Macrobiological Degradation of Esterified Wood with Sorbitol and Citric Acid
There is a need for new solutions in wood protection against marine wood borers and termites in Europe. A new solution could be the esterification of wood with sorbitol and citric acid (SCA) since these are inexpensive and readily available feedstock chemicals and have shown protective properties ag...
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doaj-ee6abce12916482f9444e38e22e830192020-11-25T02:56:33ZengMDPI AGForests1999-49072020-07-011177677610.3390/f11070776Macrobiological Degradation of Esterified Wood with Sorbitol and Citric AcidAndreas Treu0Lina Nunes1Erik Larnøy2Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research, Høgskoleveien 8, 1433 Ås, NorwayStructures Department, LNEC, National Laboratory for Civil Engineering, Av. do Brasil, 101, 1700-066 Lisbon, PortugalNorwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research, Høgskoleveien 8, 1433 Ås, NorwayThere is a need for new solutions in wood protection against marine wood borers and termites in Europe. A new solution could be the esterification of wood with sorbitol and citric acid (SCA) since these are inexpensive and readily available feedstock chemicals and have shown protective properties against fungal wood degradation in earlier studies and prevented macrobiological degradation, as shown in this study. Protection of wood products in the marine environment lacks available wood preservatives that are approved for marine applications. Termite infestation is opposed mainly by biocide treatments of wood. Several wood modification systems show high resistance against both marine borers and subterranean termites. However, the existing commercialized wood modification products are costly. Both macrobiological forms of degradation represent a great threat for most European wood species, which are rapidly and severely degraded if not properly treated. This study investigated esterified wood in standard field trials against marine wood borers, and against subterranean termites in laboratory trials in a no-choice and choice test. The treatment showed good resistance against wood borers in the marine environment after one season and against subterranean termites in the laboratory after eight weeks. The low termite survival rate (SR) in the no-choice test during the first week of testing indicates a mode of action that is incomparable to other wood modification treatments.https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/11/7/776subterranean termitesmarine wood borerspolyesterificationwood protection |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Andreas Treu Lina Nunes Erik Larnøy |
spellingShingle |
Andreas Treu Lina Nunes Erik Larnøy Macrobiological Degradation of Esterified Wood with Sorbitol and Citric Acid Forests subterranean termites marine wood borers polyesterification wood protection |
author_facet |
Andreas Treu Lina Nunes Erik Larnøy |
author_sort |
Andreas Treu |
title |
Macrobiological Degradation of Esterified Wood with Sorbitol and Citric Acid |
title_short |
Macrobiological Degradation of Esterified Wood with Sorbitol and Citric Acid |
title_full |
Macrobiological Degradation of Esterified Wood with Sorbitol and Citric Acid |
title_fullStr |
Macrobiological Degradation of Esterified Wood with Sorbitol and Citric Acid |
title_full_unstemmed |
Macrobiological Degradation of Esterified Wood with Sorbitol and Citric Acid |
title_sort |
macrobiological degradation of esterified wood with sorbitol and citric acid |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Forests |
issn |
1999-4907 |
publishDate |
2020-07-01 |
description |
There is a need for new solutions in wood protection against marine wood borers and termites in Europe. A new solution could be the esterification of wood with sorbitol and citric acid (SCA) since these are inexpensive and readily available feedstock chemicals and have shown protective properties against fungal wood degradation in earlier studies and prevented macrobiological degradation, as shown in this study. Protection of wood products in the marine environment lacks available wood preservatives that are approved for marine applications. Termite infestation is opposed mainly by biocide treatments of wood. Several wood modification systems show high resistance against both marine borers and subterranean termites. However, the existing commercialized wood modification products are costly. Both macrobiological forms of degradation represent a great threat for most European wood species, which are rapidly and severely degraded if not properly treated. This study investigated esterified wood in standard field trials against marine wood borers, and against subterranean termites in laboratory trials in a no-choice and choice test. The treatment showed good resistance against wood borers in the marine environment after one season and against subterranean termites in the laboratory after eight weeks. The low termite survival rate (SR) in the no-choice test during the first week of testing indicates a mode of action that is incomparable to other wood modification treatments. |
topic |
subterranean termites marine wood borers polyesterification wood protection |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/11/7/776 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT andreastreu macrobiologicaldegradationofesterifiedwoodwithsorbitolandcitricacid AT linanunes macrobiologicaldegradationofesterifiedwoodwithsorbitolandcitricacid AT eriklarnøy macrobiologicaldegradationofesterifiedwoodwithsorbitolandcitricacid |
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