1 / 15

Department of Wood and Forest Sciences, Laval University, Quebec (Qc), Canada G1K 7P4

Yves FORTIN* and Aziz LAGHDIR. Department of Wood and Forest Sciences, Laval University, Quebec (Qc), Canada G1K 7P4. Potential of High-Temperature Drying for the Production of Value-Added Products. Quebec. Slovakia. European Union. 2. Aim of work and methods.

kemal
Download Presentation

Department of Wood and Forest Sciences, Laval University, Quebec (Qc), Canada G1K 7P4

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Yves FORTIN* and Aziz LAGHDIR Department of Wood and Forest Sciences, Laval University, Quebec (Qc), Canada G1K 7P4 Potential of High-Temperature Drying for the Production of Value-Added Products Quebec Slovakia European Union 2

  2. Aim of work and methods To study the potential of high temperature drying for the manufacturing of value-added products from wood species traditionally used for construction lumber: • Development of drying programs and strategies • Evaluation of drying time, quality of the dried products and energy consumption 3

  3. Aim of work and methods Wood species and experimental procedure Species Dimensions Top loading Drying process (kN/m2) Black spruce (Picea mariana) 50 x 75 x 2400 mm 1.2 & 9.8 HTD White spruce (Picea glauca) 50 x 100 x 2400 mm 7.2 HTD Balsam fir (Abies balsamea) 50 x 100 x 2400 mm 7.2 CTD/HTD ; HTD Tamarack (Larix laricina) 32 x 100 x 2400 mm 7.5 CTD ; ETD ; HTD Trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides) 50 x 100 x 2400 mm 7.2 CTD/HTD ; HTD 3

  4. Aim of work and methods Experimental 2.5 m3 capacity kiln 3

  5. Aim of work and methods Typical HT drying schedule 3

  6. Results Comparison of drying time 4

  7. Results Comparison of drying time 4

  8. Results Comparison of drying time 4

  9. Results Warp and grade fall-down 4

  10. Results Warp and grade fall-down 4

  11. Results Effect of sinker heartwood on the final moisture content (FMC) distribution 4

  12. Results Total shrinkage following kiln drying 150 x 75 x 2400 mm black spruce kiln dried to 10% MC 2 50 x 100 x 2400 mm plantation white spruce kiln dried to 10% 4

  13. Results Energy consumption at the kiln 4

  14. Conclusions • HTD has a great potential for the drying of value-added products; • HTD saves time, electrical energy and can help to control drying defects for warp prone species;

  15. Conclusions • HTD must be combined with CTD for species containing impermeable sinker heartwood; A proper strategy of HTD must provide for the use of top-load restraint, presteaming treatment, long equalizing period, conditioning, and a slightly increased green dimension in thickness. The authors thank Mrs. Gordon Duplain, Bruno Girard, Abdelkarim Ben Mhenni, and Javier Chung, former graduate students, for their contribution to this paper.

More Related