Scanning or desorption isotherms? Characterising sorption hysteresis of wood

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Scanning or desorption isotherms? Characterising sorption hysteresis of wood. / Fredriksson, Maria ; Thybring, Emil Engelund.

I: Cellulose, Bind 25, Nr. 8, 08.2018, s. 4477-4485.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Fredriksson, M & Thybring, EE 2018, 'Scanning or desorption isotherms? Characterising sorption hysteresis of wood', Cellulose, bind 25, nr. 8, s. 4477-4485. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10570-018-1898-9

APA

Fredriksson, M., & Thybring, E. E. (2018). Scanning or desorption isotherms? Characterising sorption hysteresis of wood. Cellulose, 25(8), 4477-4485. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10570-018-1898-9

Vancouver

Fredriksson M, Thybring EE. Scanning or desorption isotherms? Characterising sorption hysteresis of wood. Cellulose. 2018 aug.;25(8):4477-4485. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10570-018-1898-9

Author

Fredriksson, Maria ; Thybring, Emil Engelund. / Scanning or desorption isotherms? Characterising sorption hysteresis of wood. I: Cellulose. 2018 ; Bind 25, Nr. 8. s. 4477-4485.

Bibtex

@article{6900fa7945cd4756b050df2f34e50f30,
title = "Scanning or desorption isotherms? Characterising sorption hysteresis of wood",
abstract = "Sorption isotherms describe the relation between the equilibrium moisture content of a material and the ambient relative humidity. Most materials exhibits sorption hysteresis, that is, desorption give higher equilibrium moisture contents than absorption at equal ambient climate conditions. Sorption hysteresis is commonly evaluated by determination of an absorption isotherm followed by desorption starting from the highest relative humidity used in the absorption measurement (typically 95%). The latter is often interpreted as the desorption isotherm but is in fact a scanning isotherm, i.e. an isotherm obtained from neither dry nor water-saturated state. In the present study, we investigated the difference between desorption isotherms and scanning isotherms determined by desorption from different high relative humidity levels reached by absorption and how this difference influenced the evaluation of sorption hysteresis. The measurements were performed on Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) using automated sorption balances. Hysteresis evaluated from desorption isotherms gave linear absolute sorption hysteresis for the studied relative humidity range (0–96%), whereas hysteresis evaluated from scanning isotherms gave non-linear curves with a peak between 50 and 80% relative humidity. The position of this peak depended on the relative humidity from which desorption was initiated. Consequently, understanding and evaluation of sorption hysteresis might be challenging if scanning isotherms are used instead of desorption isotherms, hereby increasing the risk of misinterpreting the results.",
author = "Maria Fredriksson and Thybring, {Emil Engelund}",
year = "2018",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1007/s10570-018-1898-9",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "4477--4485",
journal = "Cellulose",
issn = "0969-0239",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Scanning or desorption isotherms? Characterising sorption hysteresis of wood

AU - Fredriksson, Maria

AU - Thybring, Emil Engelund

PY - 2018/8

Y1 - 2018/8

N2 - Sorption isotherms describe the relation between the equilibrium moisture content of a material and the ambient relative humidity. Most materials exhibits sorption hysteresis, that is, desorption give higher equilibrium moisture contents than absorption at equal ambient climate conditions. Sorption hysteresis is commonly evaluated by determination of an absorption isotherm followed by desorption starting from the highest relative humidity used in the absorption measurement (typically 95%). The latter is often interpreted as the desorption isotherm but is in fact a scanning isotherm, i.e. an isotherm obtained from neither dry nor water-saturated state. In the present study, we investigated the difference between desorption isotherms and scanning isotherms determined by desorption from different high relative humidity levels reached by absorption and how this difference influenced the evaluation of sorption hysteresis. The measurements were performed on Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) using automated sorption balances. Hysteresis evaluated from desorption isotherms gave linear absolute sorption hysteresis for the studied relative humidity range (0–96%), whereas hysteresis evaluated from scanning isotherms gave non-linear curves with a peak between 50 and 80% relative humidity. The position of this peak depended on the relative humidity from which desorption was initiated. Consequently, understanding and evaluation of sorption hysteresis might be challenging if scanning isotherms are used instead of desorption isotherms, hereby increasing the risk of misinterpreting the results.

AB - Sorption isotherms describe the relation between the equilibrium moisture content of a material and the ambient relative humidity. Most materials exhibits sorption hysteresis, that is, desorption give higher equilibrium moisture contents than absorption at equal ambient climate conditions. Sorption hysteresis is commonly evaluated by determination of an absorption isotherm followed by desorption starting from the highest relative humidity used in the absorption measurement (typically 95%). The latter is often interpreted as the desorption isotherm but is in fact a scanning isotherm, i.e. an isotherm obtained from neither dry nor water-saturated state. In the present study, we investigated the difference between desorption isotherms and scanning isotherms determined by desorption from different high relative humidity levels reached by absorption and how this difference influenced the evaluation of sorption hysteresis. The measurements were performed on Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) using automated sorption balances. Hysteresis evaluated from desorption isotherms gave linear absolute sorption hysteresis for the studied relative humidity range (0–96%), whereas hysteresis evaluated from scanning isotherms gave non-linear curves with a peak between 50 and 80% relative humidity. The position of this peak depended on the relative humidity from which desorption was initiated. Consequently, understanding and evaluation of sorption hysteresis might be challenging if scanning isotherms are used instead of desorption isotherms, hereby increasing the risk of misinterpreting the results.

U2 - 10.1007/s10570-018-1898-9

DO - 10.1007/s10570-018-1898-9

M3 - Journal article

VL - 25

SP - 4477

EP - 4485

JO - Cellulose

JF - Cellulose

SN - 0969-0239

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 199458003