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Wood panel products formaldehyde emitting

The formaldehyde emitting potential of wood panel products can be evaluated in numerous ways, including the use of dynamic chamber tests (tests involving chambers which are ventilated and simulate real-world conditions) static (unventilated) tests, such as... [Pg.27]

Brown (1999b) reported formaldehyde and VOC emissions from new, unfinished particleboard and MDF (both using urea formaldehyde resins) in Ausbalia. Formaldehyde emissions over the first three weeks exhibited first-order decay behavior that predicted little to no formaldehyde emission after 6 months. However, further emission measurements at 8 months showed the products sbll emitted formaldehyde at approximately one-half the new product rate (also further unpublished measurement at 2 years showed the same emission rate as at 8 months). It was concluded that the wood-based panels emitted formaldehyde by a double-exponen-ttal model, the early- to late-term emissions including the free formaldehyde in the products but the long-term emissions consisbng of only the formaldehyde... [Pg.395]

Lines of demarcation between hardwood plywood, softwood plywood and certain other wood based panel products have become less distinct in recent years. One of the most important distinctions in respect to formaldehyde emission potential is that softwood plywood is typically bonded with phenol-formaldehyde while hardwood plywood is typically bonded with urea-formaldehyde. Phenol-formaldehyde adhesives are more stable and have less tendency to emit formaldehyde than do urea-formaldehyde adhesives. Some important features of hardwood plywood ... [Pg.17]

Particleboard and other products made with isocyanates emit only little formaldehyde (IJ, but these adhesives are expensive and require expensive manufacturing procedures. In contrast, phenolic soft wood plywood is a well established product that is predominantly used for exter i or appIi cat i ons. It conta i ns forma Idehyde i n chemically strongly bonded form and also emits little formaldehyde, as shown in a later chapter in this book. In fact, under almost all common use conditions this type of board contributes not much more formaldehyde than is already present in ambient air in many urban areas. The same is true for waferboard, which has recently become popular for replacing plywood. Likewise, phenolic particleboard emits little forma Idehyde, unIess the phenoIi c res in is bIended w i th UFR. Normally, the products with highest potential for formaldehyde emission are those bonded with UFR. During the past year, approximately 300,000 metric tons of UFR have been used for panel manufacturing in the U.S. [Pg.2]

Formaldehyde is directly emitted into the air from vehicles. It is released in trace amounts from pressed wood products such as particleboard and plywood paneling, from old sick bnildings, and from cotton and cotton-polyester fabrics with selected crosslink finishes. Formation of formaldehyde has been observed in some frozen gadoid fish due to enzymic decomposition of the additive trimethylamine oxide (Rehbein 1985). Its concentration can build up during frozen storage of fish (Leblanc and Leblanc 1988 Reece 1985). It occurs in the upper atmosphere, cloud, and fog it also forms in photochemical smog processes. [Pg.165]


See other pages where Wood panel products formaldehyde emitting is mentioned: [Pg.130]    [Pg.396]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.577]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.394]   


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