Split wooden rods for novel wood-based boards in the construction sector

Authors

  • Ingo Burgert Institute for Building Materials, ETH Zürich | Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
  • Sebastian Kegel Institute for Building Materials, ETH Zürich | Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
  • Thomas Schnider Institute for Building Materials, ETH Zürich
  • Julia Achatz Institute for Building Materials, ETH Zürich | Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
  • Sandro Stucki Institute for Building Materials, ETH Zürich | Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
  • Mark Schubert Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21809/rilemtechlett.2024.193

Keywords:

Wood, Separation techniques, Split rods, Wood-based products, Machine Learning

Abstract

Wood has been utilized as a building material for thousands of years. Nowadays, its renewable nature and carbon-storing capacity can become important factors in climate change mitigation efforts. This has led to a resurgence of timber engineering in recent years, with impressive multi-story timber buildings worldwide. However, it should not be overlooked that the wood sector will face several challenges in the coming years and decades to pave the way to a leading role of wood in the desired transition toward bioeconomy. Based on the assumption that an increasing demand for wood will make it a more precious resource, a couple of strains will emerge across the entire value chain of wood processing. This calls for innovations to address issues arising from predicted changes in resource provision, to increase material yields, and to promote reuse after the end of life. Our conceptual article proposes a new wood separation and processing method. This approach is inspired by the well-known production of wood shingles and is currently being developed for the implementation of new wood-based products.

Schematic illustration of the planned ML-supported processing from split rods to wood-based products.

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Published

08.11.2024

How to Cite

(1)
Burgert, I.; Kegel, S.; Schnider, T.; Achatz, J.; Stucki, S.; Schubert, M. Split Wooden Rods for Novel Wood-Based Boards in the Construction Sector. RILEM Tech Lett 2024, 9, 30-35.

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Section

Articles