Abstract In order to construct sustainable and approachable buildings it is necessary to develop efficient building materials (thermal insulation, structural and sound-absorbing) with lower environmental impact, especially regarding the carbon… Click to show full abstract
Abstract In order to construct sustainable and approachable buildings it is necessary to develop efficient building materials (thermal insulation, structural and sound-absorbing) with lower environmental impact, especially regarding the carbon footprint. Therefore, this study examines a wood-plastic composite (WPC) from wood bark particles and rapeseed oil-based binding material. The advantage of this WPC is sufficient thermal insulation and self-bearing properties for structural application. Additionally, thermal treatment or loading conditions during production are not required, which is energy and cost-efficient. WPCs were produced from different ratios of binding material and wood bark particles, 0.70, 0.75, 0.80, 0.85, 0.90, 0.95 and 1.0. The highest strength characteristics are found with the WPC-0.85 samples, however, water resistance properties such as water absorption and thickness swelling after 28 days of immersion are only reasonable. The WPC obtained at 0.85 binding material/wood bark particles ratio is characterised by density – 357 kg/m3, thermal conductivity – 0.0706 W/(m·K), compressive strength – 1.8 MPa, bending strength – 1.2 MPa, tensile strength – 0.23 MPa, water absorption by total immersion – 38.2 vol% and thickness swelling – 2.5%.
               
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