MRS Meetings and Events

 

MF03.04.16 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Engineered Wood Materials Utilizing Seaweed Biomass as an Adhesive

When and Where

Apr 23, 2024
5:00pm - 7:00pm

Flex Hall C, Level 2, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Mallory Parker1,Paul Grandgeorge1,Ian Campbell1,Hannah Nguyen1,Rebekah Brain1,Scott Edmundson2,Deborah Rose2,Chinmayee Subban2,Eleftheria Roumeli1

University of Washington1,Pacific Northwest National Laboratory2

Abstract

Mallory Parker1,Paul Grandgeorge1,Ian Campbell1,Hannah Nguyen1,Rebekah Brain1,Scott Edmundson2,Deborah Rose2,Chinmayee Subban2,Eleftheria Roumeli1

University of Washington1,Pacific Northwest National Laboratory2
The increasing concerns associated with petroleum-derived resources call for sustainable renewably sourced alternatives. Engineered wood materials are widely used in the form of panels and particleboards in structural applications, construction and packaging. Wood-products provide multiple advantages such as sustainable feedstocks and lightweight final products that can meet load-bearing requirements for a plethora of applications. However, engineered wood products, such as medium density fiberboards (MDF), most predominately rely on formaldehyde-based adhesives to achieve wood particle/fiber bonding. Such adhesives are not only petroleum-derived but also have detrimental health effects during use (formaldehyde emissions) and at their end-of-life. To further mitigate the environmental impact of construction materials, more sustainable bonding agents need to be investigated. In this work, we hypothesize that the biopolymers within seaweed biomass can form a strong hydrogen bonding network with wood particles, that can be sufficient to create a set of fully biobased engineered wood composites. The use of seaweed as an adhesive would offer the benefits of carbon sequestering and renewable sourcing, as well as non detrimental end-of-life effects. We test our hypothesis using Ulva expansa (Ulva) as a proof-of-concept seaweed species and report the manufacturing of engineered wood composites with varying concentration of waste wood particles and Ulva, as well as a detailed study of their structure, bonding and mechanical properties. We demonstrate that upon hot-pressing, powderized Ulva flows in between the wood particles and provides a strong binding effect. We show that the flexural strength of produced engineered wood composites increases with increasing Ulva concentrations. We further report that the presence of Ulva attractively improves other properties such as water resistance and flammability. To highlight the bonding mechanisms at the biopolymeric level, we perform Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) studies. We also show that the resulting wood panels can be machined using traditional drilling or laser-cutting methods. Finally, we perform an analysis of the environmental impact of ulva-bonded engineered wood composites.

Keywords

adhesion | biomaterial | hot pressing

Symposium Organizers

Yuanyuan Li, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Kunal Masania, TU Delft
Gustav Nystrom, EMPA
Eleftheria Roumeli, University of Washington

Session Chairs

Kunal Masania
Eleftheria Roumeli

In this Session

MF03.04.01
Synthesis and Antibacterial Properties of Lignin-Based Quaternary Ammonium and Phosphonium Salts

MF03.04.02
Tough 3D Printable Hydrogels Based on Force Responsive Protein Unfolding

MF03.04.04
Scalable Advance Manufacturing of Complex Multilayer Structures Film with Simultaneous Slot Dies Deposition Method

MF03.04.05
Nanocellulose Networks: Utilizing Colloidal Processing Principles to Tune The Mechanical Properties of Solid Foams

MF03.04.06
Effect of Wet-Stretching and Confinement on Fiber Alignment in Bacterial Cellulose Films

MF03.04.08
Understanding 3D Networks Structure during Biosynthesis of Cellulose from Bacteria

MF03.04.10
Hydrogel-Ceramic Composite for Efficient Oil Water Separation in Emulsified System

MF03.04.11
Mycelium Bridge Behavior for Sustainable, Architected Biocomposites

MF03.04.12
Sequence Control of Bioinspired Calcium-Responsive Protein-Based Polymers

MF03.04.13
Rapid Photo-Triggered Release Kinetics of PPA Microcapsules

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