Dielectric properties of copper-ethanolamine treated Chinese fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata Hook.)

In order to clarify the interaction between copper and wood substances in wood treated with copper containing water-borne wood preservatives, the dielectric constant ε' and dielectric loss factor ε" of untreated wood and wood treated with four concentration levels of copper-ethanolamine (Cu-EA) solu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inForestry studies in China Vol. 9; no. 4; pp. 239 - 245
Main Author Cao Jin-zhen Yu Li-li You Xiao-di Kamdem D. Pascal
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 2007
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Summary:In order to clarify the interaction between copper and wood substances in wood treated with copper containing water-borne wood preservatives, the dielectric constant ε' and dielectric loss factor ε" of untreated wood and wood treated with four concentration levels of copper-ethanolamine (Cu-EA) solutions were determined within a temperature range from -100 to 40℃ and a frequency range from 100 to 1 MHz. Three dielectric relaxation processes were observed in the ε" spectrum; among them R-Ⅰ is based on the reorientation ofmethylol groups in the amorphous region of wood cell walls and R-Ⅱ is related to wood extractives. R-Ⅲ appeared in Cu-EA treated wood, and its magnitude decreases with the concentration of Cu-EA solutions used in this experiment. This relaxation process was considered to be based on the reorientation of copper-ethanolamine-wood complexes in wood cell walls. At low copper retention, the hydrogen in the complex can form hydrogen bonding with adjacent hydroxyl groups, which results in a strong bonding state between copper and wood; at high copper retention, the numerous copper-ethanolamine complexes not only hinder them from forming hydrogen bonding with adjacent wood molecules due to steric hindrance, but also weaken the interaction between wood molecules themselves, which corresponds to reducing ε" values of both R-Ⅰ and R-Ⅲ processes. The results explain the fact of increasing copper leaching in wood treated with high concentration copper-based water-borne preservatives.
Bibliography:copper complex, copper-ethanolamine (Cu-EA), dielectric relaxation, hydrogen bond, wood
11-3919/S
S72
ISSN:1008-1321
1993-0372