<p>In the last quarter century, delamination has come to mean more than just a failure in adhesion between layers of bonded composite plies that might affect their load-bearing capacity. Ever-increasing computer power has meant that we can now detect and analyze delamination between, for example, ce
Adhesion in Cellulosic and Wood-Based Composites
โ Scribed by S. Chow (auth.), John F. Oliver (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 254
- Series
- NATO Conference Series 3
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Cellulose is a versatile and renewable natural resource which has attracted increasing attention in the last decade, expecially after the energy crisis of 1973. Apart from its extensive use as asolid product, wood is the most important source of cellulose fibres for papermaking and is also widely used as a source of energy. The form and availability otยท the forest provides a great opportunity for technological improvement and innovation in the future to satisfy the foreseeable increasing demand for woodยญ based products. For example, North American sawmills and plywood mills presently recover only about 45 to 55% of logged wood while the remainder is disposed as waste, if it is not used in pulp manufacturing. In addition, top and branch wood, and logs from non-commercial species which are presently not recovered from the logging sites could provide an abundant and relatively inexpensive resource for the manufacture of composite products. Other valuable potential sour ces of cellulosic materials are waste paper and agricultural waste. A composite is the consolidation of two polymerie materials such that one of the components acts as the adhesive binder while the other forms the substrate matrix. In some cases, the matrix and the adhesive may be the same materials. To maximize the adhesion potential of the composite, the properties of the substrate which can enhance, hinder or complicate the development of optimum adhesion should be thoroughly explored and identified.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-vi
Introduction....Pages 1-3
Front Matter....Pages 5-5
Molecular and Cell Wall Structure of Wood....Pages 7-51
Structural Wood Adhesives โ Today and Tomorrow....Pages 53-65
The Forests as a Source of Natural Adhesives....Pages 67-88
Front Matter....Pages 89-89
Adhesion and Adhesives:Interactions at Interfaces....Pages 91-111
Evaluation of Fiber Adhesion in Composites....Pages 113-125
Bonding in Wood Composites....Pages 127-146
Front Matter....Pages 147-147
Problems Encountered with Conventional Fiber-Reinforced Composites....Pages 149-166
Wood Composites....Pages 167-189
Time Dependent Properties....Pages 191-209
Back Matter....Pages 211-261
โฆ Subjects
Physics, general
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