Basic Engineering Properties of Laminated Veneer Lumber Produced from Tropical Hardwood Species

One of the reasons for a limited structural usage of L VL in tropical countries is the lack of research and development to establish design criteria for this material. Such information is essential for the development of design values as well as new structural uses of LVL.. This study aimed to es...

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Main Author: H'ng, Paik San
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 2003
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Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10152/1/FH_2003_15.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10152/
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
Language: English
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spelling my.upm.eprints.101522024-03-18T03:36:21Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10152/ Basic Engineering Properties of Laminated Veneer Lumber Produced from Tropical Hardwood Species H'ng, Paik San One of the reasons for a limited structural usage of L VL in tropical countries is the lack of research and development to establish design criteria for this material. Such information is essential for the development of design values as well as new structural uses of LVL.. This study aimed to establish basic engineering properties of L VL produced from selected tropical hardwood species i.e. Yellow Meranti (Shorea spp.), Kedondong (Conarium spp), Bintangor (Calophylhlm spp ), White Meranti horea spp.), and Kerning (Dipterocarpus spp). Tests for static bending, bending shear, tensile and compression parallel to longitudinal axis were carried out using in-grade size specimens. The tests were conducted in accordance withASINZS 4357 (Structural Laminated Veneer Lumber). The effects of two important factors (I) wood species and (2) veneer thickness, on the strength properties of LVL were studied. The results show that Kerning LVL has the highest density (700 - 820 kglm3), followed by White Meranti (600-680 kg/m Bintangor (570-590 kg/m, Kedondong (545-574 kg/m3) and Yellow Meranti (510-541 kg/m3). Using thinner veneers increased the LVL panel density between 2.8% (in Kedondong) to 8.9% (in Kerning). Despite having lower board density. both White Meranti and Bintangor LVLs had significantly superior engineering properties than those made from Keruing, Kedondong and Yellow Meranti. Keruing LVL performed below the expectation in all the strength properties which was attributed to the poor bond quality observed through the gluebond shear test and scanning electron microscope analysis. 2003-11 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10152/1/FH_2003_15.pdf H'ng, Paik San (2003) Basic Engineering Properties of Laminated Veneer Lumber Produced from Tropical Hardwood Species. Doctoral thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia. Laminated wood - Case studies English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
English
topic Laminated wood - Case studies
spellingShingle Laminated wood - Case studies
H'ng, Paik San
Basic Engineering Properties of Laminated Veneer Lumber Produced from Tropical Hardwood Species
description One of the reasons for a limited structural usage of L VL in tropical countries is the lack of research and development to establish design criteria for this material. Such information is essential for the development of design values as well as new structural uses of LVL.. This study aimed to establish basic engineering properties of L VL produced from selected tropical hardwood species i.e. Yellow Meranti (Shorea spp.), Kedondong (Conarium spp), Bintangor (Calophylhlm spp ), White Meranti horea spp.), and Kerning (Dipterocarpus spp). Tests for static bending, bending shear, tensile and compression parallel to longitudinal axis were carried out using in-grade size specimens. The tests were conducted in accordance withASINZS 4357 (Structural Laminated Veneer Lumber). The effects of two important factors (I) wood species and (2) veneer thickness, on the strength properties of LVL were studied. The results show that Kerning LVL has the highest density (700 - 820 kglm3), followed by White Meranti (600-680 kg/m Bintangor (570-590 kg/m, Kedondong (545-574 kg/m3) and Yellow Meranti (510-541 kg/m3). Using thinner veneers increased the LVL panel density between 2.8% (in Kedondong) to 8.9% (in Kerning). Despite having lower board density. both White Meranti and Bintangor LVLs had significantly superior engineering properties than those made from Keruing, Kedondong and Yellow Meranti. Keruing LVL performed below the expectation in all the strength properties which was attributed to the poor bond quality observed through the gluebond shear test and scanning electron microscope analysis.
format Thesis
author H'ng, Paik San
author_facet H'ng, Paik San
author_sort H'ng, Paik San
title Basic Engineering Properties of Laminated Veneer Lumber Produced from Tropical Hardwood Species
title_short Basic Engineering Properties of Laminated Veneer Lumber Produced from Tropical Hardwood Species
title_full Basic Engineering Properties of Laminated Veneer Lumber Produced from Tropical Hardwood Species
title_fullStr Basic Engineering Properties of Laminated Veneer Lumber Produced from Tropical Hardwood Species
title_full_unstemmed Basic Engineering Properties of Laminated Veneer Lumber Produced from Tropical Hardwood Species
title_sort basic engineering properties of laminated veneer lumber produced from tropical hardwood species
publishDate 2003
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10152/1/FH_2003_15.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10152/
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