Water vapor sorption behavior of bamboo pertaining to its hierarchical structure

Abstract Bamboo is an anisotropic, hierarchical, and hygroscopic material. Moisture transport in bamboo is one of the most fundamental properties affecting almost all other physical and mechanical properties of the material. This study investigated the water vapor sorption behaviors of bamboo at var...

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Main Authors: Qi Chen, Changhua Fang, Ge Wang, Xinxin Ma, Junji Luo, Meiling Chen, Chunping Dai, Benhua Fei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-06-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-92103-4
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spelling doaj-058e0fadc29945ccb84b9611d631dae82021-06-20T11:34:12ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-06-0111111010.1038/s41598-021-92103-4Water vapor sorption behavior of bamboo pertaining to its hierarchical structureQi Chen0Changhua Fang1Ge Wang2Xinxin Ma3Junji Luo4Meiling Chen5Chunping Dai6Benhua Fei7Department of Biomaterials, International Centre for Bamboo and RattanDepartment of Biomaterials, International Centre for Bamboo and RattanDepartment of Biomaterials, International Centre for Bamboo and RattanDepartment of Biomaterials, International Centre for Bamboo and RattanDepartment of Biomaterials, International Centre for Bamboo and RattanDepartment of Biomaterials, International Centre for Bamboo and RattanDepartment of Wood Science, Faculty of Forestry, University of British ColumbiaDepartment of Biomaterials, International Centre for Bamboo and RattanAbstract Bamboo is an anisotropic, hierarchical, and hygroscopic material. Moisture transport in bamboo is one of the most fundamental properties affecting almost all other physical and mechanical properties of the material. This study investigated the water vapor sorption behaviors of bamboo at various structural levels: cell walls, cells (with pits) and bamboo blocks. The specimens with two sorption directions, longitudinal (L) and transverse (T), were measured by saturated salt solution method and dynamic vapor sorption. The parallel exponential kinetics model was used to analyze the sorption kinetics. The results showed that at the cell wall level, the sorption rate and equilibrium moisture content (EMC) of cell wall in the L specimens were larger than those in the T specimens. The differences were probably caused by the looser cell wall layers in the L specimens. At the cellular scale, pits in the cell wall resulted in an enhanced sorption rate and EMC of the T specimens compared with the L specimens where the pits in the parenchyma cells were only distributed in the lateral walls but not in end walls. At the macro scale, the sorption rate and moisture content of bamboo blocks were largely controlled by the vessel cells. As a hierarchically-structured plant, bamboo performs the biological function of moisture transport at all these scales. This work helps improve the understanding of water transport behavior in bamboo, which may lead to better bamboo drying and impregnation processes.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-92103-4
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Qi Chen
Changhua Fang
Ge Wang
Xinxin Ma
Junji Luo
Meiling Chen
Chunping Dai
Benhua Fei
spellingShingle Qi Chen
Changhua Fang
Ge Wang
Xinxin Ma
Junji Luo
Meiling Chen
Chunping Dai
Benhua Fei
Water vapor sorption behavior of bamboo pertaining to its hierarchical structure
Scientific Reports
author_facet Qi Chen
Changhua Fang
Ge Wang
Xinxin Ma
Junji Luo
Meiling Chen
Chunping Dai
Benhua Fei
author_sort Qi Chen
title Water vapor sorption behavior of bamboo pertaining to its hierarchical structure
title_short Water vapor sorption behavior of bamboo pertaining to its hierarchical structure
title_full Water vapor sorption behavior of bamboo pertaining to its hierarchical structure
title_fullStr Water vapor sorption behavior of bamboo pertaining to its hierarchical structure
title_full_unstemmed Water vapor sorption behavior of bamboo pertaining to its hierarchical structure
title_sort water vapor sorption behavior of bamboo pertaining to its hierarchical structure
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Bamboo is an anisotropic, hierarchical, and hygroscopic material. Moisture transport in bamboo is one of the most fundamental properties affecting almost all other physical and mechanical properties of the material. This study investigated the water vapor sorption behaviors of bamboo at various structural levels: cell walls, cells (with pits) and bamboo blocks. The specimens with two sorption directions, longitudinal (L) and transverse (T), were measured by saturated salt solution method and dynamic vapor sorption. The parallel exponential kinetics model was used to analyze the sorption kinetics. The results showed that at the cell wall level, the sorption rate and equilibrium moisture content (EMC) of cell wall in the L specimens were larger than those in the T specimens. The differences were probably caused by the looser cell wall layers in the L specimens. At the cellular scale, pits in the cell wall resulted in an enhanced sorption rate and EMC of the T specimens compared with the L specimens where the pits in the parenchyma cells were only distributed in the lateral walls but not in end walls. At the macro scale, the sorption rate and moisture content of bamboo blocks were largely controlled by the vessel cells. As a hierarchically-structured plant, bamboo performs the biological function of moisture transport at all these scales. This work helps improve the understanding of water transport behavior in bamboo, which may lead to better bamboo drying and impregnation processes.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-92103-4
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