Wood & Wood Derivatives
Wood & Wood Derivatives
Wood & Wood Derivatives
Galagali
Introduction Brick school of Architecture
Already taught in 1st year
Wood is a hard and fibrous substance which forms a major part of the trunk and branches of a
tree. It can also be defined as a natural polymeric material which practically does not age. Wood
as a building material falls in two major classes i,e, natural and man-made. With the advances in
science and technology, wood in its natural form as timber, lumber, etc. is being rapidly replaced
by composite wood materials in which natural wood is just a basic ingredient of a matrix or a
laminate. The latter are found to be more useful and adaptable as they may be treated chemically,
thermally or otherwise as per requirements. Some examples are plywood, fibreboards,
chipboards, compressed wood, impregnated wood, etc.
Wood has many advantages due to which it is preferred over many other building materials. It is
easily available (this won’t be true after some years) and easy to transport and handle, has more
thermal insulation, sound absorption and electrical resistance as compared to steel and concrete.
It is the ideal material to be used in sea water. Wood is a good absorber of shocks and so is
suitable for construction work in hilly areas which are more prone to earthquakes. Finally, since
wood can be easily worked, repairs and alterations to wood work can also be done easily. Owing
to the above mentioned advantages, wood is very widely used in buildings as doors, windows,
frames, temporary partition walls, etc. and in roof trusses and ceilings apart from formwork.
Battens: Timber pieces whose breadth and thickness do not exceed 50 mm.
Baulk: Roughly squared timber piece, it is obtained by removing bark and Sapwood. One cross
sectional dimension exceeds 50 mm, while the other exceeds 200mm.
Board: A plank with parallel sides. Its thickness is less than 50mm and width exceeds 150mm.
Deal: Piece of soft wood with parallel sides. Thickness varies from 50mm to 100mm and width
does not exceed 230mm.
Log: Trunk of tree obtained after removal of branches.
Plank: Timber pieces with parallel sides. Thickness less than 50mm and width exceeds 50mm.
Pole: Sound long log of wood, dia does not exceed 200mm, also known as spar.
Quartering: Square piece of timber, the length of side being 50mm to 150mm.
Scantling: Timber piece whose breadth and thickness exceed 50mm,but are less than 200mm in
length. These are the pieces of misc sizes of timber sawn out of a log.
Wood products/ Industrial Timber
Kindly refer text book Engineering Materials by S.C.Rangwala & P.C Varghese for this
topic
Many wood based products have been developed to economise on the use of timber. These
wood products are manufactured under controlled conditions in factories. As such, these have
desired shape and dimensions, appearance, strength and durability. Some of these are described
below.
1. Veeners (IS:303-1989)
The primary process in the manufacture of wood based products is veneering which produces
thin sheets of wood known as veneers. The thickness of veneers varies from 0.4 to 0.6 mm. In no
case it should exceed 1 mm. The most suitable wood for this purpose is walnut. However other
species like teak, sissoo, rose wood, etc. are also used. The logs to be used for this purpose are
kept in wet storage to avoid end splitting and are softened by heating with hot water or steam and
the bark is removed. The log is then cut to veneers. Depending on the cutting process, the
veneers are classified as rotary veneers (Fig. 4.23) and sliced veneers (Fig. 4.24). These are used
in the manufacture of plywood and other laminated boards.
2. Plywoods
A wood panel glued under pressure from an odd number (usually 3 to 13) of layers/piles of
veneers is known as plywood (Fig. 4.25). The outer most veneer sheets in a plywood panel are
called/faces. The interior ply/plies which have their grain directions parallel to that of the faces
are termed as core/centre. Other piles which have grain directions perpendicular to that in the
face are termed as cross bands.
Plywood may be classified upon direction of grains in the plies and on the type of adhesive used.
Normally the alternate plies are oriented at 30° or 60° in star plywood. The faces are arranged
with the grain at 45° to that of the centres in diagonal plywood. When the plies are bonded
together with water-soluble glues such as casein glue, interior grade plywood is obtained and
when bonded with phenol formaldehyde adhesive it is identified as exterior grade plywood
which is completely water proof.
Classification
Based on Grades: Plywood for general purposes should be of the following two grades,
depending upon the bond strength developed by the adhesive used for bonding the veneers:
(a) Boiling water resistant or BWR Grade, and
(b) Moisture resistant or MR Grade.
Based on Appearance: Plywood for general purposes should be classified into three types,
namely, AA, AB and BB based on the quality of the two surfaces, namely, A and B in terms of
general permissible defects. The type of plywood should, therefore, be designated by the kind
of surfaces of the panels. The better quality surface should be called 'face', and the opposite side
should be called 'back'. If the face and the back are of the same quality, they are not
distinguished.
The type of plywood would denote first the quality of face followed by the quality of back. For
example, Type AA should have both surfaces of quality A, Type AB should have face of quality
A and the back of quality B and Type BB should have both the surfaces of quality B.
The thickness of plywood boards for general and structural purposes should be as given in
Table 4.6.
Uses: They are widely used for wall and ceiling cladding, partitions, doors, perforated acoustic
tiles, railway carriages, bus bodies, etc.
Uses: These are widely used in buildings, partitions, ceilings, floor slabs, doors, furniture, etc.
Uses: These are extensively used for construction of railways carriages, bodies of buses,
marine and river crafts, partitions, furniture, etc.
Batten Boards and Lamin Boards:
Batten boards have core made up of 80 mm wide wood pieces as shown in Fig. 4.27, forming a
slab glued between at least two surface veneers. Whereas, Lamin boards have a core of strips,
each not exceeding 7 mm in thickness as shown in Fig. 4.28, glued together to form a slab which
in turn is glued between two or more outer veneers. The directions of the grains of the core block
run at right angles to that of the adjacent outer veneers.
In modern building practice, wood is extensively used for walls and floors of buildings,
carpentry and graded plank items, as well as prefabricated standard wooden cottages. A great
quantity of wood is consumed in building and installation work for making piles, poles, various
load-bearing components formworks, scaffolds, etc.
Wood materials and items used in building practice include round timber (log); sawn timber and
planks; floor materials—flooring boards, end-grain blocks and fibre board; carpentry items—
doors, windows, partitions, panels and gates; roof materials—shavings, tiles and shingles,
members of roof trusses; wooden structures—beams, columns, slabs, and items of prefabricated
houses.
Glued wood components—e.g., beams, trusses, arches, frames and roofs of buildings and
installations— are very effective in chemically aggressive media because their service life is 1.5
times greater than that of steel or reinforced concrete. However, the use of wood should be
economically justified and the possibility of replacing it with prefabricated concrete,
asbestoscement, gypsum, plastics and other items should be carefully considered.
The use of fibreboard, ply-boards in building practice provides a substantial saving both in
capital investments and running costs. The economy is provided, in the first place, by a more
complete utilization of raw materials for the manufacture of building materials and items. The
use of boards made of pressed wood shavings in dwelling house construction has a great
economical effect. Currently, wood waste is utilized to manufactures polymer and cement based
fibreboard and wood shavings board. This also allows manufacturing materials of better
physical, mechanical and decorative properties than wood.
Question Bank
2. What is plywood and where is it used with advantages? State its uses in modern buildings.
3. Differentiate between:
(a) Laminate & Veneer
(b) Softwood and Hardwood
(c) Natural and artificial seasoning
(d) Lamin board and batten board