Article on making wood bulletproof

550Doug

Member
Location
Southern Ontario
Here is an article about a new development in preserving and strengthening wood.
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'Bulletproof wood': Scientists just figured out how to make wood as strong as steel

RT
Sat, 10 Feb 2018 13:54 UTC
© Anne Kauranen / AFP

Scientists at the University of Maryland have fortified wood using a process which makes it 12 times stronger, producing a natural substance more durable than many titanium alloys and capable of stopping high-speed projectiles.

"This could be a competitor to steel or even titanium alloys, it is so strong and durable. It's also comparable to carbon fiber, but much less expensive," said Liangbing Hu, head of the research team at UMD's A. James Clark School of Engineering, in a press release. "This new way to treat wood makes it 12 times stronger than natural wood and 10 times tougher."

The team of researchers boiled different varieties of wood in a caustic solution of sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfite for seven hours. This process removes some of the compounds that surround the cellulose in the wood, creating additional space within. They then pressed the block at 100 degrees Celsius for an entire day. This reduced the wood to one fifth its original thickness but increased its density threefold.


The technique crushes cellulose tubes that bind the wood together to the point where they interlock. It also removes the compound lignin, a type of polymer that binds the cellulose. This proved to be a crucial point in the development of the material as, if too much of the lignin was removed, the resulting material proved to be brittle and less dense than required. The team found the sweet spot was to remove approximately 45 percent of the lignin.

"It is both strong and tough, which is a combination not usually found in nature," said Teng Li, the co-leader of the team. "It is as strong as steel, but six times lighter. It takes 10 times more energy to fracture than natural wood. It can even be bent and molded at the beginning of the process."

The team battle-tested the new material to back up their extraordinary claims by firing bullet-like projectiles at five layers of the material laminated together (in total measuring roughly three millimeters in thickness) with the same ballistic air gun used to test the resistance of military vehicles. Whereas the "bullets" passed through natural wood with relative ease, they were stopped in their tracks by the new treated wood material.

"The paper provides a highly promising route to the design of lightweight, high performance structural materials, with tremendous potential for a broad range of applications where high strength, large toughness and superior ballistic resistance are desired," said Huajian Gao, a professor at Brown University who was not involved in the study, as cited by Eureka Alert. "It is particularly exciting to note that the method is versatile for various species of wood and fairly easy to implement."

Where once steel was the go-to material in the construction or manufacture of buildings, cars and even airplanes, this revolutionary material may spark a green revolution for materials science and reshape the engineering world. The variety of species of tree that can be used to produce the material means that cost and environmental factors can be overcome across the globe with relative ease.

"Soft woods like pine or balsa, which grow fast and are more environmentally friendly, could replace slower-growing but denser woods like teak in furniture or buildings," Hu said.

While other researchers have explored similar methods, and have even stopped actual 9mm bullets fired from a handgun, the Maryland team's research has helped advance the case for a more environmentally friendly approach to modern engineering, while simultaneously reducing the cost.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rj7GWDUXDU
 
Very interesting article. We already know the benefits of micro laminate beams and structural wood I beams. Sounds like the next step forward.
Loren
 
It would seem that such a product would military implications and applications. I'm surprised that they have made no secret of the formulation process.
 
Many years ago a friend and I did some plinking with his .22 pistol, using a piece of Longleaf yellow pine stump (what Tarheels call "lighter wood") as a backstop. The bullets just bounced off the pine stump.
 
I don't buy it. The problem these engineers have is they do something in the lab and while it might work that day they don't take in account what happens a year or two latter when the wood absorbs moisture from the air and returns to where it was. Then it's more rotten than strong. I also used to have a furniture refinishing shop where I had a dip tank using sodium hydroxide solution for the stripper. I can tell you the stuff badly damages wood especially an open grain wood such as oak. When it dries oak wood cracks badly from being stripped in sodium hydroxide.
 
Very interesting.
I'm thinking aircraft.
Remember the Mosquito aircraft in WWII?
They were built mostly of wood and did an
amazing job for the Brits.
Or the Spruce Goose.
Thanks for posting this.
 
How do you nail two pieces together? I bet you can not. Therefore it will only be used in manufacturing or with adhesives.
 
Interesting.

There is a passage in the Good Book that tells of in 'the last days', the solders were burning their armor to keep warm. . . .
 
I was watching a documentary on technology's developed during the WW2, during the program it showed a man that upon approaching an officers desk he dropped a piece of material into a glass of water, then the man proceeded to explain materials that were in short supply that it could replace, and it's possible uses mainly in cold climate marine applications because of it's characteristics, when the presentation was finished the man removed the material from the water and gave it to the officer showing him that the water had not effected it and explained it to be a type of wood ice that once it was formed it took a very looooooooong time for it to deteriorate, but the war end and it was forgotten.
 
I also used to have a furniture refinishing shop where I had a dip tank using sodium hydroxide solution for the stripper. I can tell you the stuff badly damages wood especially an open grain wood such as oak. When it dries oak wood cracks badly from being stripped in sodium hydroxide.

You're not wrong, but you missed the part of the article where the wood is compressed to 1/5 its thickness and cooked. It's not left to air-dry like your oak furniture. All that's left is the lignin(?) or cellulose.
 
They're idea is the wood is so compressed it resists moisture and bugs. Even terminates will only go after the soft grain in wood. The harder annual rings are left intact. The only way I can see it working what they propose is if the wood was pressure treated with some hardening substance which would keep the wood the same as when it comes out of the press. They would have to develop a slower drying super glue to pressure treat the wood.
 

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