Soybeans could beef up plywood glues.Soon plywood plywood, manufactured board composed of an odd number of thin sheets of wood glued together under pressure with grains of the successive layers at right angles. Laminated wood differs from plywood in that the grains of its sheets are parallel. might go vegetarian vegetarian /veg·e·tar·i·an/ (vej?e-tar´e-an) 1. one who practices vegetarianism. 2. pertaining to vegetarianism. veg·e·tar·i·an n. One who practices vegetarianism. . The ubiquitous building material owes its strength to multiple wood sheets with their grains at right angles so as to form a right angle or right angles, as when one line crosses another perpendicularly. See also: Right and tenaciousxglue between the layers. Now, researchers are proposing that plywood be manufactured using glue made with soy flour rather than with powdered cattle-blood protein as is done conventionally. The vegetable containing adhesive adhesive, substance capable of sticking to surfaces of other substances and bonding them to one another. The term adhesive cement is sometimes used in place of adhesive, especially when referring to a synthetic adhesive. might reduce the wood's cost and alleviate health concerns among mill workers. Aheading incentive for finding such an alternative is workers fears of breathing in cattle-blood dust and disease agents it might carry, says [fix][/fix] gelista of the U.S Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service (ARS) in Peoria. Ill. Furthermore there are few suppliers of the blood protein, which helps make the glue sticky and durable. In work funded by the United Soybean soybean, soya bean, or soy pea, leguminous plant (Glycine max, G. soja, or Soja max) of the family Leguminosae (pulse family), native to tropical and warm temperate regions of Asia, where it has been Board, Hojilla Evangelista and her colleagues developed and tested several glue formulations that use different amounts of soy ingredients from a variety of suppliers. Three glues that contain soyflour--a combination of soy protein Soy protein is generally regarded as the storage protein held in discrete particles called protein bodies which are estimated to contain at least 60–70% of the total soybean protein. and starch--have properties comparable to those made with the blood protein, says Hojilla Evangelista. In test, the soy-containing glues were at least as strong as the conventional glue and had comparable water resistance, she says. The new glues also had foaming behaviour comparable to that of blood-proteins glue. Foaming is an essential trait trait (trat) 1. any genetically determined characteristic; also, the condition prevailing in the heterozygous state of a recessive disorder, as the sickle cell trait. 2. a distinctive behavior pattern. for glue used in one of the major methods for making plywood. During this manufacturing process, know as foam-extrusion, machines squirt the glue in every spaced lines onto each successive ply (mathematics, data) ply - 1. Of a node in a tree, the number of branches between that node and the root. 2. Of a tree, the maximum ply of any of its nodes. , says Rick Haig of ARS. Good foaming ensures that the glue will coat the entire sheet when another layer of wood is pressed on the foam extrusion is [fix][/fix] less glue than other techniques such as brushing, rolling or spraying, he says. Pacific Adhesives Co of Portland, Ore., which makes foam extrusion equipment, is now testing the ARS formulations. In these experiments, the soy-containing glues foam just as well or better than blood containing glue, says company president Tom [fix][/fix]. The company is still examining the soy glues' adhesive properties, he says, and is planning full-scale [fix][/fix]. Paper and wood materials grand Georgia-Pacific is also testing several formulations of the new glue, says company researcher [fix][/fix] "I think that it has a lot potential", he comments. For one thing he says, the soy-containing glue has a longer shelf life than conventional glue. He speculates that the soy glue might not be [fix][/fix] to foam extrusion processes. Ultimately, cost may determine the new glues' fate. The soy glues are slightly less expensive than those that contain animal protein, Hojilla Evangelista says. Although modest, such savings could add up for mills that use tons of glue annually to make industrial quantities of plywood. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion