16 Facts About Engineered wood

1.

Engineered wood, called mass timber, composite wood, man-made wood, or manufactured board, includes a range of derivative wood products which are manufactured by binding or fixing the strands, particles, fibres, or veneers or boards of wood, together with adhesives, or other methods of fixation to form composite material.

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2.

Engineered wood products are used in a variety of applications, from home construction to commercial buildings to industrial products.

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3.

Typically, engineered wood products are made from the same hardwoods and softwoods used to manufacture lumber.

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4.

PlyEngineered wood is manufactured from sheets of cross-laminated veneer and bonded under heat and pressure with durable, moisture-resistant adhesives.

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5.

Densified Engineered wood is made by using a mechanical hot press to compress Engineered wood fibers and increase the density by a factor of three.

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6.

Environmentally, Engineered wood requires significantly less carbon dioxide to produce than steel.

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7.

Finger joint is made up of short pieces of Engineered wood combined to form longer lengths and is used in doorjambs, moldings, and studs.

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8.

I-joists and Engineered wood I-beams are ""-shaped structural members designed for use in floor and roof construction.

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9.

Transparent Engineered wood composites are new materials, currently only made at the laboratory scale, that combines transparency and stiffness via a chemical process that replaces light-absorbing compounds, such as lignin, with a transparent polymer.

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10.

Engineered wood has the potential to reduce carbon emissions by replacing cement and steel as a primary material in the construction of buildings.

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11.

Not only do buildings made from engineered wood act as a carbon sink, but they produce less emissions in the manufacturing process than steel and cement, which both emit a lot of carbon dioxide due to the chemical processes involved in their manufacturing.

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12.

Engineered wood products are used in a variety of ways, often in applications similar to solid wood products.

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13.

For example, fiber cement siding is made of cement and Engineered wood fiber, while cement board is a low-density cement panel, often with added resin, faced with fiberglass mesh.

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14.

Engineered wood composites have been found to emit potentially harmful amounts of formaldehyde gas in two ways: unreacted free formaldehyde and the chemical decomposition of resin adhesives.

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15.

Many oriented strand board and plyEngineered wood manufacturers use phenol-formaldehyde because phenol is a much more effective additive.

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16.

The low density, high mechanical strength, and excellent formability of the 3D-molded Engineered wood offers broad versatility in designing and manufacturing large, lightweight, load-bearing designs.

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