Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5365283 | Applied Surface Science | 2007 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Two European oak species (Q. petraea and Q. robur) have a high content of phenols which may participate in the alteration of colour upon UV irradiation. To study the photodegradation process of oak surfaces, the two oak species extractives, vescalagin, castalagin, ellagic acid and gallic acid were analysed quantitatively by HPLC before and after UV irradiation. Irradiation time was altered between 3, 24, 72, 96, 120, 144, 192 and 216Â h. In parallel, any colour changes of Oak wood surface was followed after 120Â h of UV-irradiation by measuring CIELAB parameters (DL*, Da*, Db* and DE*). We observed that 60% of total phenol content of extractives decreased after the maximal exposure time. Our findings also showed that castalagin and gallic acid were destroyed after 216Â h and vescalagin and ellagic acid after 72Â h. This study proves the photosenibility of oakwood extractives which, supplementary to lignin degradation, would strongly result in the discolouration of oak heartwood.
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Authors
S. Zahri, C. Belloncle, F. Charrier, P. Pardon, S. Quideau, B. Charrier,