- November 27, 2020
- Posted by: M. Sadegh Riasi
- Category: Research News
How bound water regulates wood drying
Hélène Penvern, Meng Zhou, Benjamin Maillet, Denis Courtier-Murias, Mario Scheel, Jonathan Perrin, Timm Weitkamp, Sandrine Bardet, Sabine Caré, Philippe Coussot
Water extraction from plants by evaporation is ubiquitous in nature, and essential for most uses of wood-based products, yet little is known about the internal drying mechanisms. NMR and x-ray computed tomography were used to observe the effects of drying at different length scales. In typical porous media drying is due mainly to capillary effects, but in wood the structure’s bound water controls extraction of free liquid from pores, throughout the process. Transfers between bound and free water seem to play a major role in the interaction of plantlike systems with water, and this study provides new concepts for modeling and controlling the drying properties of such materials.
Physical Review Applied 14, 054051
Corresponding Authors: Philippe Coussot