But a Texas forestry sciences researcher may have a straight-forward computer model just around the bend, saving millions for wood manufacturers and consumers.
"Wood is an old material that has been used in construction for thousands of years," said Dr. Zhiyong Cai, Texas Agricultural Experiment Station forest products researcher. "Every place in the world uses wood products, but there still are things we don't understand such as variability and moisture-related problems such as decay and warping."
Cai's study examines a new technique to understand why and how wood for walls, furniture and cabinets warps when moisture gradient is present.
"We have to understand warping in order to solve it and prevent it," Cai said. "My study aims at giving wood manufacturers good tools with which to make the right decisions in manufacturing."
According to the Composite Panel Association, warping is a leading technical problem for the industry.
"Severe warping of finished products has the potential to damage a manufacturer's reputation and significantly increase the cost of making the product," said Cai, noting that often the wood product leaves a factory looking straight only to warp later.
Warping has been studied for a long time, Cai said, but the existing warping control model for manufacturing composite wood has been one-dimensional and has not been updated in almost 40 years.
"Wood composite panels are two-dimensional and can be regarded as a multi-layered product in which each layer has different behaviors, especially when they experience moisture gradients through their thickness," Cai said.
His study developed a two-dimensional warping model based on the mechanics of layered
composites. Using commercial spreadsheet software and a complicated math formula, wood
panels are modeled as having
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Contact: Kathleen Phillips
ka-phillips@tamu.edu
979-845-2872
Texas A&M University - Agricultural Communications
14-Apr-2003