Supercritical CO2 dewatering of green wood creates timber with unique properties due to the removal of sap directly from cell lumens as a result of cycling between supercritical and gas… Click to show full abstract
Supercritical CO2 dewatering of green wood creates timber with unique properties due to the removal of sap directly from cell lumens as a result of cycling between supercritical and gas phases. The susceptibility of 22 softwoods and hardwoods to shrinkage, collapse and checking during dewatering and oven-drying was investigated. The results were compared to green control specimens that were directly oven-dried. Dewatering efficiency was highly variable amongst species and was highest (93–94%) for the permeable sapwood of four softwoods and lowest for the impermeable heartwood of two hardwoods and two softwoods (4–27%). In general, there was less collapse after dewatering followed by oven-drying than after oven-drying alone, more so in hardwoods than softwoods. Six species (a softwood and five hardwoods) displayed strong collapse. Checking was more prevalent after CO2 dewatering and oven-drying than after oven-drying alone. The supercritical dewatering treatment alone did not induce collapse or internal checking; however, for collapse-prone timber either collapse or internal checking, or a combination of both, was induced on subsequent oven-drying.
               
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