• Author/Authors

    Var, Ahmet Ali Süleyman Demirel Üniversitesi - Orman Fakültesi - Orman Endüstrisi Mühendisliği Bölümü, Turkey , Göncü, Doygun Ayazlar Nakliyat Kereste ve Tahta Ambalaj San., Turkey , Karsantıözü, Fatih Yıldız Entegre Akdeniz MDF Tesisleri, Turkey

  • Title Of Article

    Investigation of absorption, retention and swelling in Izmir-Doğanbey geothermal waters-treated pine wood (Pinus brutia Ten.)

  • شماره ركورد
    44082
  • Abstract
    The purpose of this study is to investigate amounts of geothermal water absorption, geothermochemical retention and swelling in radial and tangential directions in İzmir-Doğanbey geothermal fields-treated woods. Samples of pine sapwood (Pinus brutia Ten.), low-temperature geothermal resource waters, hot-cold open tank method and distilled water were used for experiments. Impregnating procedures were carried out in geothermal field in normal weather conditions. Tests were conducted in laboratory conditions. As a result, these waters could a potential wood protection fluid that will be used for wood impregnation according to hot-cold open tank method. For pine wood treated with these waters, the absorption, retention, swelling in radial and tangential directions were founded between 0,40 to 0,53 g/cm^3, 0,10 to 0,31%, 5,04 to 5,30% and 7,23 to 7,24%, respectively. Type of geothermal resource affected significantly absorption and retention statistically (p≤0,05), but did not affect swelling. Despite no significant difference between geothermal fluids in terms of impacts, when geothermal water-treated wood samples were compared with distilled water-treated wood samples, the swelling decreased 18,25% and 8,02% in radial and tangential directions, respectively. Similar results were also obtained for retention and swelling in air-dry humidity.
  • From Page
    127
  • NaturalLanguageKeyword
    Pine , Geothermal , Impregnation , Absorption , Retention , Swelling
  • JournalTitle
    Turkish Journal of Forestry
  • To Page
    133
  • JournalTitle
    Turkish Journal of Forestry