| Literature DB >> 35115635 |
Kristýna Šimůnková1, Štěpán Hýsek1, Ladislav Reinprecht2, Jan Šobotník1,3, Tereza Lišková1, Miloš Pánek4.
Abstract
Timber suffers from various biological damages. Recent efforts aim on nature-friendly sustainable technologies of wood protection to replace classical synthetic agents having usually negative impact on many non-target organisms including man. This research investigated the biocidal effectiveness of lavender oil (LO) in protecting the Norway spruce (Picea abies) wood against the termites Reticulitermes flavipes and the brown-rot fungus Rhodonia placenta. Following, selected physical characteristics of spruce wood treated with LO were evaluated: colour changes, roughness, surface wetting with water and surface free energy (SFE). Experiments showed that LO increased the resistance of spruce wood to termites nearly to the level of its treatment with commercial biocide based on trivalent boron and quaternary ammonium salt. The additional hydrophobic treatment of wood ensured its full termite-resistance even after artificial weathering in Xenotest and leaching in water according to EN 84, respectively. It shows a high potential of LO to protect wood against termites. Adversely, the effectiveness of 5% LO against rot was not sufficient. The colour of the oil-treated wood was preserved, its roughness increased slightly, and wetting and SFE led to a positive change, improving the adhesion of potentially applied coatings or adhesives for exterior exposures.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35115635 PMCID: PMC8813917 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-05959-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Retention of solutions and active substances into wood samples.
| Set of samples | Wood species | Lavender oil (5%) | Bochemit QB (20%) | Hydrophobizer Solution retention* (kg m−3) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solution | Active LO | Solution | Boric acid | QAC | |||
| REF-P | Pine | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| U-O | Spruce | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| U-H | Spruce | – | – | – | – | – | 117 (± 20) |
| L-O | Spruce | 121 (± 20) | 6.05 (± 0.68) | – | – | – | – |
| L-H | Spruce | 119 (± 21) | 5.95 (± 0.71) | – | – | – | 119 (± 19) |
| B-O | Spruce | – | – | 119 (± 18) | 4.76 (± 0.72) | 4.76 (± 0.72) | – |
| B-H | Spruce | – | – | 119 (± 18) | 4.76 (± 0.72) | 4.76 (± 0.72) | 119 (± 21) |
*Explanation of symbols: Scotch pine wood—(REF-P) is reference required by EN 113; Other symbols are valid for the Norway spruce wood: Untreated original—(U-O); Untreated, but with the additional hydrophobic substance—(U-H); Treated with the lavender oil—(L-O); Treated with the lavender oil and then with the hydrophobic substance (L-H); Treated with the Bochemit QB—(B-O); Treated with the Bochemit QB and then with the hydrophobic substance—(B-H).
Only the retention of the 6% hydrophobizer solution is given.
Figure 1Mass losses (Δm) of the Norway spruce wood samples after 6-weeks attack by termites Reticulitermes flavipes. Untreated original—(U–O); Untreated, but with the additional hydrophobic substance—(U-H); Treated with the lavender oil—(L-O); Treated with the lavender oil and then with the hydrophobic substance (L-H); Treated with the Bochemit QB—(B-O); Treated with the Bochemit QB and then with the hydrophobic substance—(B-H).
Survival of termites after 6 weeks of termite attack by EN 118. Untreated original—(U-O); Untreated, but with the additional hydrophobic substance—(U-H); Treated with the lavender oil—(L-O); Treated with the lavender oil and then with the hydrophobic substance (L-H); Treated with the Bochemit QB—(B-O); Treated with the Bochemit QB and then with the hydrophobic substance—(B-H).
| Set of samples | Spruce | Spruce | Spruce | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| U-O | U-H | L-O | L-H | B-O | B-H | |
| Survival of termites (%) | ||||||
| Without aging | 19.37 (20.39) | 31.32 (13.82) | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Leaching by EN 84 | 53.53 (4.94) | 53.45 (11.55) | 31.98 (25.91) | 9.88 (11.36) | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Weathering in Xenotest | 41.95 (20.90) | 53.13 (13.51) | 53.60 (9.57) | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
Mean values are from 6 replicates; Numbers in parentheses are SD.
Figure 2Samples demonstrating termite activity after 6 weeks of testing based on EN 118. Untreated original—(U–O); Untreated, but with the additional hydrophobic substance—(U-H); Treated with the lavender oil—(L-O); Treated with the lavender oil and then with the hydrophobic substance (L-H); Treated with the Bochemit QB—(B-O); Treated with the Bochemit QB and then with the hydrophobic substance—(B-H).
Figure 3Mass losses (Δm) of wood caused with the brown-rot fungus Rhodonia placenta after 16-weeks. Reference—the Scotch pine wood—(REF-P); Other symbols are valid for the Norway spruce wood: Untreated original—(U–O); Untreated, but with the additional hydrophobic substance—(U-H); Treated with the lavender oil—(L-O); Treated with the lavender oil and then with the hydrophobic substance (L-H); Treated with the Bochemit QB—(B-O); Treated with the Bochemit QB and then with the hydrophobic substance—(B-H).
CA° and SFE of Norway spruce wood without and with lavender treatment.
| CAwater° | SFE (mN m−2) | SFE disperse (mN m−2) | SFE polar (mN m−2) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Untreated spruce (U-O) | 105.56 (15.57) | 30.48 (7.45) | 30.47 (7.10) | 0.01 (0.36) |
| Lavender treated spruce (L-O) | 90.02 (6.55) | 47.27 (3.16) | 46.88 (2.39) | 0.38 (0.77) |
Mean values are from 8 replicates; Numbers in parentheses are SD.
Measured roughness of spruce wood without and with lavender treatment.
| Set of samples | Ra | Rz | RSM | Rc |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Untreated spruce (U-O) | 7.30 (1.79) | 51.97 (9.43) | 430.77 (92.13) | 31.52 (8.93) |
| Lavender treated spruce (L-O) | 9,49 (2.48) | 63.11 (12.70) | 391.33 (113.93) | 45.32 (9.51) |
Mean values are from 24 measurements; Numbers in parentheses are SD.
Figure 4SEM micrograph (left) and the elemental composition analyses focused on Si (right) of the surface layer of spruce heartwood treated with lavender oil and a hydrophobic substance. The presence of higher concentrations of silane-siloxane compounds in cell wall structure and glass micro-particles on the surface and lumen of tracheid is shown—also after accelerated aging. (A) Lavender oil spruce wood treatment without aging and without hydrophobic layer 7; (B) Lavender oil treatment withou aging and with hydrophobic layer; (C) Lavender oil treatment with hydrophobic layer after leaching by water in accordance with EN 84; (D) Lavender oil treatment with hydrophobic layer after artificial weathering in Xenotest.