ABSTRACT

The source of strength in solid wood is the wood fiber. Wood is basically a series of tubular fibers or cells cemented together. Each fiber wall is composed of various quantities of three polymers: cellulose, hemicelluloses, and lignin. Cellulose is the strongest polymer in wood and, thus, is highly responsible for strength in the wood fiber because of its high degree of polymerization and linear orientation. The hemicelluloses act as a matrix for the cellulose and increase the packing density of the cell wall; hemicelluloses and lignin are also closely associated. The actual role of hemicelluloses in wood strength has recently been shown to be far more critical toward the overall engineering performance of wood than had previously been assumed. We suspect the primary role of hemicelluloses is to act as a highly specific coupling agent capable of associating both with the more random areas (i.e., noncrystalline) of hydrophilic cellulose and the more amorphous hydrophobic lignin. Lignin not only holds wood fibers themselves together but also helps bind carbohydrate molecules together within the cell wall of the wood fiber. The chemical components of wood that are responsible for mechanical properties can be viewed from three levels: macroscopic (cellular), microscopic (cell wall), and molecular (polymeric) (Winandy and Rowell 1984). Mechanical properties change with changes in the thermal, chemical, and/or biochemical environment. Changes in temperature, pressure, humidity, pH, chemical adsorption from the environment, UV radiation, fire, or biological degradation can have significant effects on the strength of wood.