SINTEF1st Nordic Drying Conference - NDC'01, Trondheim, Norway, June 27-29, 2001NTNU

MOISTURE MOVEMENT ON DRYING SOFTWOOD BOARDS AND KILN DESIGN

Roger B Keey and Justin J Nijdam
Wood Technology Research Centre, University of Canterbury,
Private Bag 4800, Christchurch, New Zealand
E-mail: wtrc@cape.canterbury.ac.nz

Keywords: Softwoods, kiln-drying, moisture movement, kiln design, airflow

ABSTRACT

This paper provides an overview of present understanding of how moisture can move through softwood boards, as a basis for determining kiln-seasoning strategies. Moisture in green wood is held essentially unbound, whereas below fibre saturation it is bound to a variable extent to the fibre walls. Sapwood, which is that part of the timber used for the transport of liquid nutrients, contains more moisture than physiologically inactive heartwood. Sawing the felled log creates a moisture-denuded layer at the damaged exposed surfaces. These features have a profound influence on the way that moisture can be removed on drying. Superimposed are differences arising from seasonal variations in the growth of wood between earlywood and latewood, which have different moisture permeabilities. When the width of the annual growth ring is relatively large compared with the board dimensions, moisture movement and the development of drying stresses depend markedly upon the sawing orientation relative to the grain direction. Quarter-sawn boards dry more uniformly (in the direction normal to the drying surfaces), but more slowly than flat-sawn boards. Most timber boards are stacked and then dried in box-shaped kilns. The uniformity of drying depends on the goodness of this stacking and on a uniform airflow being presented to the inlet face of the stack. Some non-uniformities can be mitigated by periodic reversals of the airflow direction through the stack and by overdrying the majority of boards to reduce wet spots, but there are limits, while overdrying reduces kiln capacity. Attention to aspects of the kiln geometry can reduce the fan-energy requirements and shorten the drying time, with a more uniform moisture content through out the kiln load.

 

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