首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 78 毫秒
1.
This study is evaluated by measuring the weight loss, and the ability of white- and brown-rot fungi and termites to attack untreated and boron-treated blockboard manufactured using untreated fir (Abies bornmulleriana M.) strips sandwiched between Ekaba (Tetraberlinia bifoliolata Harms.) veneers at final assembly. The veneers were treated with either boric acid or disodium octoborate tetrahydrate, or mixtures of these chemicals, and blockboard specimens were subjected to fungal decay resistance tests performed according to the Japanese Industrial Standard (JIS) A-9201 method using the brown-rot fungus Fomitopsis palustris (Berkeley et Curtis) Murrill and the white-rot fungus, Trametes versicolor (L. ex Fr.) Quel. Blockboard specimens were also tested against the subterranean termite Coptotermes formosanus Shiraki to determine termite resistance. Blockboard specimens with boron-treated veneers demonstrated increased durability against decay fungi and termite attack. However, sealing of untreated fir strips before decay resistance tests helped reduce significantly the weight losses in blockboard with either untreated or boron-treated veneers. Although blockboard is usually used in indoor applications, incorporation of boron-based biocides may be required for increasing resistance to fungal decay and termite attack and giving fire retardancy.  相似文献   

2.
Natural decay resistance of teak wood grown in home-garden forestry and the factors influencing decay resistance were determined in comparison with that of a typical forest plantation. Accelerated laboratory tests were conducted on 1800 wood samples drawn from 15 trees of three planted sites. Analysis of variance based on a univariate mixed model showed that planted site, fungal species, and their interaction terms were important sources of variation in decay resistance. With increasing decay resistance from centre to periphery of the heartwood, radial position was a critical factor and the interaction effect of fungal species × radial position was significant in influencing the durability. No significant differences were found in decay resistance either between the opposite radii or due to the various possible interaction terms of radii with the site, fungal species and radial position. There were significant differences in decay resistance against brown-rot fungi between wet and dry sites of home-garden teak although differences against white-rot fungi were non-significant among the three planted sites. Polyporus palustris was the more aggressive brown-rot fungus than Gloeophyllum trabeum. The higher susceptibility of wet site home-garden teak to brown-rot decay was associated with a paler colour of the wood and lower extractive content.  相似文献   

3.
Medium density fiberboard (MDF) production worldwide is increasing due to the development of new manufacturing technologies. As a result, MDF products are increasingly utilized in traditional wood applications that require fungal and insect resistance. This study evaluated the ability of white and brown rot fungi and termites to decompose MDF consisting of different wood species by measuring weight loss. Furnish in the boards was prepared from heart and sapwood portions of pine (Pinus nigra Arnold var. pallasiana), beech (Fagus orientalis Lipsky), and European oak (Quercus robur L.) species. Fungal decay resistance tests were performed according to ASTM D 2017-81 standard method using two brown-rot fungi, Gloeophyllum trabeum (Pers. ex Fr.) Murr. (Mad 617), Postia placenta (Fries) M. Larsen et Lombard (Mad 698), and one white-rot fungus, Trametes versicolor (L. ex Ft.) Pilat (Mad 697). MDF and wood specimens were also bioassayed against the eastern subterranean termite, Reticulitermes flavipes (Kollar) in order to determine termite resistance of the specimens. MDF specimens containing oak and mixed furnish demonstrated increased durability against decay fungi. Only pine, oak, and mixed MDF specimens met the 25% or less weight loss limit to be classified resistant according to ASTM D 2017-81 standard method. Overall, MDF specimens made from oak showed better performance than oak solid wood specimens. Accelerated aging according to ASTM D 1037-96a standard method before fungal bioassay decreased fungal resistance of the specimens. In contrast to the fungal bioassay, MDF specimens made from beech and mixed furnish showed decreased weight losses from termite attack after 4 weeks. However, none of the MDF specimens were resistant to termite attack. In severe conditions, the MDFs may require the incorporation of chemical biocides prior to board production for increasing the resistance of MDF to termite attack.  相似文献   

4.
In this study, we tested tetraethoxysilane and methyltriethoxysilane as modifying silicon-based compounds for their potential to limit boron leachability from modified wood and to increase biological durability of the wood against fungi and termites. Both the silane compounds were used in silane state where acidified ethanol was added and stirred at ambient temperature for 30 min. We used two different processes for preservative treatments: double treatment and single treatment. In double treatment, the specimens from sugi wood were first treated with boric acid at 1% concentration and subsequently treated with the silanes. In single treatment, boric acid was mixed with the silane compounds in the silane state yielding 1% boric acid concentration. Subsequent to the treatments, wood specimens were subjected to laboratory leaching tests, and leachates were analyzed for boron content with an inductively coupled plasma (ICP) spectrometry. ICP analyses showed that silane treatments were able to limit boron leaching from treated wood by about 40% in all cases for each silane compound. Wood specimens were then subjected to laboratory termite and decay resistance tests using the subterranean termites, Coptotermes formosanus, and the wood decaying fungi, Fomitopsis palustris and Trametes versicolor. Termite and fungal decay resistance tests revealed that resistance of modified wood with the silane and boron compounds increased when compared to untreated and boron-only treated wood specimens. More in-depth studies on the mechanisms of interactions between the silicon compounds, boron elements and wood components are in progress.  相似文献   

5.
The heartwood of Caesalpinia echinata Lam. (Leguminosae) (commonly called brazilwood) is used for violin bow manufacture due to the unique vibrational and physical properties found in the wood. In the present work, the effects of Pycnoporus sanguineus (white-rot fungus), Gloeophyllum trabeum (brown-rot fungus), Chaetomium globosum (soft-rot fungus), and Cryptotermes brevis (dry-wood termite) on weight losses and chemical composition of extractives and cell-wall polysaccharides of C. echinata wood were investigated under laboratory conditions and compared to those obtained for Anadenanthera macrocarpa, Eucalyptus grandis, and Pinus elliottii. The heartwood of C. echinata was found to be as resistant as A. macrocarpa to the decay fungi tested and to the attack of the dry-wood termite. Pinitol and galactopinitol A were the main sugar alcohols found in the extractives of wood of C. echinata, their presence, however, did not appear related to the resistance to fungal decay. Although only incipient stages of decay were found, the modifications in cell-wall polysaccharide composition of heartwood of C. echinata by rot fungi were related to decrease in polymers other than xylans. The high resistance of C. echinata to xylophages is probably due to the presence of toxic extractives in the wood.  相似文献   

6.
China fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata var. lanceolata) and maple (Acer sp.) wood were etherified with isopropyl glycidyl ether and the decay resistance and light stability of the modified wood were assessed. CP/MAS (13)C NMR and FT-IR analyses indicated that new ether bonds containing isopropyl groups formed after reacting wood with isopropyl glycidyl ether. Modified wood samples were very resistant to decay when exposed to brown-rot fungus Laetiporus sulphureus or white-rot fungus Lenzites betulina for 60 days in the soil-block test. The isopropyl glycidyl ether treatment of wood was effective in decreasing formation of phenoxyl radicals upon UV irradiation and thus protecting wood from photodiscoloration.  相似文献   

7.
Particleboard specimens produced by adding waste tire rubber particles were assayed against white- and brown-rot fungi and termites in laboratory conditions. Particleboards were manufactured from a mixture of pine and poplar particles bonded with two different resins (melamine/urea formaldehyde [MUF] and polyisocyanate [PI]) by adding waste tire rubber particles at three different levels (10%/90%, 20%/80%, and 30%/70% by weight of waste tire rubber/wood). The particleboard specimens with waste tire rubber were not generally resistant against four fungi tested. Only MUF-containing specimens showed considerably better performance in decay resistance tests using the brown-rot fungus, Postia placenta; however, addition of waste tire rubber into those specimens did not provide resistance in comparison with control specimens without tire rubber. Formosan termites were also able to degrade particleboard specimens with waste tire rubber.  相似文献   

8.
Biocides must be developed for controlling mould establishment on cellulose-based building materials. Accordingly, biocides intended for indoor applications must be non-toxic, non-volatile, odourless, hypoallergenic, and able to provide long-term protection under conditions of high humidity. Multi-component biocide systems were tested in American Wood-Preservers’ Association soil block tests for inhibition of brown-rot and white-rot decay fungi and American Society for Testing and Materials standard tests for inhibition of mould fungi and termites. Multi-component systems combining a borate base supplemented with either 0.1% azole or 0.5% thujaplicin, performed well against the two brown-rot fungi Postia placenta and Gloeophyllum trabeum; the white-rot fungus Coriolus versicolor; the three mould fungi Aspergillus niger, Penicillium chrysogenum, and Trichoderma viride; and the subterranean termite Reticulitermes flavipes (Kollar). It was concluded that for interior applications borate-based multi-component biocide systems can protect wood from decay fungi, mould fungi, and termites, and that a system containing thiabendazole provided protection at a lower retention than the other biocides in this study. Synergy was observed between the borate base and voriconazole in inhibition of mould.  相似文献   

9.
Proteins expressed by the brown-rot fungus Gloeophyllum trabeum were characterized from inoculated southern yellow pine sapwood undergoing decay, from pure cultures of the fungus and from uninoculated pinewood. Analysis was carried out by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and MALDI-TOF/TOF/MS. No proteins were detected from the clean uncontaminated wood. The inoculated wood undergoing active brown-rot decay produced 76 proteins, including the Fenton-chemistry related enzymes, alcohol oxidase, lipoxygenase, and catalase. One hundred and eleven proteins were detected from the pure culture and most were common metabolic proteins. A majority of proteins in both samples were identified as hypothetical proteins. A surprising result is that there was very little overlap between proteins found in both sets of samples, indicating a very different mechanism in action when the fungus is growing on a cellulose-based nutrient source (wood) versus glucose media. This study also highlights a current limitation of this approach, which is the limited protein and genomic sequence information annotated on the public databases. Of the 187 proteins characterized, only 36 were identified with confidence. To our knowledge, this is the first reported proteomic analysis of pinewood decayed by a brown-rot fungus and provides the initial characterization of proteins involved in this type of wood biodeterioration. Although significant limitations still exist in identifying the proteins, this limitation will diminish as functional proteins are identified and added to the databases.  相似文献   

10.
Nanotechnology has the potential to affect the field of wood preservation through the creation of new and unique metal biocides with improved properties. This study evaluated leachability and efficacy of southern yellow pine wood treated with copper, zinc, or boron nanoparticles against mould fungi, decay fungi, and Eastern subterranean termites. Results showed that nanocopper with and without surfactant, nanozinc, and nanozinc plus silver with surfactant resisted leaching compared with metal oxide controls. Nearly all nanoboron and boric acid was released from the treated wood specimens during leaching. Mould fungi were moderately inhibited by nanozinc oxide with surfactant, but the other nanometal preparations did not significantly inhibit mould fungi. Mass loss from Gloeophyllum trabeum was significantly inhibited by all copper preparations, while Antrodia sp. was not inhibited by nanometal treatments. Nanometals imparted high resistance in southern yellow pine to the white-rot fungus, Trametes versicolor. Unleached specimens treated with nanoboron or nanozinc plus surfactant caused 100% and 31% mortality, respectively. All specimens treated with nanozinc or nanozinc plus silver inhibited termite feeding, but the copper treatments were less effective against termites. Nanozinc possessed the most favorable properties: leach resistance, termite mortality, and inhibition of termite feeding and decay by the white-rot fungus.  相似文献   

11.
This study evaluated the relative ability of various combinations of copper sulfate with either boric acid or calcium-precipitating agent, N′-N-(1, 8-naphthalyl) hydroxylamine (NHA-Na), to inhibit fungal degradation and attack by Formosan subterranean termites (Coptotermes formosanus Shiraki). Wood specimens were treated with either 1%, 0.5%, or 0.1% concentrations of copper sulfate, boric acid, NHA-Na, copper sulfate + boric acid, or copper sulfate + NHA-Na mixtures. Treated specimens were subjected to laboratory decay-resistance tests by using petri dishes inoculated with the Basidiomycetes fungi Tyromyces palustris and Trametes versicolor for 12 weeks. Treated wood specimens were also subjected to termite-resistance tests under laboratory conditions. Increased efficacy of copper sulfate against the brown-rot fungus T. palustris was observed when either boric acid or NHA-Na was added. The most effective treatments against the fungi tested were NHA-Na only treatments at 1% and 0.5% concentration levels. Boric acid treatments were not able to protect wood against decay after leaching because of excessive leaching of boron. Similar results were obtained in termite-resistance tests in comparison with decay-resistance tests. These results indicate that the efficacy of the treatments in preventing fungal and termite attack is a function of the type of preservative.  相似文献   

12.
Decay and termite resistance of wood treated with tar oil obtained from a commercial pyrolysis process of macadamia nut shells was evaluated. Vacuum-treated pinewood specimens were subjected to two brown- and two white-rot fungi based on the soil-block test method specified by the American Wood Protection Association after a 10-day-leaching process. Treated specimens were also subjected to the subterranean termite attack according to Japanese Industrial Standards (JIS) for 3 weeks under laboratory conditions. In the study, growth inhibition of selected fungi with the tar oil was also tested in vitro. Treated wood specimens at a retention level of 460 kg m−3 showed good protection against all the fungi tested. Mass losses in leached specimens were less than those observed in unleached specimens. Similar results were seen when the specimens were subjected to termite attack. Inhibition tests showed that higher concentrations of the tar oil are critical for inhibition of the brown-rot fungi compared to the concentrations required to impede the white-rot and sap-staining fungi tested.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Low molecular weight iron-binding compounds are produced by the brown-rot fungus Gloeophyllum trabeum. These chelators may function in scavenging transition metals for fungal metabolism and extracellular enzyme production. Because of the low molecular mass of the chelate-metal complex (below 1000 Da), and the oxidizing potential of the bound transition metals, certain chelating compounds could also play a role in the early stages of cellulose depolymerization by brown-rot fungi. High-affinity iron-binding compounds were isolated and partially purified from both liquid cultures of the brown-rot Gloeophyllum trabeum and from infected wood. Chelating compounds purified by thin-layer chromatography were used to prepare specific antibodies. These antibodies were shown to detect the chelator in infected wood and liquid fungal cultures by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and could be used in immunotransmission electron microscopy to visualize the high-affinity iron-binding compounds in situ. Elucidating the physiological roles of fungal chelate-metal complexes and determining their function in lignocellulose depolymerization will help us to better understand the mechanism of wood biodegradation.Publication no. 1549 Maine Agricultural Experiment Station Offprint requests to: J. Jellison  相似文献   

14.
Xylanase, oxidative enzymes and iron-binding compounds were detected in the filtrates of Wolfiporia cocos and Poria medula-panis grown in wheat bran liquid medium. Xylanase and iron-binding compounds were produced at high levels by the brown-rot fungus (BR) W. cocos and at low levels by the white-rot fungus (WR) P. medula-panis. Phenoloxidase was produced only by P. medula-panis. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) (SDS-PAGE) showed a wide variety of bands for extracellular proteins produced by W.cocos, with low molecular weight (<30 kDa) and minor bands with molecular weight above 45 kDa. Two bands with xylanase activity derived from W. cocos extracts were detected in the gels, whereas many different bands with xylanase activity were found in the extracts from P. medula-panis. P. medula-panis is a selective lignin degrader, whereas W. cocos preferentially removes cellulose from wood.  相似文献   

15.
Poplar wood (Populus ussuriensis Kom) was modified by a novel combined two-step treatment to improve its decay resistance. Maleic Anhydride (MAN) was first employed to swell and bond to wood cell wall, and then mixed monomers of glycidyl methacrylate/methyl methacrylate (GMA/MMA) were used to graft copolymerization within wood cell lumen. The swelling and bonding of cell wall by MAN, interfacial compatibility between resultant polymer from GMA/MMA monomers and wood cell wall, and decay resistance of all composites were tested and analyzed by Scanning electron microscopy–Energy dispersive X-ray (SEM–EDX), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) apparatus. The results indicate that the volume of poplar wood treated by MAN swells about 9% with about 15% of weight percent gain, and MAN chemically bonds to the cell wall through substitution reaction with hydroxyl group, and the grafting adduct mainly remains as an amorphous form. The resultant Poplar-MAN shows improved decay resistance of 69.79% against brown fungus (Gloeophyllum trabeum (Pers. ex Fr.) Murr.) and 81.42% against white fungus (Phanerochaete chrysosporium Burdsall.) over those of untreated Poplar, respectively. After the combined two-step treatment, GMA and MMA are copolymerized within wood cell lumen, and the resultant polymer is also grafted onto wood cell wall, resulting in the improvement of interfacial compatibility between polymer and wood substance without obvious gaps. The decay resistance of the resultant composite from the combined two-step treatment against the brown decay fungus and the white decay fungus is improved by 97.64% and 99.17%, respectively, compared with those of untreated poplar wood; and also more excellent than those of MMA treated wood, GMA/MMA monomers treated wood, organic 3-Iodo-2-Propynyl Butyl Carbamate (IPBC) treated wood and inorganic boron compounds treated wood, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Bioincising is a biotechnological process that aims at the improvement of wood preservative uptake in wood species with a low permeability, such as Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst). The process is based on a short-term pre-treatment with white-rot fungus Physisporinus vitreus. During incubation the membranes of bordered and half bordered pits are supposed to be degraded by fungal activity resulting in a better treatability of the wood structure for wood preservatives. In the present study, first of all the resistance of bioincised Norway spruce heartwood and untreated controls against blue-stain and wood-decay fungi (white- and brown-rot) was determined. Then, bioincised and untreated specimens were dipped or vacuum impregnated with six wood preservatives and substance uptake was assessed gravimetrically. Additionally, the penetration of 3-iodo-2-propynyl butylcarbamate (IPBC) into the wood was analyzed by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). Finally, wood resistance was assessed according to the European standards EN 152 and EN 113. Results showed no difference between bioincised wood without preservatives and the untreated wood against blue-stain discolouration. However, a significant (P < 0.05) increase in susceptibility against wood decay was recorded. In the bioincised wood samples a significantly higher uptake of all the different preservatives was determined and the HPLC-method revealed that IPBC penetrated deeper into bioincised wood than into control samples. The improved uptake of preservatives into bioincised wood resulted in a significantly higher resistance against white- and brown-rot fungi. However, only a slight protection against wood discolouration by blue-stain fungi was recorded. The results of this study show for the first time that the biotechnological process with P. vitreus can be used to improve wood durability by increasing the uptake and penetration of wood preservatives.  相似文献   

17.
Wood-feeding, nesting and production of secondary reproductives are key determinant traits of invasive species of drywood termites, and the West Indian drywood termite Cryptotermes brevis (Walker) is one of their major examples of worldwide concern as pest species of structural lumber, furniture and other wood products. The problem and losses by this species are determined by the prevailing wood characteristics. However, despite the current widespread occurrence of this species in the tropics, except Asia, tropical wood resistance and underlying mechanisms of resistance against this termite are scarcely known. Nonetheless, wood hardness and particularly wood density were recently recognized as important underlying traits for C. brevis resistance in tropical woods, but the chemical wood constituents were not considered. Here, we assessed tropical wood resistance to the invasive termite species Cbrevis and tested the relevance of their holocellulose, lignin and (total) extractive contents preventing termite infestation. Free-choice and no-choice tests were carried out in parallel with wood chemical characterization. Resistance to the West Indian termite varied with wood species in terms of both colonization and consumption, but only under free-choice testing because without choice, no significant difference was detected among wood species. Regardless, none of these traits were significantly correlated with wood resistance to C. brevis. Therefore, wood physical resistance, particularly wood density, seems the main recognized determinant of tropical wood resistance against the West Indian drywood termite. The pattern of termite movement on the surface of soft, mid and hard wood was also consistent with this conclusion.  相似文献   

18.
The susceptibility of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) sap- and heartwood against the wood decaying brown-rot fungus (Coniophora puteana) was investigated after long-term forest fertilization at three different sites in central Finland. Different wood properties: wood extractives, wood chemistry, and wood anatomy were used to explain sap- and heartwood decay. Scots pine sapwood was more susceptible to decay than its heartwood. In one site, sapwood seemed to be more resistant to wood decay after forest fertilization whereas the susceptibility of heartwood increased. Significant changes in the sapwood chemistry were found between treatment and sites, however, no relationship between wood chemistry and wood decay was observed in the factor analysis. The results of this study show that there was an inconsistent relationship between decay susceptibility and fertilization and the measured physical and chemical attributes of the wood were not consistently correlated with the decay rate.  相似文献   

19.
Lu JZ  Duan X  Wu Q  Lian K 《Bioresource technology》2008,99(13):5906-5914
Wood–polymer composites (WPC) have been extensively used for building products, outdoor decking, automotive, packaging materials, and other applications. WPC is subject to fungal and termite attacks due to wood components enveloped in the thermoplastic matrix. Much effort has been made to improve decay resistance of WPC using zinc borate and other chemicals. In this study, chitosan copper complex (CCC) compounds were used as a potential preservative for wood–HDPE composites. CCC was formulated by reacting chitosan with copper salts under controlled conditions. Inductively coupled plasma (ICP) analytical results indicated that chitosan had high chelating efficiency with copper cations. CCC-treated wood–HDPE composites had a thermal behavior similar to untreated and zinc borate-treated wood–HDPE composites. Incorporation of CCC in wood–HDPE composites did not significantly influence board density of the resultant composites, but had a negative effect on tensile strength at high CCC concentration. In comparison with solid wood and the untreated wood–HDPE composites, 3% CCC-treated wood–HDPE composites significantly improved the decay resistance against white rot fungus Trametes versicolor and brown rot fungus Gloeophyllum trabeum. Especially, CCC-treated wood–HDPE composites were more effectively against the brown rot than the untreated and chitosan-treated wood–HDPE composites. Moreover, CCC-treated wood–HDPE composites performed well as zinc borate-treated wood–HDPE composites on fungal decay resistance. Accordingly, CCC can be effectively used as a preservative for WPC.  相似文献   

20.
In this work, the resistance of black pine wood (Pinus nigra L.) vacuum-treated with zinc oxide, zinc borate and copper oxide nanoparticles against mold and decay fungi and the subterranean termites was evaluated. Some of the nanocompounds tested were forced with acrylic emulsions to avoid leaching. Results showed that mold fungi were slightly inhibited by nanozinc borate, while the other nanometal preparations did not inhibit mold fungi. Mass loss from fungal attack by Trametes versicolor was significantly inhibited by the zinc-based preparations, while the brown-rot fungus, Tyromyces palustris was not inhibited by the nanometal treatments. Notably, nanozinc borate plus acrylic emulsion imparted very high resistance in pine wood to the white-rot fungus, T. versicolor with a mass loss of 1.8%. Following leaching, all pine specimens treated with nanozinc borate, with or without acrylic emulsion, strongly inhibited termite feeding, i.e. mass losses varying at 5.2–5.4%. In contrast, the copper-based treatments were much less effective against the subterranean termites, Coptotermes formosanus. In general, nanozinc borate possessed favorable properties, that is, inhibition of termite feeding and decay by T. versicolor.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号