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Wood naval stores processing

Increases in yield of naval stores are brought about by chemical treatment of the exposed wood, especially with paraquat herbicides (dipyridyl compounds). This treatment stimulates extensive oleoresin formation and diffusion into the wood, extending to the pith of the tree and several feet above the treatment level. As much as 40 percent oleoresin content in the wood has been produced. Such treatment could double naval stores production, for both gum and sulfate processes. It also has the potential of providing a new type of wood naval stores by solvent extraction prior to kraft pulping, or a combination of both methods. [Pg.1287]

Wood naval stores are produced by solvent extraction of resin-rich wood from old southern pine stumps and roots. The depletion of these stumps from the large trees of virgin forests, combined with high labor costs, has brought about a major decline in the production of wood naval stores by this process. [Pg.1287]

Dyestuffs, natural Ethyl acetate, natural Fustic wood extract Gambier extract Gum naval stores, processing but not gathering or warehousing Hardwood distillates Hemlock extract Logwood extract Mangrove extract Methanol, natural (wood alcohol) Methyl acetone Methyl alcohol, natural (wood alcohol)... [Pg.466]

History of Naval Stores Production Statistics of Naval Stores Processes of Naval Stores Gum Naval Stores Wood Naval Stores Tall Oil Naval Stores Chemistry of Naval Stores Rosin Turpentine Fatty Acid... [Pg.1159]

The oleoresinous exudate or "pitch of many conifers, but mainly pines, is the raw material for the major products of the naval stores industry. The oleoresin is produced in the epithelial cells which surround the resin canals. When the tree is wounded the resin canals are cut. The pressure of the epithelial cells forces die oleoresin to the surface of die wound where it is collected. The oleoresin is separated into two fractions by steam distillation. The volatile fraction is called gum turpentine and contains chiefly a mixture of monoterpenes but a smaller amount of sesquiterpenes is present also. The nonvolatile gum rosin 5 consists mainly of llie dilerpenuid resin acids and smaller amounts of esters, alcohols and steroids. Wood turpentine, wood rosin and a fraction of intermediate volatility, pine oil are obtained together by gasoline extrachon of the chipped wood of old pine stumps. Pine oil is largely a mixture of the monoterpenoids terpineol. borneol and fenchyl alcohol. Sulfate turpentine and its nonvolatile counterpart, tall oil, 5 are isolated as by-products of the kraft pulping process. Tall oil consists of nearly equal amounts of saponified fatty acid esters and resin acids. [Pg.1602]

Diterpene resin acids are abundantly produced in conifers of the pine family (Pinaceae) and in other plant species (Fig. 6). They are produced in the epithelial cells that surround the resin ducts that are found constitutively, or they are induced in the xylem upon wounding and are important for the physical and chemical plant defenses against herbivores and pathogens (18, 40). Industrially, diterpene resin acids are important chemicals for the naval stores industry, in printing inks, as potential antimicrobials and pharmaceuticals, and are byproducts of wood pulping processes. [Pg.1838]

There are three routes by which naval stores are produced. The oldest method is the tapping of living trees to cause a flow of oleoresin. The second method is removal of naval stores by solvent extraction. The latter process now has replaced steam distillation as a means of recovering turpentine. In the United States, the latest and now the most important route is kraft (sulphate) pulping of pine, during which turpentine and tall oil are recovered as by-products of kraft pulp manufacture. A fourth process, no longer used in the United States, is recovery of turpentine and pine oils by the destructive distillation of pine wood. ... [Pg.265]


See other pages where Wood naval stores processing is mentioned: [Pg.1165]    [Pg.1165]    [Pg.308]    [Pg.956]    [Pg.959]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.954]    [Pg.1180]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.129]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.65 , Pg.1163 ]




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