WO2000069606A1 - Method and device for compressing wood - Google Patents

Method and device for compressing wood Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2000069606A1
WO2000069606A1 PCT/SE2000/000976 SE0000976W WO0069606A1 WO 2000069606 A1 WO2000069606 A1 WO 2000069606A1 SE 0000976 W SE0000976 W SE 0000976W WO 0069606 A1 WO0069606 A1 WO 0069606A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
wood
compression
piece
plates
press
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/SE2000/000976
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2000069606A9 (en
Inventor
Martin Wiklund
Girma Kifetew
Original Assignee
Primwood Ab
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Primwood Ab filed Critical Primwood Ab
Priority to AT00931857T priority Critical patent/ATE251976T1/en
Priority to EP00931857A priority patent/EP1202848B1/en
Priority to DE60005968T priority patent/DE60005968T2/en
Priority to AU49674/00A priority patent/AU4967400A/en
Publication of WO2000069606A1 publication Critical patent/WO2000069606A1/en
Publication of WO2000069606A9 publication Critical patent/WO2000069606A9/en

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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B27WORKING OR PRESERVING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; NAILING OR STAPLING MACHINES IN GENERAL
    • B27MWORKING OF WOOD NOT PROVIDED FOR IN SUBCLASSES B27B - B27L; MANUFACTURE OF SPECIFIC WOODEN ARTICLES
    • B27M1/00Working of wood not provided for in subclasses B27B - B27L, e.g. by stretching
    • B27M1/02Working of wood not provided for in subclasses B27B - B27L, e.g. by stretching by compressing

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a method of compressing wood of the kind disclosed in the preamble of claim 1 , and a system to realise the method.
  • the hardness of wood is a function of the density of the wood. This means that heavier arts of wood are harder than lighter arts of wood. This is true even within one and the same piece of wood.
  • the density of the spring wood is about 1/3 of the density of the summer wood (-300 kg/m J and -900 kg/m J . respectively) for wood from needle-trees, such as pine and spruce, grown in Sweden. Transition wood between spring and summer wood is provided, and the density transition will therefore be continuous. However, the transition between summer and spring wood is abrupt.
  • spring wood which comprises large air filled channels (lumen) in the cells, is the easiest to compress. These channels have thin cell walls, which can deform easily without damaging them.
  • the summer wood has cells having thick walls with rather small lumen and can therefore not be compressed to a great extent before the cell walls are crushed or broken.
  • FIG 1 illustrates a piece of wood treated with this kind of compression. This piece of wood has got a crush of a summer wood layer at A. A shear fracture between spring and summer wood, or in the spring wood, as shown at B, represents a common problem.
  • the piece of wood shown in FIG 1 is cut such that its flat sides are parallel to a diametrical section through a log of wood.
  • the annual rings lie essentially parallel to the flat sides, at least in the middle of the piece of wood since they are arcuate.
  • Limbs in the wood have an essentially higher density (and hence hardness) than the rest of the piece of wood.
  • the limb direction, and hence limb fibre direction lies practically radial in the tree trunk, and has a certain angle against the longitudinal direction of the tree trunk, most often 70° to 90°. If the limbs are to be compressed in their longitudinal direction, a strong force is required. This causes great cross-damages in the material, partly because of the limb as such and partly because of the cross grain around the limb. Solutions to this problem have been tried by establishing the compression power by means of relatively soft plates of rubber, which admit the hard limbs to be pressed into the plate of rubber and providing a proportionately even pressure on the wood surface. Thereby, isostatic compression provides the best compression result.
  • An object with the invention is to provide a method and system, which remove the problems stated at the introductory part of this specification.
  • Another object with the invention is to provide a method and system providing compressed, hard pieces of wood without splits and cross damages.
  • Still another object with the invention is to provide a method and system providing compressed hard pieces of wood having an esthetical attractive surface structure.
  • the invention thus relates to a method for providing a hard piece of wood using compression treatment in order to compress a disjoint timber of wood, which is characterised by a) preparing the piece of wood such that it comprises a piece of wood essentially having standing annular rings perpendicular to the flat sides of the piece of wood: b) placing the piece of wood between two plates, which have a fixedly provided position in relation to each other and have a distance to each other adapted to the thickness of the piece of wood between its flat sides; c) compression of the piece of wood between its side surfaces in radial direction to the annular rings of the wood using increasing compression force until a wanted compression has been reached.
  • a device to provide the method is characterised by a) a piece of wood having standing annular rings perpendicular to the flat sides of the piece of wood; b) two plates having a fixed position in relation to each other and having a distance to each other adapted to the thickness of the piece of wood between its flat sides, and between the two plates the piece of wood is adapted to be placed; b) press means for compressing the piece of wood between its side surfaces in radial direction of the annular rings of the wood and with increasing compression power until a wanted compression has been obtained.
  • FIG 1 illustrates a compression in accordance with a prior known method, described above
  • FIG 2 illustrates schematically a first embodiment of a system according to the invention
  • FIG 3 illustrates a second embodiment of a system according to the invention
  • FIG 4 shows a diagram, by means of which the invention is explained
  • FIG 5 illustrates a third embodiment of a system according to the invention
  • FIG 6 shows a longitudinal section through a first embodiment of a press having feeding of a longitudinal timber of wood to be treated and batch wise compression of the wood
  • FIG 7 illustrates a longitudinal section through a second embodiment of a press having feeding of a longitudinal timber of wood to be treated and continuous compression of the wood
  • FIG 8 illustrates a longitudinal section through a third embodiment of a press having feeding of a longitudinal timber of wood to be treated and continuous compression of the wood.
  • FIG 2A shows a wood board 1 in the form of a piece of wood having standing annular rings.
  • a wood board 1 is made for example by means of quarter or star sawing.
  • the centre part of a timber log obtained when using through or square cutting can be used, for example having the pitch and a part of the juvenile wood cut away.
  • the wood cut in this way is dried at least to the fibre saturation point, but preferably longer, for example to ca. 10% humidity in the wood. Thereafter, the limbs with the surrounding cross grain are cut away. Woods are joined as needed, for example with finger joint.
  • the wood 1 prepared in this way is placed between two plates 3 and 4.
  • Each plate has a glossy surface turned towards the wood and preferably has a coating 5 and 6, respectively, providing a low friction to the wood.
  • the purpose of having the glossy surfaces of the plates 3 and 4 is to give such as low force of friction from these plates as possible when the wood board is compressed during the compression to come.
  • the distance between the plates 3 and 4 should be approximately as long as the thickness of the board. Preferably, the distance could be controllable, e.g. by means of a steering wheel or the like (not shown). It is also an advantage to be able to move away one of the plates 3. 4 during working moments with insertion of an untreated wood board and unloading of a treated wood board. However, the positions of the plates 3 and 4 are essentially fixed, when a wood board is placed between them in order to be treated.
  • a pressure force is imposed on the edge sides of the wood board 1 in the direction of the arrows PI and P2.
  • the pressure force is provided by a press arrangement having pressure providers 7, 8 and a pressure foot 9, 1 1 on each edge side.
  • the two pressure providers are controlled by a control unit 1 1. which also can sense the total pressure, to which the wood board 1 is exposed. It is to be noted that the way shown having edge pressure from both directions is to be preferred. However, it is also possible, as shown in FIG 3. to have a fixed holder-on 12 at one side of the wood board and apply the pressure P3 against its other edge side using the same kind of pressure arrangement 8, 10 as in FIG 1 controlled by a control unit 13.
  • the compression can go on until a strong increase of the pressure resistance is provided. This occurs when the wood board has got a density in the order of 1200 kg/m . A spring back occurs when the pressure force is released, but remaining density for pine wood spruce is ca 800 kg/m , i.e. somewhat lower than the original density of the summer wood.
  • FIG 4. A diagram of the pressure force as a function of compression is shown in FIG 4.
  • a first phase having increasing pressure force up to BR1
  • no essential compression is provided.
  • a strong compression using a small extra pressure force is provided up to BR2
  • the pressure force has to be increased essentially in order to get a small increase of the compression.
  • the compression is finished when the pressure force has reached a predetermined level that according to observed results is known to represent the maximal compression before an extra pressure increase will lead to a hardly noticeable effect.
  • the pressure force could be maintained constant during a certain time.
  • the material is floating during this time, and a certain tension relaxation is obtained.
  • chemical or fhermo- mechanical locking which means that the piece of wood 1 for instance has been impregnated with some chemical substance before compression, which substance hardens during compression. Or else that heat is provided, particular during the end phase having constant pressure.
  • the piece of wood board can be attached, for example glued, on a fixating bed, e.g. a plate of wood 14.
  • a fixating bed e.g. a plate of wood 14.
  • This fixation may be made only directly on one side of the wood board.
  • two compressed wood boards 1, 1 ' could be attached on each side of the fixating bed in order to get symmetry such that the composite wood board does not bend.
  • the fixating bed strives against the effect provided when the compressed wood board has a possible tendency to swell in the compression direction.
  • the bed 14 should not be made thicker than that the glue is holding in on place, it should be so thin that it does not press itself away from the glue.
  • the bed 14 could at such a use be protruding somewhat at one side and be notched somewhat at the other side such that pieces of wood board having groove and tenon are created in this way.
  • FIG 3 illustrates that a piece of wood 10 before the compression could be sawn into radial sliced veneer (shown sparsely for clearness), which thereafter are laid one of top of the other between the plates 15 and 16. Thereafter the compression is provided from the edges, which results in hard veneer disks, which can be used for example to wear and tear layers on floors, kitchen shelves, kitchen shutters etc.
  • FIG 5 shows that two triangular blocks 17 and 18 have been glued together such that the glued common block 20 has got standing annular rings.
  • Two blocks 19 and 20 provided in this way have thereafter, having an insert 21 between them, been placed between fixedly placed plates 23 and 24. After that the blocks are compressed from the edges in order to get a harder and stronger material.
  • the distance plates are not shown in FIG 6 since they are provided in front of and behind the section shown in the Figure.
  • the plank is fed in through an opening in the right side of the Figure between a press arrangement having two longish pressure units 26 and 27 having different pressure forces along the plank 25.
  • the plank is fed through the press arrangement in the direction of the arrow P5 and is then compressed more and more in the beginning (see the section from the beginning to BR1 in FIG 4). After that, the plank is exerted to a pressure, which increased in a lower rate (see the section between BR1 and BR2 in FIG 5). After that, the control unit (not shown in FIG 6) senses that the pressure should not increase any more the pressure is maintained constant in the end of the pressure chain along the plank 25.
  • the pressure along the plank is here controlled to have different pressure power in dependence of the position along the press units. This is possible to make by means of the control unit in a way obvious for the person skilled in the art.
  • the press units 26 and 27 could have a coating giving a low friction. This is advantageous even if the press is opened somewhat at each movement forward.
  • a chain of press plates 27, 28 has been placed between a guide (work support) 29 and 30 each for the belonging press units 31 and 32, respectively, and the plank 25.
  • the press plates 27 and 28 are fed in the direction of the arrows such that they help the feeding movement of the plank 27 through the press arrangement. In doing so the press plates do not need to be opened between the batch wise compression, and the pressure proceeding can be provided continuously.
  • Each chain of press plates can be fastened to each other in a ring and be fed around as an endless band.
  • the method according to the invention can be used for each kind of wood where it is a wish to increase its hardness and resistance.
  • a corresponding increase of the tear- proof, compression strength and resistance to bending for the wood is provided in the similar way as described above for the hardness.
  • the method is particularly advantageous for fast-growing wood, which in itself has deficient resistance values, for example quick growing spruce planted on arable land.
  • the method is adapted for treatment of needle as well as leaf wood.
  • the pieces of wood treated to be hard with the method according to the invention are principally thought to be used a floor covering.
  • the hardness has been derived by compression sideways and thus not by compression from the flat sides.
  • the E-module at tangential load, i.e. on surfaces along a radial plane is much lower than that on tangential surfaces.
  • the manufacturing method according to the invention if it is used to making floor boards, thus gives an aesthetically attractive floor having its standing annular, narrow rings.
  • the floors are also pleasant to walk on.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Chemical And Physical Treatments For Wood And The Like (AREA)
  • Debarking, Splitting, And Disintegration Of Timber (AREA)
  • Dry Formation Of Fiberboard And The Like (AREA)

Abstract

The invention relates to a method and a device for providing a hard piece of wood using compression treatment in order to compress a disjoint timber of wood (1). The timber of wood has been prepared such that it comprises a piece of wood having standing annular rings perpendicular to the flat sides of the piece of wood. The piece of wood is placed between two plates (3, 4), which have a fixed placement in relation to each other and have a distance to each other adapted to the thickness of the piece of wood between its flat sides. The piece of wood is compressed between its side surfaces in radial direction to the annular rings of the wood using increasing compression force until a wanted compression has been reached.

Description

Method and device for compressing wood
The present invention relates to a method of compressing wood of the kind disclosed in the preamble of claim 1 , and a system to realise the method.
BACKGROUND
The hardness of wood is a function of the density of the wood. This means that heavier arts of wood are harder than lighter arts of wood. This is true even within one and the same piece of wood. For example, the density of the spring wood is about 1/3 of the density of the summer wood (-300 kg/mJ and -900 kg/mJ. respectively) for wood from needle-trees, such as pine and spruce, grown in Sweden. Transition wood between spring and summer wood is provided, and the density transition will therefore be continuous. However, the transition between summer and spring wood is abrupt.
It is prior knowledge to increase the density of wood by compressing the wood in order to increase the density of the wood with this measure. The normal procedure has then been to compress the timber from the flat sides of plane-parallel pieces of timber in order to get the surfaces of the flat sides a hard as required.
It is then self evident that the spring wood, which comprises large air filled channels (lumen) in the cells, is the easiest to compress. These channels have thin cell walls, which can deform easily without damaging them.
The summer wood has cells having thick walls with rather small lumen and can therefore not be compressed to a great extent before the cell walls are crushed or broken.
This implies among other things that when the compressing power at the compressing should be parallel with the annual rings of the wood (i.e. tangential) or in any event with a relatively small angle, for example <45°, the summer wood will be crushed. A great part of the fibre walls will then be crushed. FIG 1 illustrates a piece of wood treated with this kind of compression. This piece of wood has got a crush of a summer wood layer at A. A shear fracture between spring and summer wood, or in the spring wood, as shown at B, represents a common problem. The piece of wood shown in FIG 1 is cut such that its flat sides are parallel to a diametrical section through a log of wood. The annual rings lie essentially parallel to the flat sides, at least in the middle of the piece of wood since they are arcuate.
A known way to settle the problems mentioned above is to provide power from both the flat sides and the edge sides. In order to provide a compression giving an end product having as even hardness as possible it is known to apply a so called iso-static compression of the piece of wood. However, this has also proven to provide internal tension, which can cause different kinds of fractures. Different kinds of heat treatment and dehumidification of timber wood during compression have been tested, which for example is described in the article THE SIMULTANEOUS DRYING AND
DENSIFICATION OF SAPWOOD, by J.G. Haygreen and D. H. Daniels, published as Sci. Jour. Paper No 6745 of the Univ. of Minn. Agr. Exp. Sta.
Limbs in the wood have an essentially higher density (and hence hardness) than the rest of the piece of wood. The limb direction, and hence limb fibre direction, lies practically radial in the tree trunk, and has a certain angle against the longitudinal direction of the tree trunk, most often 70° to 90°. If the limbs are to be compressed in their longitudinal direction, a strong force is required. This causes great cross-damages in the material, partly because of the limb as such and partly because of the cross grain around the limb. Solutions to this problem have been tried by establishing the compression power by means of relatively soft plates of rubber, which admit the hard limbs to be pressed into the plate of rubber and providing a proportionately even pressure on the wood surface. Thereby, isostatic compression provides the best compression result. However, a piece of wood having outstanding fragments of limb and with a heavily deformed section is obtained after the compression. Wood gain is lost since there most often is a need to use a flat parallelepiped piece of wood. Another disadvantage is that those side surfaces, which one often wishes to get hard (e.g. for floors) to a great extent are tangential surfaces, i.e. such surfaces where a great deal of the damages mentioned above preferably are obtained. Investigations have shown that most people, from esthetical and tactile reasons, best appreciate wood having radial, limb free surfaces that also have thin annual rings.
Radial compression of wet timber and various complicated heating and drying treatments for a quite particular Japanese kind of wood has been suggested in the article RADIAL COMPRESSION OF SUGI WOOD (CRYPTOMERJA JAPONICA D. DON). BY w. Dwanto et al, published by Division of Wood Biomass Science, Wood Research Institute, Kyoto University, Gokasho, Uji Kyoto 61 1. Japan.
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
An object with the invention is to provide a method and system, which remove the problems stated at the introductory part of this specification.
Another object with the invention is to provide a method and system providing compressed, hard pieces of wood without splits and cross damages.
Still another object with the invention is to provide a method and system providing compressed hard pieces of wood having an esthetical attractive surface structure.
The objects mentioned above are full-filled by using a method having the characteristics mentioned in the characterising part of claim 1. Further features and developments of the method and a system to perform the method are disclosed in the rest of the claims. The invention thus relates to a method for providing a hard piece of wood using compression treatment in order to compress a disjoint timber of wood, which is characterised by a) preparing the piece of wood such that it comprises a piece of wood essentially having standing annular rings perpendicular to the flat sides of the piece of wood: b) placing the piece of wood between two plates, which have a fixedly provided position in relation to each other and have a distance to each other adapted to the thickness of the piece of wood between its flat sides; c) compression of the piece of wood between its side surfaces in radial direction to the annular rings of the wood using increasing compression force until a wanted compression has been reached.
A device to provide the method is characterised by a) a piece of wood having standing annular rings perpendicular to the flat sides of the piece of wood; b) two plates having a fixed position in relation to each other and having a distance to each other adapted to the thickness of the piece of wood between its flat sides, and between the two plates the piece of wood is adapted to be placed; b) press means for compressing the piece of wood between its side surfaces in radial direction of the annular rings of the wood and with increasing compression power until a wanted compression has been obtained.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will be described in more detail below with reference to the enclosed drawings, where
FIG 1 illustrates a compression in accordance with a prior known method, described above, FIG 2 illustrates schematically a first embodiment of a system according to the invention, FIG 3 illustrates a second embodiment of a system according to the invention, FIG 4 shows a diagram, by means of which the invention is explained, FIG 5 illustrates a third embodiment of a system according to the invention, FIG 6 shows a longitudinal section through a first embodiment of a press having feeding of a longitudinal timber of wood to be treated and batch wise compression of the wood, FIG 7 illustrates a longitudinal section through a second embodiment of a press having feeding of a longitudinal timber of wood to be treated and continuous compression of the wood, and FIG 8 illustrates a longitudinal section through a third embodiment of a press having feeding of a longitudinal timber of wood to be treated and continuous compression of the wood.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG 2A shows a wood board 1 in the form of a piece of wood having standing annular rings. Such kind of wood is made for example by means of quarter or star sawing. Also the centre part of a timber log obtained when using through or square cutting can be used, for example having the pitch and a part of the juvenile wood cut away. The wood cut in this way is dried at least to the fibre saturation point, but preferably longer, for example to ca. 10% humidity in the wood. Thereafter, the limbs with the surrounding cross grain are cut away. Woods are joined as needed, for example with finger joint.
The wood 1 prepared in this way is placed between two plates 3 and 4. Each plate has a glossy surface turned towards the wood and preferably has a coating 5 and 6, respectively, providing a low friction to the wood. The purpose of having the glossy surfaces of the plates 3 and 4 is to give such as low force of friction from these plates as possible when the wood board is compressed during the compression to come. The distance between the plates 3 and 4 should be approximately as long as the thickness of the board. Preferably, the distance could be controllable, e.g. by means of a steering wheel or the like (not shown). It is also an advantage to be able to move away one of the plates 3. 4 during working moments with insertion of an untreated wood board and unloading of a treated wood board. However, the positions of the plates 3 and 4 are essentially fixed, when a wood board is placed between them in order to be treated.
Thereafter, a pressure force is imposed on the edge sides of the wood board 1 in the direction of the arrows PI and P2. The pressure force is provided by a press arrangement having pressure providers 7, 8 and a pressure foot 9, 1 1 on each edge side. The two pressure providers are controlled by a control unit 1 1. which also can sense the total pressure, to which the wood board 1 is exposed. It is to be noted that the way shown having edge pressure from both directions is to be preferred. However, it is also possible, as shown in FIG 3. to have a fixed holder-on 12 at one side of the wood board and apply the pressure P3 against its other edge side using the same kind of pressure arrangement 8, 10 as in FIG 1 controlled by a control unit 13.
The compression can go on until a strong increase of the pressure resistance is provided. This occurs when the wood board has got a density in the order of 1200 kg/m . A spring back occurs when the pressure force is released, but remaining density for pine wood spruce is ca 800 kg/m , i.e. somewhat lower than the original density of the summer wood.
A diagram of the pressure force as a function of compression is shown in FIG 4. During a first phase having increasing pressure force, up to BR1, no essential compression is provided. Thereafter, a strong compression using a small extra pressure force is provided up to BR2, whereupon the pressure force has to be increased essentially in order to get a small increase of the compression. At an automatic pressure equipment controlled by the control unit 1 1 or 13 the compression is finished when the pressure force has reached a predetermined level that according to observed results is known to represent the maximal compression before an extra pressure increase will lead to a hardly noticeable effect. It is also possible to measure the distance between the side surfaces of the wood board during the pressure procedure. The measurement result is fed to the control unit 1 1. 13. which stops the pressure increase when this distance diminish to decrease with a predetermined rate.
Instead of releasing the pressure force after obtained compression so that a back swelling is provided the pressure force could be maintained constant during a certain time. The material is floating during this time, and a certain tension relaxation is obtained. It is also possible to complete with for example chemical or fhermo- mechanical locking, which means that the piece of wood 1 for instance has been impregnated with some chemical substance before compression, which substance hardens during compression. Or else that heat is provided, particular during the end phase having constant pressure.
After that the wood board 1 in FIG 1 has been removed from the pressure device the piece of wood board can be attached, for example glued, on a fixating bed, e.g. a plate of wood 14. This fixation may be made only directly on one side of the wood board. However, as shown in FIG 2B, two compressed wood boards 1, 1 ' could be attached on each side of the fixating bed in order to get symmetry such that the composite wood board does not bend. The fixating bed strives against the effect provided when the compressed wood board has a possible tendency to swell in the compression direction. The bed 14 should not be made thicker than that the glue is holding in on place, it should be so thin that it does not press itself away from the glue. This kind of wood boards will advantageously be used for flooring, it is then important that the material does not warp. The bed 14 could at such a use be protruding somewhat at one side and be notched somewhat at the other side such that pieces of wood board having groove and tenon are created in this way.
Compression of a wood board in one piece is shown in the embodiment in FIG 2. FIG 3 illustrates that a piece of wood 10 before the compression could be sawn into radial sliced veneer (shown sparsely for clearness), which thereafter are laid one of top of the other between the plates 15 and 16. Thereafter the compression is provided from the edges, which results in hard veneer disks, which can be used for example to wear and tear layers on floors, kitchen shelves, kitchen shutters etc.
In spite of the possibility shown in FIG 3 it is to be preferred to saw. or disjoint in some other way. an already compressed wood board to radial sliced veneer disks, which can be used for wear and tear layers. Since the piece of wood board is not compressed in tangential direction, i.e. between the plates 3 and 4 in FIG 2. no increase material losses are obtained compared with cutting the veneer before the compression.
FIG 5 shows that two triangular blocks 17 and 18 have been glued together such that the glued common block 20 has got standing annular rings. Two blocks 19 and 20 provided in this way have thereafter, having an insert 21 between them, been placed between fixedly placed plates 23 and 24. After that the blocks are compressed from the edges in order to get a harder and stronger material.
The result is a limb free, lasting and hard material having an attractive appearance because of the visible narrow annual rings, which appears as longitudinal rays. Since the completely compressed material has a rectangular form a minimum of waste material is provided.
In the section shown in FIG 6, having an essential smaller scale than in FIGs 2, 3, 5 and perpendicular to the sections shown in these FIGs, i.e. through the press plates, it is illustrated that the compression could be provided batch wise along the length of a long wood plank 25, or the length of a group of wood planks. This means that each plank, or group of planks, are compressed with stepwise forwardly fed planks, whereby the press is opened between every movement of the plank in the direction of the arrow P5 and is closed during the compression. This means that the compression is made successively. The distance plates of the kind 3, 4; 15, 16; 23, 24 are provided on each side of the plank in order to prevent the wood material to flow out over the edges. The distance plates are not shown in FIG 6 since they are provided in front of and behind the section shown in the Figure. As shown the plank is fed in through an opening in the right side of the Figure between a press arrangement having two longish pressure units 26 and 27 having different pressure forces along the plank 25.
As mentioned above the plank is fed through the press arrangement in the direction of the arrow P5 and is then compressed more and more in the beginning (see the section from the beginning to BR1 in FIG 4). After that, the plank is exerted to a pressure, which increased in a lower rate (see the section between BR1 and BR2 in FIG 5). After that, the control unit (not shown in FIG 6) senses that the pressure should not increase any more the pressure is maintained constant in the end of the pressure chain along the plank 25. Thus the pressure along the plank is here controlled to have different pressure power in dependence of the position along the press units. This is possible to make by means of the control unit in a way obvious for the person skilled in the art. In order to feed the planks through the press as free from friction as possible the press units 26 and 27 could have a coating giving a low friction. This is advantageous even if the press is opened somewhat at each movement forward.
In the embodiment shown in FIG 7, however, a chain of press plates 27, 28 has been placed between a guide (work support) 29 and 30 each for the belonging press units 31 and 32, respectively, and the plank 25. The press plates 27 and 28 are fed in the direction of the arrows such that they help the feeding movement of the plank 27 through the press arrangement. In doing so the press plates do not need to be opened between the batch wise compression, and the pressure proceeding can be provided continuously. Each chain of press plates can be fastened to each other in a ring and be fed around as an endless band.
In order to increase the capacity of the press a plurality of pieces of work could be pressed simultaneously by placing them at the side of each other, or on top of each other. In the later case, shown in FIG 8, an intermediate rigid metal bar 35 should be provided between the planks 33 and 34 in order to prevent the individual planks to get lasting distortion from its parallelepiped form. It is also possible to provide a stepwise fed press or a continuously working press, which works with transversely fed pieces of work, which then are fed into the press by means of one of the fixed plates 3, 4, or 15, 16 or 23. 24 before that the position of this plate is fixed before the start of the press operation. This is shown in the embodiment according to FIG 5 but can be applied to anyone of the other embodiments. At the feeding in. one of the plates 23 is moved outwardly far enough to let the planks be fed in as shown. Thereafter, the plate 23 is moved back and is fixed to its position. The press feet 9 and 10 are thus not yet inserted in the way shown in FIG 5.
The method according to the invention can be used for each kind of wood where it is a wish to increase its hardness and resistance. A corresponding increase of the tear- proof, compression strength and resistance to bending for the wood is provided in the similar way as described above for the hardness.
The method is particularly advantageous for fast-growing wood, which in itself has deficient resistance values, for example quick growing spruce planted on arable land. The method is adapted for treatment of needle as well as leaf wood.
The pieces of wood treated to be hard with the method according to the invention are principally thought to be used a floor covering. The hardness has been derived by compression sideways and thus not by compression from the flat sides. For every floor it is essential that it has a pleasant feel. Thereby, it is a wish that the floor shall have a soft feel as it does if it has a low E-module. The E-module at tangential load, i.e. on surfaces along a radial plane is much lower than that on tangential surfaces. The manufacturing method according to the invention, if it is used to making floor boards, thus gives an aesthetically attractive floor having its standing annular, narrow rings. The floors are also pleasant to walk on.
Many modifications are possible within the frame given by the accompanying claims.

Claims

WE CLAIM
1. A method for providing a hard piece of wood using compression treatment in order to compress a disjoint timber of wood, which has been prepared such that it comprises a piece of wood ( 1 ; 19. 20; 25) having standing annular rings perpendicular to the flat sides of the piece of wood. characterized by a) placing the piece of wood (1 ; 19, 20; 25) between two plates (3, 4: 23,24) and having its flat sides turned towards the plates, the plates having a fixedly provided position in relation to each other and having a distance to each other adapted to the thickness of the piece of wood (1 ; 19, 20; 25) between its flat sides; b) compression (9J0; 10,12) of the piece of wood between its edge sides in radial direction to the annular rings of the wood using increasing compression force until a wanted compression has been reached.
2. A method according to claim 1, characterized in that the fixedly provided position for the two plates (3, 4; 23,24) is adjustable before the compression operation.
3. A method according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the compression action, after that a wanted compression has been reached, continues with constant compression force during a time fitted for providing fixation of the compression obtained.
4. A method according to anyone of the preceding claims, characterized by treating the piece of wood (1 ; 19, 20; 25) before compression with a chemical substance to obtain locking of the compression obtained when once obtained.
5. A method according to anyone of the preceding claims, characterized by heat treatment during and/or after compression to obtain thermo-mechanical locking.
6. A method according to anyone of the preceding claims, characterized by gluing one of the flat sides, or both, to a fixating bed, e.g. a plate of wood, after compression.
7. A method according to anyone of the preceding claims, characterized by sawing the piece of wood ( 1 ; 19. 20: 25) to radial cut veneer before the placing between the plates.
8. A method according to anyone of the claims 1 to 6, characterized by sawing the piece of wood (1 ; 19, 20: 25) to veneer sheets after the compression.
9. A method according to anyone of the preceding claims, characterized by feeding the wood material (25) in the form of a plank through a press arrangement giving different compression pressure along the path along which the plank is fed through.
10. A device for providing a hard piece of wood (1 ; 19, 20; 25; 33, 34) having standing annular rings perpendicular to the flat sides of the piece of wood using compression treatment in order to provide compression of the piece of wood, characterized by a) two plates (3, 4; 13, 14: 23, 24) having a fixed position in relation to each other and having a distance to each other adapted to the thickness of the piece of wood (1 ; 19, 20; 25; 33. 34) between its flat sides and between the two plates the piece of wood is adapted to be placed having its flat sides turned towards the plates (3, 4; 13, 14; 23, 24); b) press means (7, 9, 8. 10; 12, 8, 10; 26, 27; 31, 32) for compressing the piece of wood between its edge sides in radial direction of the annular ring of the wood and with increasing compression power until a wanted compression has been obtained.
1 1. A device according to claim 10, characterized in that the fixed position for the two plates (3, 4; 13, 14; 23. 24) is adjustable before the compression operation.
12. A device according to claim 10 or 1 1. characterized by a fixating bed means, for example a wooden sheet ( 14), glued to the piece of wood ( 1. 1 ") after the compression operation.
5 13. A device according to anyone of the claims 10 to 12. characterized by pressure means comprising a press arrangement (26, 27; 31. 32) providing different compression power along a plank (25) of wood, or several planks (33, 34) of wood, fed through the press arrangement.
[0 14. A device according to claim 13, characterized by a chain of press plates (27, 28) in the press arrangement being placed near-by the plank or the planks, which are compressed, when feeding the plank or planks forward the press plates are adapted to be moved in the same batch wise or continuous rate as the plank or the planks. 5
15. A device according to anyone of the claims 10 to 14, characterized by a control unit (1 1 , 13) providing control to the press means (7. 9, 8, 10; 12, 8, 10; 26. 27; 31, 32) in the press arrangement to provide a fitting pressure power for compressing the piece of wood.
PCT/SE2000/000976 1999-05-17 2000-05-17 Method and device for compressing wood WO2000069606A1 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AT00931857T ATE251976T1 (en) 1999-05-17 2000-05-17 METHOD AND DEVICE FOR PRODUCING PRESSED WOOD
EP00931857A EP1202848B1 (en) 1999-05-17 2000-05-17 Method and device for compressing wood
DE60005968T DE60005968T2 (en) 1999-05-17 2000-05-17 METHOD AND DEVICE FOR PRODUCING PRESTRESSED WOOD
AU49674/00A AU4967400A (en) 1999-05-17 2000-05-17 Method and device for compressing wood

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE9901796-4 1999-05-17
SE9901796A SE515328C2 (en) 1999-05-17 1999-05-17 Method and apparatus for compressing wood

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2000069606A1 true WO2000069606A1 (en) 2000-11-23
WO2000069606A9 WO2000069606A9 (en) 2001-03-01

Family

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PCT/SE2000/000976 WO2000069606A1 (en) 1999-05-17 2000-05-17 Method and device for compressing wood

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EP (1) EP1202848B1 (en)
AT (1) ATE251976T1 (en)
AU (1) AU4967400A (en)
DE (1) DE60005968T2 (en)
SE (1) SE515328C2 (en)
WO (1) WO2000069606A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN114147827A (en) * 2021-12-14 2022-03-08 黄荣凤 Solid wood layered compression method based on moisture distribution regulation and control

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3591448A (en) * 1966-08-15 1971-07-06 Armin Elmendorf Wood with a densified surface layer and method of making same
US4606388A (en) * 1985-03-28 1986-08-19 Peter Favot Process for densifying low density woods
WO1996005034A1 (en) * 1994-08-15 1996-02-22 Weyerhaeuser Company Wood veneers and products therefrom having enhanced strength and stiffness
SE505408C2 (en) * 1994-05-06 1997-08-25 Traetek Inst Foer Traeteknisk Surface-cladding elements made of hardened wood and methods for making such elements
WO1999020443A1 (en) * 1997-10-16 1999-04-29 Lindhe, Curt Novel material and process for its production

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3591448A (en) * 1966-08-15 1971-07-06 Armin Elmendorf Wood with a densified surface layer and method of making same
US4606388A (en) * 1985-03-28 1986-08-19 Peter Favot Process for densifying low density woods
SE505408C2 (en) * 1994-05-06 1997-08-25 Traetek Inst Foer Traeteknisk Surface-cladding elements made of hardened wood and methods for making such elements
WO1996005034A1 (en) * 1994-08-15 1996-02-22 Weyerhaeuser Company Wood veneers and products therefrom having enhanced strength and stiffness
WO1999020443A1 (en) * 1997-10-16 1999-04-29 Lindhe, Curt Novel material and process for its production

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP1202848A1 (en) 2002-05-08
DE60005968T2 (en) 2004-07-29
AU4967400A (en) 2000-12-05
SE515328C2 (en) 2001-07-16
SE9901796D0 (en) 1999-05-17
ATE251976T1 (en) 2003-11-15
SE9901796L (en) 2000-11-18
EP1202848B1 (en) 2003-10-15
WO2000069606A9 (en) 2001-03-01
DE60005968D1 (en) 2003-11-20

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