The permeability to water of the cell wall has been measured by applying a known osmotic pressure generated by PEG 6000 across wood samples containing water-swollen cell walls. In pine the void space was filled with silicone resin with the wood at near fibre saturation point. Permeability kβ’ 1021 as
Permeability to water of the cell wall material of spruce heartwood
β Scribed by M. Anne Palin; J. A. Petty
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 479 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0043-7719
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β¦ Synopsis
The permeability to water of spruce heartwood has been measured by applying a known osmotic pressure difference across specimens in which the cell walls were water swollen and most of the void space was filled with paraffin wax.
To ensure that solute molecules should not penetrate the cell wall aqueous solutions of polyethylene glycol of molecular weight 6,000 and dextran of molecular weight 40,000 were used to generate the osmotic pressures. The mean values of the permeability k x 1021 defined by the Darcy equation were 67.5 m 2 for longitudinal flow, 7.12 m 2 for radial flow and 4.03 m 2 for tangential flow. Permeability was probably overestimated by about 10 % owing to water entering some of the void space not filled by wax. The measured values are 10 to 100 times smaller than those calculated assuming all water in the cell walls is free to flow and this is probably caused by much of the water being bound to cell wall material.
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