Keeping Wood Preservatives!Thu, 12 Apr 2012 Pressure-treated wood is great stuff, but the chemicals used to preserve
it from decay can leach out, where they can be toxic to bugs, fungi and
other hapless creatures that have the bad luck to be in the
neighborhood. Now, a team of Michigan Technological University
scientists has used nanotechnology to keep the chemicals inside the wood
where they belong.
"It's a new method that uses nanoparticles to deliver preservatives
into the lumber," said chemistry professor Patricia Heiden. "In our
experiments, it reduced the leaching of biocides by 90 percent."
The nanoparticles are tiny spheres of gelatin or chitosan (a material
found in the shells of shrimp and other shellfish) chemically modified
to surround the fungicide tebuconazole. The little spheres require no
special handling.
"You just pressure-treat the wood in the usual way," Heiden said.
The initial tests show that the nanoparticle-treated wood is just as
resistant to rot and insects as conventionally treated lumber. The
researchers are now testing the wood in the warm, wet weather of Hawaii.
The research is funded by the US Environmental Protection Agency.
Other Michigan Tech researchers contributing to the project are
chemistry PhD student Xiaochu Ding and, from the School of Forest
Research and Environmental Science, Research Engineer/Scientist II Dana
Richter, Senior Research Engineer/Scientist Glenn Larkin, Assistant
Research Scientist Erik Keranen and Professor Peter Laks.
Courtesy:ScienceDaily