Summary
The penetration characteristics of five modern wood coatings (three waterborne, one high solid and one solvent borne) into pine sapwood, spruce and dark red meranti have been systematically compared. The degree of coating penetration is mainly determined by the ability of the coating to flow into wood capillaries. Binder type, pigmentation, solid matter content and drying speed appeared to influence this ability. In softwoods the following different coating penetration routes are observed: the flow into open ends of longitudinal early-and latewood tracheids, the flow into ray cells and the transport from rays through the cross-field into longitudinal tracheids adjacent to rays. The possibility for the coating to follow the latter route is strongly influenced by the existing type of cross field pitting and to a lesser degree by the pigmentation of the paint. Clear differences between pine and spruce have been found with respect to the flow into ray parenchym and ray tracheids. The flow into open ends of longitudinal tracheids is strongly influenced by the grain angle of tracheids. Penetration into dark red meranti is mainly limited to vessels and rays. Tylose membranes can prevent the complete filling of vessels. The impact on penetration of the removal of extractives and of sanding of the surface has also been studied but appears to be of only minor importance.
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The authors want to thank Akzo Nobel Coatings, DSM Resins and Sigma Coatings for their technical support. This research was financed by the the Dutch Innovative Research Program on Coatings under contract number IVE 93-812. Authors also thank the University of Hamburg (BFH) for the use of their electron microscopy facilities.
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de Meijer, M., Thurich, K. & Militz, H. Comparative study on penetration characteristics of modern wood coatings. Wood Sci.Technol. 32, 347–365 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00702791
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00702791