Timber (2nd Ed.) Its Nature and Behaviour
Auteur : Dinwoodie J.M.
Timber: Its Nature and Behaviour adopts a materials science approach to timber and comprehensively examines the relationship between the performance of timber and its structure. This book explains a wide range of timbers physical and mechanical behaviour (including processing) in terms of its basic structure and its complex interaction with moisture. The performance of timber and panel products is also related to the levels set in new European specifications and with the associated methods of testing.
1. Structure of Timber. 2. Appearance of Timber in Relation to its Structure. 3. Mass-Volume Relationships. 4. Movement in Timber. 5. Flow in Timber. 6. Deformation Under Load. 7. Strength and Failure in Timber. 8. Durability of Timber. 9. Processing of Timber. Further Reading. Index.
John M. Dinwoodie carried out research for the UK Building Research Establishment for 35 years, focusing on timber and wood-based panels with a special interest in their rhetological behaviour. Since his retirement from the BRE he has been employed as a consultant to represent the UK in the preparation of European standards for wood-based panels. He was awarded an OBE in 1994, and appointed Honorary Professor in the Department of Forest Sciences, University of Wales Bangor.
Date de parution : 09-2017
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 02-2000
Ouvrage de 272 p.
15.6x23.4 cm
Thème de Timber :
Mots-clés :
Moisture Content; Carbonfibre Reinforced Plastic; Microfibrillar Angle; Fibre Saturation Point; Unsteady State Equation; Longitudinal Radial Plane; Test Piece; Cell Cavities; Oven Dry Mass; Unsteady State Flow; Visual Grading; UK Building Regulation; Mechanosorptive Behaviour; Dry Cell Wall; Lignum Vitae; Creep Compliance; Relative Creep; Cell Wall Substance; Slip Flow; Cambial Cells; Transverse Shrinkage; Cell Wall Water; High Interlaminar Shear Strength; Moisture Diffusion; Scots Pine Sapwood