Engineered wood
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Engineered wood, also called composite wood, includes a range of derivative wood products which are manufactured by binding together wood strands, particles, fibers, or veneers with adhesives to form composite materials. These products are engineered to precise design specifications which are tested to meet national or international standards.
Typically, engineered wood products are made from the same hardwoods and softwoods used to manufacture lumber. Sawmill scraps and other wood waste can be used for engineered wood composed of wood particles or fibers, but whole logs are usually used for veneers, like plywood. Alternatively, it is also possible to manufacture similar engineered cellulosic products from other lignin-containing materials such as rye straw, wheat straw, hemp stalks, or sugar cane residue, in which case they contain no actual wood but rather vegetable fibers.
Characteristics
Engineered wood products are used in a variety of ways, often similarly to solid wood Engineered wood products are preferred over solid wood in many applications due to a certain comparative advantages:- Because engineered wood is man-made, it can be designed to meet application-specific performance requirements.
- Large panels of engineered wood may be constructed from small trees.
- Small pieces of wood and wood that has defects can be used in many engineered wood products, especially particle and fiber-based boards.
- Engineered wood products are often stronger and less prone to humidity-induced warping than equivalent solid woods, although most particle and fiber-based boards readily soak up water unless they are treated with sealant or at least paint.
Although engineered wood products use the resource of wood efficiently and therefore promote natural resource conservation, the required adhesives may be toxic.
Adhesives types are:
- Urea-formaldehyde resins, (UF), most common and cheapest, not waterproof
- Phenol-formaldehyde resins, (PF), a yellow-brown adhesive commonly used for exterior exposure products
- Melamine-formaldehyde resin, (MF) a white, heat and water resistant resin, often used in exposed surfaces in more costly designs
- Methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) or ethyl carbamate (urethane) resins which are expensive and generally waterproof do not contain formaldehyde
Types
- Glued laminated timber
- Veneer-based
- *Plywood
- *Laminated veneer lumber (LVL)
- *Stamina wood
- Parallam
- Parallel strand lumber
- Particle-based
- *Oriented strand board (OSB)
- *Waferboard
- *Particleboard (chipboard)
- Fiberboard
- *Insulation board
- *Homasote
- *Masonite
- *Medium-density fiberboard (MDF)
- *Hardboard
- Mineral-bonded particleboard and fiberboard
- *Cement board
- *Fiber cement siding
- *Gypsum board
- *Papercrete
- Strawboard
- Wood-plastic composite
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