Posted by
Numanco Rubber on Thursday, April 02, 2009 5:00:00 PM
Wood plastic composites,
often used for such things as outdoor decking, are one of the fastest growing
components of the wood composites industry. Some projections have suggested
that these products, which were used for less than 1 percent of decking in the
mid-1990s, may capture 20 percent of that market by 2010.
"Composite
products made from wood and plastic are highly desirable for their low
maintenance and ability to resist rot," said Kaichang Li, an associate
professor in the OSU Department of Wood Science and Engineering. "But
their use has been limited because of high cost and low strength, a result of
inadequate adhesion between the wood fibers and plastic."
Fundamentally, Li
said, this is because wood and plastic are like oil and water, and do not mix
well. Wood is hydrophilic – it absorbs water – and plastic is hydrophobic,
repelling it. A "compatibilizer," typically a polymer that bridges
the interface between the wood and plastic in these products, improves stress
transfer and increases their strength and stiffness.
The new wood plastic composites use superior
compatibilizers developed in Li's laboratory, and an innovative technology for
mixing wood and thermoplastics such as nylons, in which the melting temperature
of the plastic is higher than the wood degradation temperature.
With this approach,
the new wood-plastic composites
can use very inexpensive plastics such as those found in old carpet fibers –
about 4.4 billion pounds of which are now wasted every year, going into
landfills where they are extremely slow to biodegrade and pose a significant
waste disposal problem.
They could also open
the door for improved utilization of low-grade woody biomass from needed
thinning of Oregon
forests, which is increasingly being done to improve forest health and prevent
catastrophic wildfire. A better "value added" use for that wood fiber
could be important, experts say.
The technology may
prompt a major expansion of the wood plastic
composite industry into new types of products and uses, experts say. In
particular, such products may help further replace wood treated with chemical
preservatives, some of which have already been banned due to health and
environmental concerns.