Preservation are used to
protect timber against deterioration due to fungi and attacks of termites,
borers, and marine organisms. Most efficient means of preserving timber are,
good seasoning and free circulation of air. Protection against moisture is
afforded by oil-paint provided that the timber is perfectly dry when first
painted otherwise the filling up of the outer pores only confines the moisture
and causes rot. A pre-requisite for satisfactory treatment is that the timber
shall be seasoned so that the timber shall be seasoned so that the outer layers
have a moisture content of less than 20 percent. For exposed timber the only
remedy at present available is impregnation by substances poisonous to fungi,
these substances being either of the oil or chemical types.
Description of Preservatives
Oil type preservatives
Coal Tar Creosote is a fraction
of coal tar distillate and is the most important preservatives of the oil type
having been in use for a very long time and is specially suitable for the
treatment of timber for exterior use, e.g. railway sleepers, poles, piles, etc.
Although creosote has been fairly satisfactory but after sometimes in exposed
situation, it tends to leach out, and has an unpleasant odour; is not clean to
handle and the timber treated with it cannot be painted or polished. Surface
application of creosote has little, if any, value, and for satisfactory
protection a deep impregnation of the preservative must be obtained.
Coal tar is a good preservative
(but not so effective as the creosote derived from it) and is more suitable for
surface applications. It is less toxic to wood destroying agencies and being
very viscous does not penetrate the wood deeply. It should be applied hot. Coal
tar is sometimes mixed with ordinary creosote. All timbers embedded in masonry
or in contact with masonry should be well tarred before erection with three
coasts of hot coal tar into which quick lime powder has been thoroughly
incorporated in the proportion of 1 kg of lime to 5 litres of tar. Framed
joints must be coated with paint before frames are put together. When the end
of a beam or any woodwork is buried in masonry or brickwork, an air space of 6
mm should be left at the ends, sides and top.
Chemical Type Organic Solvent
Preservatives
These preservatives are used
after dissolving them in suitable organic solvents such as, naptha, kerosene
and white spirit. They are clean to handle and are more or less permanent but
some of them are inflammable and care is necessary in handling the solution.
These preservatives are applied cold and in most cases the timber treated with
them can be painted or polished. DDT is an example.
Water Soluble Preservatives
They are comparatively cheaper
and the timber treated with these preservatives can be painted or varnished
when dry. The (and washed out, being water soluble) when the timber is exposed
to wet conditions (i.e. the preservative gets gradually depleted owing to the
dissolving effect of water), though more recent preservatives employ acidified
solutions which after impregnation deposit the chemical in the wood as an
insoluble salt. This leaching of the preservatives can be to some extent,
minimized if a water proof paint coating is applied on the treated timber and
is properly maintained. Most of these chemicals are suitable for inside
locations only for protecting timber not in contact with ground, and are not
suitable for works underground and severe conditions of exposure.
“Ascu” has been quite
successful. It is in powder form and 1 part of the powder dissolved in 16 parts
of water (by weight) gives a solution for ordinary use. The solution can be
applied with a brush or the wood soaked into it. The treated wood can be
painted or polished. Zinc chloride has some fire-retardant properties also.
The most common method of
applying a preservative is by brush, but this gives only limited protection.
Better results are obtained with a hot solution or by spraying, but dipping or
steeping is much more effective. Still better results can be obtained by using
what is known as the open hot tank and cold process. impregnating timber by
applying the preservative under pressure is the most effective method.
Timber to be treated should be
dried to an appropriate moisture content and whenever possible all work on the
timber should be completed and it should be fully fabricated and all cuttings
and drilling done before preservative treatment is applied. Where subsequent
cutting or working is unavoidable, preservative should be liberally applied to
the freshly worked surfaces.
Fire-Proofing Timber
For fire-proofing timber, the
method recommended is the pressure impregnation of the timber with large
quantities of chemicals, the most common of which are ammonium disphoshate,
sodium aresenate, sodium tetraborate. Fire-resistant paints are also available.
White washing is effective to some extent in retarding the action of fire. It
is not possible to make timber fire-proof, chemicals and paints only retard the
action of fire. Timber can be rendered non-inflammable in that it will not
flame or glow but merely char, and will not, therefore, assist in the
propagation of fire. A dense wood offers greater resistance to fire than a
lighter one. Presence of resins and oils in wood increase combustibility. No
wood work of any kind should be laid within 60 cm of a fire-place or a flue.
All portions of timber abutting
against masonry or concrete or embedded in ground shall be painted with a wood
primer or two coats of boiling tar.