Startseite Localization of Wood Improvement Compounds by Microautoradiography and ESEM
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Localization of Wood Improvement Compounds by Microautoradiography and ESEM

  • Marie Rosenqvist
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 1. Juni 2005
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Holzforschung
Aus der Zeitschrift Band 53 Heft 6

Summary

Environmental Scanning Electron Microscopy, ESEM, was used to investigate microautoradiographs of Scots pine (Pinus silvestris L.) sapwood painted with a priming oil containing 14C-labelled alkyd paint binders.

Microautoradiography is a photographic method which reveals the localization of compounds labelled with a radioactive isotope in the investigated material. The photographically developed silver grains in the microautoradiograph indicate where the labelled compounds are situated.

Microautoradiographs were investigated with ESEM in their natural state, without conventional preparation techniques which are time-consuming and may cause unwanted artefacts. It is demonstrated that the wood structure is clearly visible in the mainly transparent photographic film of the microautoradiographs. Images produced by the backscatter emission detector were of high quality, silver grains and wood structure are visible at the same time and the images are almost without artefacts due to charge built-up, which it is not possible to achieve using a conventional SEM.

The investigation of penetration into wood with microautoradiography can thus be conveniently evaluated by ESEM.

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Published Online: 2005-06-01
Published in Print: 1999-11-11

Copyright © 1999 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG

Artikel in diesem Heft

  1. Subject Index
  2. Author Index
  3. Species Index
  4. Contents
  5. Production of Polygalacturonase and Increase of Longitudinal Gas Permeability in Southern Pine by Brown-Rot and White-Rot Fungi
  6. Components of Steamed and Non-Steamed Japanese Larch (Larix leptolepis (Sieb. et Zucc.) Gord.) Heartwood Affecting the Feeding Behavior of the Subterranean Termite, Coptotermes formosanus Shiraki (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae)
  7. Effect of Soluble Nutrient Content in Wood on its Susceptibility to Soft Rot and Bacterial Attack in Ground Test
  8. Carboxylic Acids of Moroccan Pinus Pinaster Bark Extract
  9. What Factors Control Dimerization of Coniferyl Alcohol?
  10. Atmospheric Acetic Acid Pulping of Rice Straw IV: Physico-Chemical Characterization of Acetic Acid Lignins from Rice Straw and Woods. Part 2. Chemical Structures
  11. Rapid Determination of the Lignin Content in Sitka Spruce (Picea sitchensis (Bong.) Carr.) Wood by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectrometry
  12. Lignin Analysis by Permanganate Oxidation. II. Lignins in Acidic Organosolv Pulps
  13. Lignin Depolymerization in Hydrogen-Donor Solvents
  14. Species Effects on Wood-Liquefaction in Polyhydric Alcohols
  15. NMR Analysis of Oxidative Alkaline Extraction Stage Lignins
  16. Reduction of Weathering Degradation of Wood Through Plasma-Polymer Coating
  17. VOC Extraction from Softwood Through Low-Headspace Heating
  18. Localization of Wood Improvement Compounds by Microautoradiography and ESEM
  19. Laser Ablation of Machined Wood Surfaces. 2. Effect on End-Grain Gluing of Pine (Pinus silvestris L.)
  20. Multi-Component Mixture Modeling for the Dielectric Properties of Rubber Wood at Microwave Frequencies
  21. Adsorption of Liquids and Swelling of Wood IV. Temperature Dependence on the Adsorption
  22. Prevention of Extractive Leaching by Chemical Treatments of Wood Surface
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