Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
250378 Building and Environment 2006 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this study the surface roughness of plywood treated with various fire retardants was investigated. Commercially manufactured veneer of Akaba wood (Tetraberlinia bifoliolata  ) was treated with borax, boric acid, monoammonium phosphate and diammonium phosphate, then experimental plywood panels were made from these veneer sheets. A stylus method was employed to evaluate the surface characteristics of the samples. Three main roughness parameters, mean arithmetic deviation of profile (RaRa), mean peak-to-valley height (RzRz), and maximum roughness (RmaxRmax) obtained from the surface of plywood were used to evaluate the effect of chemical treatments on the surface characteristics of the specimens. Significant difference was determined (p=0.05p=0.05) between surface roughness parameters (RaRa, RzRz, RmaxRmax) for four treatments and two retentions of fire retardants. Samples treated with 3% concentration of borax had the smoothest surface with 11.09μmRaRa while the roughest surface was found for the samples treated with 6% boric acid having RaRa value of 12.44μm. Results revealed that the surface quality of the panels reduced with increasing chemical concentration.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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