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Wettability changes and mass loss during heat treatment of wood
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Mohammed Hakkou
Published/Copyright:
June 1, 2005
Published Online: 2005-06-01
Published in Print: 2005-01-01
©2004 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
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Articles in the same Issue
- Effect of juvenile wood on strength properties and dimensional stability of black spruce medium-density fiberboard panels
- Hot-pressing stress graded aspen veneer for laminated veneer lumber (LVL)
- Internal stresses in glulam due to moisture gradients in the grain direction
- Influence of grain direction in vibrational wood welding
- Evaluation of heat-treated wood swelling by differential scanning calorimetry in relation to chemical composition
- Wettability changes and mass loss during heat treatment of wood
- Inverse analysis of the transient bound water diffusion in wood
- The creep of wood destabilized by change in moisture content. Part 2: The creep behaviors of wood during and immediately after adsorption
- On some physical properties of six aspen clones
- Changes in color and structure of birch wood (Betula pendula) caused by bleaching with hydrogen peroxide solution
- Enhanced wet tensile paper properties via dielectric-barrier discharge
- Survival of bacteria on wood and plastic particles: Dependence on wood species and environmental conditions
- Microdistribution of copper in copper-ethanolamine (Cu-EA) treated southern yellow pine (Pinus spp.) related to density distribution
- Investigations on ribosomal DNA of indoor wood decay fungi for their characterization and identification
- Bioactive phenolic substances in important tree species. Part 3: Knots and stemwood of Acacia crassicarpa and A. mangium
- Cellulose microfibrils: A novel method of preparation using high shear refining and cryocrushing
Keywords for this article
chemical modification;
contact angle;
heat treatment;
wettability;
wood
Articles in the same Issue
- Effect of juvenile wood on strength properties and dimensional stability of black spruce medium-density fiberboard panels
- Hot-pressing stress graded aspen veneer for laminated veneer lumber (LVL)
- Internal stresses in glulam due to moisture gradients in the grain direction
- Influence of grain direction in vibrational wood welding
- Evaluation of heat-treated wood swelling by differential scanning calorimetry in relation to chemical composition
- Wettability changes and mass loss during heat treatment of wood
- Inverse analysis of the transient bound water diffusion in wood
- The creep of wood destabilized by change in moisture content. Part 2: The creep behaviors of wood during and immediately after adsorption
- On some physical properties of six aspen clones
- Changes in color and structure of birch wood (Betula pendula) caused by bleaching with hydrogen peroxide solution
- Enhanced wet tensile paper properties via dielectric-barrier discharge
- Survival of bacteria on wood and plastic particles: Dependence on wood species and environmental conditions
- Microdistribution of copper in copper-ethanolamine (Cu-EA) treated southern yellow pine (Pinus spp.) related to density distribution
- Investigations on ribosomal DNA of indoor wood decay fungi for their characterization and identification
- Bioactive phenolic substances in important tree species. Part 3: Knots and stemwood of Acacia crassicarpa and A. mangium
- Cellulose microfibrils: A novel method of preparation using high shear refining and cryocrushing