Title: Wood Preservation
1Wood Preservation
2Wood enemies
- Wood staining fungi
- Wood decay fungi types
- Brown rots
- White rots
- Soft rots
3Wood Enemies Borers - Beetles
4Wood Enemies Termites
5Characteristics of wood preservatives
- Toxicity - poisonous to fungi and insects
- Penetration capacity
- Fixation capacity chemically stable
- Retention capacity
- Distribution in the wood
- Availability
- Economical
- Eco friendly
- Should not Leached into soil and water
6Wood Preservative Chemicals
- Tar oil Preservative eg. Creosote
- Organic solvent Preservatives
- Water-borne Preservatives
7Tar oil Preservative eg. Creosote
- Railway Sleepers Transmission Poles
- USA STC
Kaldemulla 2010 - S
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9Tar oil Preservative eg. Creosote
- Produced as distillate of coal tar
- Very effective against wide range of organisms
- Pressure-treated timber service life of 30 -50
years even in high hazard situations - But odour, taint food not suitable for indoor
use - Treated wood cannot be painted, surface becomes
greasy
10Tar oil Preservative eg. Creosote
- In Sri Lanka STC use creosote to treat railway
sleepers and transmission poles - Decline in creosote use in some countries
11Organic solvent preservatives
- Biocidal (Insecticides or fungicides) dissolved
in organic solvent - Solvent can be
- Oily type (heavy fuel oil)
- Medium heavy type (kerosene or petrol)
- Light type (white spirits)
- Applied by brushing, dipping, spraying or double
vacuum treatment
12Organic solvent preservatives
13Organic solvent preservatives
- Used as pre-treatment of building timber
- Used as remedial treatment of wood in buildings
following fungal or insect infestations
14Fungicides in Organic solvent preservatives
- Pentachlorophenol PCP Na PCP
- Effective fungicide
- Used to control blue stain
- attack of rubberwood
- Now banned
- Cu and Zn Naphthenates -
15Insecticides in Organic solvent preservatives
- Chlorinated hydrocarbons
- Aldrin, dieldrin - Banned in many countries
(persistent in env) - Lindane
- Organophospahtes
- Synthetic pyrethroids
- Permenthryn, cypermethrin,
- deltamethrin
Low persistence in env. Low mammalian toxicity.
16Insecticides in Organic solvent preservatives
- Synthetic pyrethroids
- Has contact toxicity for range of wood borers
- Used as pretreatment of construction timber
17Water Borne Preservatives
- Aqueous solutions of toxic salts
- They are odourless
- Leave the wood clean
- Wood can be paintable after treatment
- Two types
- Unfixed eg. Boron compound
- Fixed eg. CCA
18Celcure - CCA
19Water Borne PreservativesBoron compounds
- Boric acid and borax (disodium tetraborate)
mixure - Diffusion treatment of rubberwood with boron
first invented in Sri Lanka - Green timber immerse in solution for short time
closed stacked under plastic sheets - Not fixed. Leached.
- Not suitable to use in buildings
20Water Borne PreservativesCopper-chromium-arsenic
(CCA)
- Most effective preservative against fungi,
insects and marine borers. - Service life or more than 30 years in hazard
conditions - Use to treat railway sleepers, poles, building
timber.
21CCA treatment_at_ Finlay Rentokil, Wattala (2009)
22Water Borne PreservativesCopper-chromium-arsenic
(CCA)
- Use of CCA banned in Sri Lanka
- STC still use CCA
- Finlay Rentokil use CCB (Copper-chrome-boron)
- Other Cu preservatives CCB, CCF, CCP
23Drying before preservationSTC, 2010
24CCA treatment vessel_at_ Finlay Rentokil, Wattala
(2009)
25CCA treatment vessel_at_ Finlay Rentokil, Wattala
26Chrome-Azurol-SBlue colour penetraion
27Creosote treated Poles
28Treatment Methods
- Brush, spraying, and dip (immersion)
- Sap-displacement method
- Vacuum Pressure Impregnation
- Hot and cold open tank
- Full cell (Bethell)
- Empty cell
- Double vacuum