Options
Fire resistance of wood treated with a cationic silica sol
ISSN
0018-3768
Date Issued
2013
Author(s)
Pries, Malte
DOI
10.1007/s00107-013-0674-7
Abstract
Wood was treated with the cationic silica sol (CSS) Levasil 200S and dried at various temperatures (room temperature, 40, 60, 80 and 103 A degrees C). A water leaching test revealed fixation of the silica in wood even after drying at room temperature. Maximum cross sectional swelling of the specimens decreased from 15.6 % (untreated control) to 13.0 %, when treated wood was dried at 103 A degrees C; cell wall bulking values were also negative (-2.3 %), indicating a thermal degradation of the cell wall polymers catalyzed by the CSS. Penetration of the CSS into the cell wall did not occur. A simple flammability test revealed increased fire resistance of the treated wood. Mass loss and velocity of mass loss as well as burning time were reduced; glowing of the formed charcoal was completely prevented. The effectiveness increased with increasing weight percent gain of the CSS in the wood. Thermo gravimetric analysis under nitrogen atmosphere displayed only minor reduction in the initial temperature of thermal decomposition for wood treated with CSS as compared to the control. In the presence of oxygen the resulting charcoal showed comparable thermal behaviour to the control. The yield of charcoal after pyrolysis was increased to a minor extent (from 19.9 to 23.0 %), indicating that the release of combustible gases was hardly reduced. The mode of action of enhanced fire resistance due to CSS-treatment is discussed.
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
107_2013_Article_674.pdf
Size
367.71 KB
Checksum (MD5)
535eedf46cb926ee304a3bae4f75c767