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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter December 3, 2008

Properties of wood surfaces – characterisation and measurement. A review COST Action E35 2004–2008: Wood machining – micromechanics and fracture

  • Gerhard Sinn , Jakub Sandak and Tahiana Ramananantoandro
From the journal Holzforschung

Abstract

Wood surfaces might be considered as geometrical structures combined with position dependent chemical properties. It is possible to access surface properties only from a methodical point of view, e.g., by measuring roughness, colour, surface energy and other features. This type of characterisation remains incomplete because it does not account for the complex interactions of the properties, which are caused by the machining process. A better approach might be to describe the surface as a system of time dependent properties including the history of machining operations performed for a specific purpose. This work presents the advancements in the understanding of wood surfaces achieved in the course of the COST Action E35. The interaction between raw material, machining, and techniques of measurement will be discussed in terms of surface characteristics including the tactile properties of wood surfaces.


Corresponding author. BOKU – University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Department of Material Sciences and Process Engineering, Institute of Physics and Materials Science, Peter Jordan-Strasse 82, A-1190 Vienna, Austria

Received: 2008-4-10
Accepted: 2008-10-1
Published Online: 2008-12-03
Published Online: 2008-12-03
Published in Print: 2009-03-01

©2009 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

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