>Hz</sub> ≤ 0.89 MPa), with the brittle char layer reducing the determined hardness of the tested surfaces. During two years of natural weathering, the char layer was removed from the wood surface, even if the samples were additionally coated. The greatest colour changes during weathering were observed on samples treated by sanding (Δ<i>E</i>* ≤ 60) and sanding + coating (Δ<i>E</i>* ≤ 33), followed by samples treated with charring + brushing (Δ<i>E</i>* ≤ 10) and samples treated with charring (Δ<i>E</i>* ≤ 9). In summary, treating wood by charring in combination with brushing was the best wood protection technique.
ISSN:1999-4907