CA1318762C - Electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board - Google Patents

Electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board

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Publication number
CA1318762C
CA1318762C CA000588760A CA588760A CA1318762C CA 1318762 C CA1318762 C CA 1318762C CA 000588760 A CA000588760 A CA 000588760A CA 588760 A CA588760 A CA 588760A CA 1318762 C CA1318762 C CA 1318762C
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CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
particle board
electrically conductive
lignocellulose
particles
lignocellulosic
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA000588760A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Alan L. Lambuth
C. Comer Brown
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
EAGLE MANUFACTURING LLC
Original Assignee
Boise Cascade Corp
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Filing date
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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01BCABLES; CONDUCTORS; INSULATORS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR CONDUCTIVE, INSULATING OR DIELECTRIC PROPERTIES
    • H01B1/00Conductors or conductive bodies characterised by the conductive materials; Selection of materials as conductors
    • H01B1/20Conductive material dispersed in non-conductive organic material
    • H01B1/24Conductive material dispersed in non-conductive organic material the conductive material comprising carbon-silicon compounds, carbon or silicon
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08KUse of inorganic or non-macromolecular organic substances as compounding ingredients
    • C08K3/00Use of inorganic substances as compounding ingredients
    • C08K3/02Elements
    • C08K3/04Carbon
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/25Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component and including a second component containing structurally defined particles
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/25Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component and including a second component containing structurally defined particles
    • Y10T428/253Cellulosic [e.g., wood, paper, cork, rayon, etc.]
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/25Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component and including a second component containing structurally defined particles
    • Y10T428/256Heavy metal or aluminum or compound thereof
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/30Self-sustaining carbon mass or layer with impregnant or other layer
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/31504Composite [nonstructural laminate]
    • Y10T428/31971Of carbohydrate
    • Y10T428/31989Of wood

Abstract

ABSTRACT
An electrically conductive medium or high density lignocellulose particle board useful in the manufacture of flooring, wall paneling, and furniture functioning to establish static-free environments for the manufacture and operation of microcomputers and related equipment and protection from static electrical discharge problems generally.
The particle boards comprise dry-formed, hot-consolidated mixtures of finely divided, electrically conductive carbon particles 0.2-5 particle board adhesive 1.5-15 lignocellulosic particles balance In this composition the carbon particles are character-ized by a having specific surface areas of at least 20 square meters per gram. The lignocellulose particles comprise lignocellulose chips and flakes having width to length ratios within the range of from 1-1 to 1-20, and lignocellulose strands having width to length ratios within the range of from 1-1 to 1-40 and minimum widths of one millimeter.

Description

-131~

ELECTRICALLY CONDUCTIVE LIG~OCELLULOSE PARTICLE BOARD
Backqround and General Statement of the Invention This invention relates to electrically conductive ligno-cellulosic particle boards. It pertains particularly to electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle boards of use in establishing static-free environments for the manu-facture and operation of mlcrocomputers and associated and/or related components and equipment, as well as for the control ~ .
of static electrical discharge problems generally.
Important locations which must be protected from static electrical accumulation and discharge include any involved with the production or use of volatile inflammable liquids and gases. Hospital operating rooms are an example. Quoting from Sections 3-3.6.1.2 and 1.3 of the Americal National Standards Institute/National Fire Protection Standard 99 for Health Care Facilities: ;
1.2 "The prevention of the accumulation of static charges revolves about a number of safeguards which shall be complied with in flammable anesthetizing locations, in corridors and passageways adjacent there-to, in rooms connecting directly to anesthetizing loca-tions, such as scrub rooms and sterilizing rooms, and in storage locations for flammable anesthetics located in an operating suite."

1.3 "The method employed to prevent such accumulation include the installation of conductive floor (see 3-3.6.2J, the maintenancs of the relative humidity at 50 percent at least, and the use of certain items of conductive equipment, accessories and wearing apparel."
It is well known that the operating voltages of micro-computers and related equipment are now so 10W that thedischarge of static electricity in the vicinity of the equipment may easily erase the memory or even damage the microcircuits of the equipment, to the great dismay of both equipment manufacturers and users~ As a result, every effort must be made to produce and operate the eguipment in a static-free environment, including the provision of electri-cally-grounded furniture, floors and walls in the equipment production facilities and user installations.
In such rooms and booths, it is common practice to use lignocellulosic particle boards, particularly wood particle boards, having thicknesses in the range of from one-eighth to two inches in the manufacture of the flooring, wall panels, cabinets and furniture.
Such particle boards are conventionally made by comminut-ing wood or other lignocellulose to the form of small pieces, blending mixtures of the small pie~es with a suitable thermo-setting adhesive, dry-forming the resulting mixture into a mat, and hot-pressing the mat (in a platen press) to the de-sired density and thickness.
Varieties of particle board manufactured in this manner are chipboard, flakeboard, and strand tor sliver) board, which is used in the manufacture of oriented "strand boards". Closely related ~iber-based products are conven-131~

tionally termed low density, medium density and high d~nsit~
fiberboards.
Followi~g are product definitions from various recog-nized sources;
Particle board is a generic term for a panel manu-factured from lignocellulosic materials tusually wood) primarily in the form of discxe~e pieces or particles, as distinguished from fibers, combined with a synthetic resin or other suitable binder and bonded together under heat and pressure in a hot press by a process in which entire interparticle bond is created by the added binder and to which other materials may have been added during manufacture to improve certain properties. (ASTM D-1554-86, Standard Definitions of Terms Relating to ~1ood-base Fiber and Particle Panel Materials).
Chipboard is a particle panel composed of small pieces of wood chopped off a larger piece by axe-like cuts as in a chipper of the paper industry, or produced by mechanical hogs, hammermills, etc. (ASTM D 1554-86). The term chip-board is frequently used to identify particle board madefrom mill waste raw materials such as planer shavings, hogged mill ends and sawdust.
Flakeboard is a particle panel composed of flakes.
Flakes are small flat wood particles of predetermined dimensions, substantially uniform in thickness, with fiber direction essentially in the plane of the flake; in overall character resembling a small piece of veneer. It is pro-13~ g~
--4--duced by special equipment for use in the manufacture of flakeboard. (Wood Handbook: Wood as an Engineering Material.
USDA Agriculture Handbook 72).
Oriented Strandboard is a type o particle panel product 5 composed of strand-type flakes which are purposely aligned in directions which make a panel stronger, stiffer and with improved dimensional properties in the alignment directions, as compared with a panel with random flake orientation.
Wood Handbook: Wood as an Engineering Material (USDA
lQAgriculture Handbook 72).
Fiberboard is a dry formed panel product manufactured from lignocellulosic fibers combined with a synthetic resin or other suitable binder. The fibers are slender, thread-like elements resulting from the chemical or mechanical ¦l5defiberization of woody materials, with or without steam refining. In the manufacture of medium density fiber board, the panels are compressed to a density of 0.50 to 0.80 gm./cm cm, in a hot press by a process in which substantially the entire interfiber bond is created by the added binder. Other 20materials may have been added during manufacture to improve certain properties. (American National Standard, Medium Density Fiberboard for Interior Use. ANSI A208.2-1980).

! 25 -5- 131~

All of these products are to be distinguished from paper products based on chemically pulped wood fibers in that (1) they comprise lignocellulose products rather than cellulosic products from which the lignin has besn removed and (2) they have appreciable thic~ness (herein from 1/~-inch to 2-inches) and hence have appreciable structural str~ngth.
As noted, they have primary application as flooring, wall-board, cabinets and furniture components.
Electrically conductive paper products are known.
~s illustrated in Davenport et al. U.S. 2,328,198, they are manufactured by including electrically conductive carbon particles in the papermaking furnish which is converted to the finished paper sheet. Alternatively, as illustrated in Ohlbach, U.S. 4,160,503, they may be manufactured by sprinkling electrically conductive carbon particles on the surfaces of paper or paperboard sheets. The object is to provide on or in the sheet a continuous, electrically conducting path which~in use leads to ground any electric charges which may develop on the sheet.
~Iowever, particle board products having this desired capacity have not heretofore been developed. Manifold prob-lems attend the manufacture of electrically conducting boards using comminuted lignocellulose as a primary raw material.
As will be shown hereinafter, certain forms of ligno-cellulose of reduced size, for example refined wood fibers, are not operable. Similarly, all electrically conductive 7 ~ 2 materials are not operable, for e~ampls el~ctrically conductive inorganic salts, or even particles of electri-cally conducting metals or metal oxides such as aluminum oxide and iron oxide. Still further, although finely divided carbon particles are operable, they function successfully only within carefully defined parameters.
Accordingly it is the general object of the present invention to provide a particle board product useful in the described and related applications.
A further important object of the present invention is the provision of such a product at various controllable levels of conductivity produced by procedures which are compatible with current conventional particle board manu-facturing operations.
We have discovered that electrically conductive particle boards of the class described may be manufactured practically and economically at various controllable levels of conductivity by procedures which are compatible with current particle board manufacturing procedures by dry-20 forming and subsequently hot-consolidating a mat having the following composition, in % by weight, dry solids basis:
Finely divided, electrically conductive carbon particles 0.2-5 particle board adhesive 1.5-15 lignocellulose particles balance -7- 131~7~
~n the foregoing, the-lignocellulose particles com-prise at least one member of the group consisting oi ligno-cellulose chips, lignocellulose flakes, and lignocellulose strands.
In addition to the above, minor proportions of process fines and of additives such as pigmentst fire proofing agents, rot proofing agents, wax emulsions and the like may be employed as desirable or necessary for particular purposes.
To secure effective, complete coverage of the foregoing lignocellulosic components, the carbon particles used with them must have surface areas of at least 20 square meters per gram.
When these conditions are fulfilled, electrically lS conductive particle products may be fabricated from wood and other forms of lignocellulose in the form of boards or billets having the desired properties.
THE DRAWINGS
In the drawings:
Figure 1 comprises diagrammatic views of lignocellulosic chips of the class under consideration herein.
Figure 2 comprises diagrammatic views of lignocellulosic flakes of the class under consideration herein.
Figure 3 comprises diagrammatic views of lignocellulosic strands of the class under consideration herein.
Figure 4 comprises diagrammatic views of lignocellulosic fibers of the class under consideration herein.

P~ ~ 2 DESC~ 'TION Or ~?~EFi~:~RED E.IBODIMENTS OF TH~ IMVZ'~JTIOil As indicated above, the principal constituents of the electrically conductive lignocellulose boards of the present invention comprise lignocellulose chips, flakes and strands (herein termed generically "lignocellulose particles"l; finely divided carbon particles; and particle board adhesive. Considering each of these in turn, and the critical characteristics which determine their suitability for use in the present invention:
a- T,,he Liqnocellulose Part cles The lignocellulose particle component may comprise either wood or other woody materials such as bagasse, rice hulls, straw, corn stalks or the like. The raw materials investigated comprise wood chips, flakes, strands and refined fibers.
The chip particles were prepared from a raw material mixture consisting of hammermilled sawmill trim wacte, coarse sawdust, planer shavings and paper pulp chips. This mixture was reduced in particle size by passing it through a 20 ~Pallman flaker and a Bauer single disc grinder or a hammer-mill. Chips not passing through an appropriate screen size were recycled and reground. The screened chip stream was metered into a triple-pass heated rotating drum dryer in which the chip moisture content was reduced to about 4%.
*Trade mark - 1318~
g The flake particles were prspared from small-diameter debarked green White fir logs. The logs were cut into 24" lengths and were fed against the knives of a rotat-ing disc flaker. The knives of the flaker were set to cut flakes 1-3/4" long, 1/2" wide and 0.020" thick with tapered ends. The flakes were then metered into a heated rotating drum dryer which reduced their moisture content to about 4%.
- The strand particles were prepared from the ~7hite fir flakes described above by passing them rapidly through a hammer mill with a slotted output screen which split the flakes lengthwise into slivers and splinters of much narrower average width. The minimum width was about one millimeter.
The refined fibers were prepared by steam condition-ing 1" dry Douglas fir wood chips under 80 to 150 pounds of steam pressure for 3 minutes, then passing the con-ditioned chips under continuing steam pressure through a double-disc refiner witll a plate gap setting of 0.012".
The fibers thus produced were blown into a storage bin and were metered into a heated revolving drum dryer which reduced their moisture content to about 4%.
From these lignocellulosic raw materials dry process wood particle board was prepar~d to the specifications of industrial grade particle board widely used as the "core panel" in furniture, floors, decorative wall paneling, ~--31~r~

cabinets and similar interior furnishings for both residential and commercial construction. The procedure for its manufacture was as follows:
The wood furnish consistsd of about 75 percent mixed pine residues, 15 percent Douglas fir and 10 percent White fir in the form of planer shavings, coarsely chipped sawmill trim waste, sawdust and green pulp chips. The mixture was ground and screened into a size range suitable for particle board by passing it through a Pallman chipper that reduces the chun]cs and finger-size chips to small -flakes. Any finer particles present passed through the machine without further size reduction. The Pallman output stream was put through a Bauer aingle disc grinder that further reduced the size of the chips and increased the percentage of rod-shaped particles and small slivers in order -to ensure adequate board stiffness.
The Pallman/Bauer-ground wood chips were then passed through a heated revolving drum dryer to bring their average moisture content down to about four percent, dry wood basis.
This dry chip stream is normally fed into plant blending and forming equipment to produce commercial particle board.
However, a quantity was diverted and collected for laboratory use in the production of smaller e~perimental boards. In either case, the ensuing board production steps were approximately the same, differing mainly in scale.

13~87 ~2 The experimental boards were produced singly. Thus, the chips for one board were weighed out accurately, tlle actual weight depending on board thickness and density.
In the case of the conductive board experiments, the conductive agent (carbon black, metal oxide, etc.) was added in dry powdered form to the weighed chips. The chips and conductive agent were dry-blended with intensive agitation for one minute to distribute the conductive material as com-pletely as possible over the surface of every wood chip, large and small. One minute of intensive blending was adequate to cause the wood chips to take up all the con-ductive powder that could be made to cling to them. Any excess simply sifted to the bottom of the blender.
The dry-blended mixture of wood chips and conductive agent was transferred in total to a laboratory-size rotating drum resin blender equipped with internal vanes to continuously lift and cascade the chips during resin application. As the drum rotated slowly t14 RPM) adhesive resin, water and other liquid additives (if any) were atom-ized and sprayed into the blender at a right angle to thecenter of rotation under 30 psi air pressure. The spray tip was cycled slowly and continuously from front to rear within the blender to ensure uniform liquid distribution. The application of resin and additives to the chips was accomplished in 4 to 8 minutes depending on quantity and viscosity. The resin, water, wa~ emulsion and other addi-12~ 7 ~ ~

tives such as lignin solution were sprayed in variouscombinations and sequences to establish (experimentally) the effect on board conductivity.
The resin-coated chips then were poured into a forming box placed on a stainless steel caul from a height of about two feet, roughly simulating the drop onto the conveyor cauls of a commercial board forming line. The chips were lightly levelled with a spatula and cold pressed within the forming box for 8 seconds at 300 psi to con-solidate the loose chips into a mat which could be handled.The forming box was removed and a second stainless steel caul was placed on top of the consolidated mat. Total forming and prepressing time was about two minutes.
The mat, with 1/4, 3/8 or 3/4-inch steel stop bars placed ne~t to it between the cauls, was inserted into an electrically heated press at a temperature of 330 F. The press was closed in 15 seconds to 600 psi initial pressure and held at this pressure for 30 seconds to bring the mat down to stop thickness (1/4, 3/8 or 3/4-inch). Then the pressure was reduced to 300 psi for the rest of the pressing cycle. On completion of the 3 to 6-minute hot pressing time, the press was opened and the fully cured board removed. The board was stored 24 hours at room temperature before any electrical or physical tests were performed.
As a variation of this procedure, several boards were made by placing the weighed chips directly in the resin blender in order to coat the chips with adhesive first.
Then the conductive agent was charged into the resin blender and the tumbling action continued for about three minutes. The rest of the board forming and pressing procedure remained as outlined above. Table 7, experi-ments 18A and 23A, in~ra, show that this reversed appli-cation of the conductive agent yielded normall~ and acceptably conductive particle boards.

AVERAGE BOARD PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
10 ~ensity, lbs. per cubic foot 45 Modulus of Rupture, lbs. per square inch2500 Modulus of Elastici,y, lbs. per square inch 450,000 Internal Bond, lbs. per square inch 200 Thickness Swell (24 hour immersion), percent 8 15 Water Adsorption (24 hour immersion), percent 12%
Linear Expansion (24 hour immersion), ~ercent 0.3 Moisture Content, % by weight 4%
Screwholding, lbs. face 400 edge 350 20 Hardness, lbs. 1,100 The electrical conductivity of the particle boards was measured by a device commonly known as a '~rleggerll manufactured by the Biddle Instrument Company under the designation "MI~-IV Resistance Measuring Instrument"
The test equipment and procedure are described in the -14~ 7 ~ ~

following standards: ASTM 150-72, r~nderwriters Laboratory 779, ANSI/NFP~ 99, and NFPA (National Fire Protection Association) 56-A.
It should be noted that the meter scale on the ~egger instrument, from which resistance values in ohms per square centimeter of product surface are read, is an exponential scale. Resistances up to 10 million ohms may be determined accurately. However, the next and final scale division above 10 million ohms is infinite rasistance. In order to make resistance comparisons reasonably possible for these experiments, the infinite reading on the scale was considered to be 20 million ohms, thus permitting the interpolation o resistance readings between 10 and 20 million ohms.
Therefor`e, the true electrical resistance of any value above 10 million ohms listed in the supporting tables is actually higher than the number shown. For example, a re-corded value of 11 million ohms represénts an actual re-sistance moderately higher than that number, while a re-corded value of 19 million ohms is really approaching infinite resistance. In summary, any resistance value above 10 million ohms in the following experimental data is considered too high and variable to represent a use-ful level of product conductivity.
Early test observations on the conductive particle boards of this invention indicated that variations in 131 8~

board surface roughness influenced the accuracy and re-producibility of electric 1 conducti-~Jity measur2ments.
For instance, when sanded boards were e~posed to a high humidity environment to observe its effect on conductivity and the board surfaces became roughened by the moisture absorption of individual chips, the electrical contact between the board surfaces and the Megger electrodes became variable and unreliable. To overcome this pro~lem, paint grade dry aluminum powder was rubbed onto the opposing surfaces of test specimens to ensure adequate electrical contact with the electrodes regardless of surface roughening or sandpaper grit sizer After this surface treatment, the conductivity measurements immediately became consistent and reproducible.
We have used this modification of the ANSI/NFPA 99 test procedure to ma~e every electrical conductivity measurement listed in the tables of data which follow.
In the ensuing discussion the following abbreviations are employed:
K - 1,000 M - 1 million m.c. - ~oisture con~ent cond. - conditioned Res. - resistance PF - Phenol-formaldehyde resin PRF - Phenol-resorcinol-formaldehyde resin 131~7~

:
M~ - Melamine-formaldehyde resin UF - Urea-formaldehyde resin MDI - Polymeric methylene diphenyl diisocya~ate resin CaSSL - Calcium-base spent sulfite pulping liquor concentrated to 50~ aqueous solution.
IS0 - Polymeric isocyanate-r~sin ISO.LIG - Polymeric isocyanate-lignin residue combina-tions. (U.S. 4,279,788) To determine the effect of particle size and shape on board electrical conductivity, a series of panels was made employing furnishes comprising wood particles of various mesh size (U.S. sieve series). Two of the panels con-tained steam conditioned, disc-refined wood fiber as opposed to the mechanically comminuted wood employed in the others.
Two very conductive substances,*"Pfizer's LB1011 lampblac]c and "~abot's XC-72 R" carbon black were used in ample quantities to prepare the panels so that the question of conductivity related only to wood par~icle size and configuration and not to the properties of the electrically conductive agent. The results are shown in Table 1.

Trade mark "

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W--I ~; ~1 a~ l H ~1 0 ~ S-l 0 Q S-l ~ 0 0 CC ~ U Ll ~,, C
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~' -18- 13187~2 Experiments 44, 45 and 54 indicate that particle size as such is not a determinant of electrical conductivity of the panels. In e~periment 44, all the chips were between 1/4 and 1/8-inch mesh size. There were no fine particles present in the board.
E~periment 45 employed particles which consiste~
entirely of particl~s 60-mesh through 200-mesh in size.
There were no coarse particles present in the panel.
Experiment 54 tested panels consisting entirely of 40 millimeter wood flakes and strands with no fine particles present~ All three panels demonstrated e~.-cellent conductivity (1,000 to 9,000 ohms per square centimeter). For the purposes of this study panels having resistances within the broad range of from 1,000 to 10 million ohms were considered acceptable for some category of electrically conductive products.
The panel tested in e~periinent 47, made with the ma:~imum amount of long refined fiber, i~e. 17 percent, r,7hich could be tumbled in a normal particle board blender without agglomerating into balls demonstrated e~cellent conductivity (1,000 ohms per square centimeter). However, the panel tested in e~periment WSU11 made with 100 percent of refined long fiber showed infinite electrical resistance;
that is, no conductivity.
It thus is demonstrated that wood particles of a wide variety of shapes and sizes can be made conductive in a -19- ~31~ ~2 medium and high board density range of 35 to 65, preferably 40 to 60 pounds per cubic foot while pure fiber3 cannot.
This phenomenon relates to the intimacy of surface contact (by definition, interparticle bonding) among irregularly shaped particles which are compressed into complete accommo-dation with each other via heat, pressurQ and moisture into boards of medium or higher density, causing them to form continuous conductive paths when coated with carbon black, versus an apparent lack of adequate surface contact among individual long fibers when similarly coated and densified unless compressed to a very high and uneconomic density which is not of interest in the presently described a2plications.
The unsuitability of long refined wood fibers for the present purposes is further illustrated in the following study. For this study, long refined fibers produced by the commercial steam pressure-refining of Douglas Fir chips were employed, together with a range of binders, and lamp blac~ content, to form a series of panels of varying specific gravity. The results are summarized in Table 2.

13~7&~

Table Z
Low and l~edium Densit~ ~iberboard Ex~eriments _ Board Press Dry Elestrical Board Th;ck- Res;n Res;n Pfizer LB-1101 Spec~fic Time Res;stance, No. ness Type Content ~ Lampbl-ack (%) Gravity ~m;n.) ohms /s~,cm.
1 3/8" UF 10 1 0.70 4 Infinite Z " UF 10 l 0.30 4 ll 3 " UF 10 2 0.70 4 11 4 " UF 10 2 0.30 4 "
" UF 10 3 0.70 4 "
6 " UF 10 3 0.30 4 "

7 " ISO 4.5 1 0.70 8 " ISO 4.5 1 0.30 4 "
9 " ISO 4.5 2 0.70 4 " ISO 4;5 2 0.30 4 "
1l " ISO 4.5 3 0.70 4 12 " ISO 4.5 3 0.30 4 "

13 " ISO. LIG. 3.75/0.75 1 0.70 4 "
14 " ISO. LIG. 3.75/0.75 1 ~ 0.30 4 11!
" ISO. LIG. 3.75/0.75 2 0.70 4 16 " ISO. LIG. 3.75/0.75 2 ~ 0.30 4 "
17 " ISO. LIG. 3.75/0.75 3 0.70 4 "
18 " ISU. LIG. 3.75/0.75 3 0.30 4 ... _ ....... _ . ... . . .. . _ 3/4" ISO. LIG. 3.75/0.75 2 0.70 6 "
21 3/4" UF 10 2 0.70 6 NOTES:
1. For all boards the carbon black was intensively mixed with the fiber before resin application by spraying.
2. For the iso-lignin boards the lignin was applied separately from the iso.
3. After the resin was applied7 the furnish was passed rapidly through a double disc attrition mill with a plate gap of 0.040" to ensure complete resin distribution by wiping transfer.
4. Moisture content into the press was approximately 10%.

~3~g7~

As shown, no combination of variables resulted in the production of panels having acceptable electrical con-ductivity properties.
The ne~t series of experiments addressed the question of whether the non-operative characteristic of steam-con-ditioned, disc-refined wood fibers in the preparation of electrically conductive panel boards is a function of panel thickness.
To answer this question, a series of experimental boards was prepared using the same steam refined long fibers set forth above. The results are given in Table 3.

.

-22~ æ
Table 3 ~ledium Denslt~/ Fiberboard Thickness vs Conducti~

E1ectrical Resistance ohms/sq.cm.
Expt. Conductive Board 1-day (Dr~) 30-da~ (Conditioned) No. Blnder A~ent % Thickness Res. % M.C. Res. % M.C.
WSU lZ4.5~ MDIPfizer LB1011 3 3/8" Inf. 3.17*Inf. 8.78%**
" lZA " Carbon Black " 3/16i' " " " " -" 12B " " " " 1/8" " ; " " "
" 12C i, ~' " 1/16" 19M " 19M "

WSU 2010% UFPfizer LB1011 2 3/4" Inf. 3.17%*Inf. 8.78%**
" ZOA " Carbon Black " 3/8" " " i' "
" 20B " " " " 3/16" " " " "

* Average dry M.C. for two medium density fiberboard panels.
** Average 30-day conditioned M.C. for two medium dens;ty fiberboard panels.

7 ~ ~

From an inspection of the above data it is apparent that the electrical resistance of all of the medium density fiberboard panels was infinite down to a thickness of 1/1~-inch, at which it was measurable, but of the very high level of 19 million ohms. This is an unacceptably high level of resistance for the purpose at hand. (See the previous e~-planatory note on Megger measurements.) However, the fact that measurable conductivity is exhibited by boards of 1/16-inch thic~ness relates to the conductive paper products of the prior art patents, for example U.S. 2,328,198 referred to above. That is, refined fiber-based wood products containing carbon exhibit electrical conductivity only when they are very thin, or very dense, or both. For this reason, electri-cally conductive refined fiber paper products constitute adifferent class of products from the electrically conductive particle board products which are of interest herein.
To assist in formulating a practical definition of the length-to-width ratio at which wood particles cease to be operable (for present purposes) chips, flakes or strands,and start to become inoperable refined fibers, a series of microscopic measurements of length and width of such products was carried out. The results are given in Table 4.

1 3 1 ~ I ~ 2 Table a Width-to-Len~th Ratios for a Random Selection of Particleboard Chips Flakeboard Strands and R~fined Wood Fibers Reflned Lons Refined Snort Chips Flakes;Strands Fibers (broken) Fibers - 4 38 ~ 70 Z0 8 30 40 ~ 15 li 35 30 ~ 3 50 lZ 100 . 18 80 9 . - 35 8 70 .
1 4a ~ 3 ~

The results of Table 4 indicate that operable chip dimensions may be defined from inoperable refined fiber dimensions by speciying ma~imum chip lengths of 3-1/2 inches and width to length ratios of from 1-1 to 1-20. The same consideration applies to preferable flake sizes.
A minimum width-to-length ratio range of about 1-40 is indicated for the refined wood fibers disclaimed as inoperable.
The values given in the "Flakes; Strands" column of lO Table 4 present a complication since the maximum ~7idth-to-length ratio needed adequately to define all operable strand or sliver type particles is about 40. To accommodate this-difference, it is pointed out that while some strands may have the same width to length ratio as some of the shorter refined fibers, they are many times thicker in width and cross section. In other words, they are stiff wooden slivers and not thin, curly wood fibers. Thus it is possible to differentiate the wood particle strands of the present invention by limiting the ma~imum width-to-length ratio for suitable chips to 1-20, or 1-40 if their minimum width is 1 millimeter. By comparison, the width and thickness of refined wood fibers are hardly more than a tenth of a millimeter, hence their pronounced tendency to curl.
The smaLl proportion of short or broken refined wood fibers listed in the last column of Table 4 simply repre-13~7~

sents the inevitable "fines" that are a by-product of any wood size reduction process. A certain proportion of th 52 process fines can be tolerated in the production of the presantly described electrically conductive T~700d particle board. This conclusion is also confirmed in ex~eriment 47 of Table 1, which indicates that a certain proportion of refined long fiber can in facL be tolerated in a partisle board and still yield a usefully conductive product.
The limit to the long fiber content is strictly 10 physical. Long fiber can be tolerated up to the point where it causes the resin-particle blending operation to produce entangled balls of chips and fiber instead of a continuous free flow of resin-coated particles.
The data presented herein indicate that the latter un-15 desirable condition exists at a long refined fibercontent of about 17 to 20 percent by weight.
b. The Electrically Conductive Com~onent Next a series of experiments was carried out to in-dicate the identity and characteristics of the electrically 20 conductive component of the board making furnish. Electri-cally conductive particles tested were various forms of carbon particles, electrically conductive salts, and electrically conductive metal powders and metal oxides.
(1) Carbon Particles Carbon particle varieties of potential use in the present application comprise lamp black, furnace black, smoke black, and other varieties generically termed 1 3 ~

"carbon black"; charcoal; graphite; coal coke; petroleum coke, and calcined petroleum pitch.
Representative samples of the foregoing were mixed in varying proportion into the particle board furnish, and fabricated into wood particle boards using the general procedure outlined above. Carbon products having various particle sizes were tested to determine the effect of particle size on conductivlty. Since the carbon particles are available in the form of powders sub-micron in size and far beyond the capability of screen mesh testing to describe, there was selected as a definitive fineness measure-ment a speciPic surface test procedure, ASTM method 819-77, i.e. the Brunauer, Emmett, and Teller (BET) test method.
This method is based on the absorption of a monolayer of nitrogen gas at its normal boiling point on the carbon or graphite particle surfaces. The unit of measurement is square meters per gram.
Conductivity tests were carried out on the dry particle board and on the conditioned particle board at moisture content levels approximating maximum normal use levels. The results are given in Table 5.

7 ~ 2 Tabl e 5 Carbon Types E~a1uated .
Electri_al Resis~anc__ollms/sq.cm.
E,Ypt. Spec;f;c 1-Day tDr~r~ 30-day (Çondit;oned~No. Type and % Carbon 81ack Surface* ~ Res. ~ M.C. ~~Res. ~ X M.C.
~ . _ 6 2~Asbury ~850'Micro Graph;te 13.2 Inf. 3.74~O 1~ M 10.33 16 1%'Asbury #250'M;cro Gnaphite 19.7 Inf. 2.59 19 M 8.~7 17 2~ " ~ " " 40 K 2.56 110 K 8.47 18 3~ " " " " 3 K 3.33 g K 7.6Z
7 l~o ~;zer L8-1011"Lampblac~ 44 15 ~1 3.46 11 M 10.86 9 . 1.5h ~i ,. " " 31 K 3.89 135 i~ 10.34 zc~ 1~ n 1~ . 9 K 3 . 69 27 K 9 . 62 26 1~'Asbury 4023"Calcined Petroleum 15 Inf. 2.07 Inf. 8.29 Coke 2J 2~ n ~ Inf. 1.83 19 M 8.72 28 3~ n ll ~ Inf. 1.63 19 M 8.23 33 ~ z~ n n n ~ I- 25 K 2. 60 63 K 9 .16 ~ 0.5~!Cabot XC-72R Furnace Black 254 0.5~"Cabot XC-72R"Furnace Black Z542~0 K 3.64900 K 9.61 31 l~o 17 n n 1~ n 7 K Z.8614 K 9.20 32 2~ n n It 1 K 3.146 K 9.75 0.5% " " " ~ 720 K 3.274 M 9.16 34 2~ Alcoa~1663!Alum;num Paste 2 læ'Cabot Sterling SO'Carb~n ~lack 41 19 M2.65 17 M 9.53 36 2Y ll " " " "19 K 2 . 9471 K 9. 52 37 3~ i- " " " "4.5 K 2.7512 K 9.11 * AS~l 819-77 The BET Meth~d Square Meters per Gram.
~ Trade mark .

-29~

Inspection of the Table 5 data indicates that lamp black, furnace black and, in general, the carbon forms 5imply designated as carbon black all produce useful levels of conductivity in wood particle board at reasonable levels of addition.
Even calcined petroleum coke, not too finely powdered, can be made to work. Experiment 27 shows that 2% "Asbury 4023" calcined petroleum coke yields infinite resistance at 2.07 percent moisture content. However, by adding 0.5 percent "Cabot - XC-72R", a very finely powdered furnace black, the conductivity becomes 25,000 ohms per square centimeter, a useful level. By comparison, 0.5~ "Cabot -XC-72R" furnace black used alone yields a board having a conductivity of 250,000 ohms per square centimeter.
Thus, there is an obvious synergistic effect in which the coarser calcined coke particles provide significant conductivity ~hen connected by smaller carbon particles.
By further comparison note experiment 34 in which was used a combination of 2% "Alcoa 1663" aluminum powder with 0~5~ "Cabot XC-72R" furnace black. This produced a board having an electrical resistance of 720,000 ohms per square centimeter, or about three times the value obtained if the "Cabot XC-72R" had been used alone in the same amount.
The data of this example indicate that a practical lower limit of ~article size fineness for carbon products used as electrically conductive components in the composi-tions of this invention is about 20 square meters per gram 13~ 87~

specific surface area, ~egardless of carbon form. Belo~J
this level, such a large percentaga of carbon product is required for conductivity that the wood products cannot retain it all, leaving free carbon in the blending system.
This is undesirable because the free carbon particles sift and settle to the bottom of the particle mats during proces-sing, leaving unequal distribution in the boards and a blackened, lower-strength back side on the board products.
(2~ Electrically Conductin~ ~etal and Metal-Type Powders I0 The foregoing procedure was carried out using in place of finely divided carbon particles, equivalent quantities of various electrically conducting me.al powders and conductive metal oxides in the same particle size range that was shown to be operational with carbon blacks. These were blended intensively into the particle board chips in the hope of imparting useful levels of electrical conductivity.
The results are given in Table 6.

131~7~

Table 6 Non-Carbon ConductiYe P;cme ts Teste~
.
E1ectrical Resls~anco, ohms/s3,cm.
Expt. Spec;fic 1-~ay (Dry3 30-da~ (Conditione~
No. Conductive Agent Surface X Res. ~ M.C. Res. ~ M.C.
29 "Alcua 1663 Aluminum Paste 6 3 In~; 1.96 Inf. ~.79 46~C'Magnox NP4701 ~ran Ox;de 40 10 InF. 3.17* 15 M 10,02 51*~Mobay AC5123'Cobalt-Ep;tax;al .34.5 10 Inf. 3.17*15 M 10.69 Gamma Ferric Oxide 52~' Mobay AC~107 Gamma Ferric Oxide 29 10 Inf. 3.17* 11 ~l 10.57 ~3 ~"Mobay ~CS127"Cobal~ Surface 27.5 10 ~nf. 3.17*11 M 10.34 Treated Iron Oxide (Magnetite) * Dry M.O. Average for 37 panels.
~k . .
Trade mark ., .
G~
, . . .
. , 1 3 ~

The values outlined above indicate electrical re-sistance levels so high as to render the boards useless for their intended purpose, i.e. dry electrical resistance levels of infinity. This is in spite of the fact that very large quantities of the metal powder or metal oxiae powder, up to 10~ of the dry weight of the wood chips, were employed~
(3) Electrically Conductive Salts By the same general procedure, a series of particle boards was prepared using a variety of electrically conductive salts in place of the finely divided carbon particles. The salts were employed with and without humectants (glycerine and ethylene glycol), which might theoretically enhance conductivity by drawing atmospheric moisture into the boards as a conductive phase for the salts.
The results are given in Table 7.

.

-33- 13~
! Table ~

Dissolved Sa1ts and Humertants Evaluatod Pt. Dr~ Electr;cal P~esistance, No. Type of Salt or Additive Binder Z* ohms/sg.cm.
_ .... . . . . _ 3 A Sodium Chlor;de 9~ UF 8.1% Inf.
11 A Sodium Chloride 9~0 UF17.0% Inf.
. Sodium Chloride 9~ UF 10.~% Inf.
8 A Glycerine 15%
9 A Urea .5~ PF lO.OZ - Inf.
10 A Glycerine 5~ PF .22~ Inf.
13 A 80rax l Boric Acid 9% PF 2% ** Inf.
- 14 A Ethylene Glycol 8~ UF 18% Inf.
Kenrich Z38 M *** 8~ UF 0.5~ Inf.
24 A ~.,. " LICA38J *~*
"Asbury 4431 Calcined 8~ UF Z.0%~ Inf.
~c 25 A Petroleum Coke Kenrich 238 M 0.5 " " LICA38J ~.5 , - * Salts and Add;tives were dissolved in resin binder, so the amounts shown are percen~ages of binder weight, not dry wood weight.
** Dry chips were soaked in 20% borax/boric acid solution and were redried to 4.0% M.C. Estimated addition, 2% based on dry chip weight.
*** Kenrich 238 M and LICA38J are reaction catalysts and highly conductive Zirconate salts.
# 2.0% based on dry chip weight.

~ Trade mark 131~7~2 The unsuitability of typical electrically conductive salts, used with and without humectants, is indicated by the infinite electrical resistance measurements obtained in all cases.
c. The Particle Board Adhesive Component Also employed in the hereindescribed electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board is a suitable adhesive or binder of a character and used in an amount suitable for obtaining the desired board physical properties.
A wide variety of such adhesives may be employed, in aqueous or non-aqueous solution. All are of the class known to the trade as "thermosetting particle board resins". Illustrative are Methylene diphenyl diisocyanate resins lS Urea-formaldehyde resins Melamine-urea-formaldehyde resins Melamine-formaldehyde resins Phenol-formaldehyde resins Phenol-resorcinol-formaldehyde resins Resorcinol-formaldehyde resins Polymeric isocyanate-lignin residue adhesive compositions (See U.S. Patent 4,279,788) The foregoing and other adhesives are used in amounts sufficient to manufacture boards of saleable strength and performance properties. In general, from 1.5-15%, preferably 3-12%, of adhesive, dry solids basis is 131g7~

employed.
To test the suitability of various resin adhesives, the experi.~ents outlined in Table 8 were performed. In each case, the general procedure of board formation out-lined above was employed.

-36- 131~7~2 ~ a U ~ O a~
~ o ~ ~ ~ ~ co o ~ ~ ~ t~ c~
u~ ~ o a~ a~ o o ~ o ,i _~ o U ~ ~ --I r1 r1 ~1 ~1 ~1 ~
O C~
~a K ~; K X X X :~ K K K
~ o ~ O 1 m _ u ~ O ~ ~ O c~ ~r *
~1 ~ X , . . .
U ~ d~
~ 3 U ~ ~D ~ 4 K t4 ~4 ~ ~ _I a ~7 ~ ~ eo ~ ~ ~

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o t~ _ _ ~m ~ x ~I n ~ N q ~
O~o 0~O ~0 0~ 0~O0~O 0~O o~ O\o E~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ,~ ~î ~ ~ ~ ~ ~d ~ t~
\o CO ~ ~ ~D t~ I` ~D ~D ~ O
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7 ~ 2 The foregoing results-using six different thermo-setting adhesive rasinous compositions in carbon-conductive particle board indicated the very low electrical resistance of each board product, using only 2~ or less of an appro-priately fine carbon product. Thus, binder type as suchis not a critical consideration.
To test the e~fect of binder blending order, if any, the experiments outlined in Table 9 were carried out, again using the general board forming procedure out-lined above.
' 7g~

-Blendin~ Order Table 9 Elec. Res.
ohms/sq.cm.
Board 1-dav (Dry) Ex~. Thickness Blendinq Order Res. P5 M.C.
18A 1/4" Chips blended with 8 K 3.17%*
1 1/2~ lampblac]c#, then with 8% UF resin and water 23A 1/4" Chips blended with 8% 9 K 3.17%*
UF resin and water, then with 1 1/2%
lampblack#

* Dry M.C. average for 37 panels # Pfiæer LB1011n ~31~7~

The results indicate that there is no difference in t~e electrical conductivity 2roperties of the finished board whether the conductive agent is blended with wood particles before or after the application of the resin binder. The resistance values obtained were virtually identical.
A series of particle boards was prepared using the general procedure described above, but of varying thick-nesses in order to evaluate the effect, if any, of board thickness on electrical conductivity of the board. The results are given in Table 10.

13l~7g2 Tabte 10 Particle Board Thicknesses ~ Electrical Resistance ohms/sa.cm.
E,~pt. Board Z-day (Dr~) 30-da~ (C~ndi~ioned~
No. Thic~ness % Carbon Black _8inder ~ Res. q,' M.C. _ Res. % M.C.
16 A 1/4" l~O'Pfizer L81011 UF 8 1.7M 3.17* 17 M 9.60**-17 A " 1~ 1/2~, " " " " 11 K 3.17* - 9.60**
19 A " 2~ " " " " 2 K 3.17* - g.60**
. .
1 3/8" 1~ " " UF 8 2.8M 4.9218 M 9.55 2 - " - Z70 " - " " " 11 K 4.2330 K 10.28 7 " lX " " MDI 4.5 15 M 3.46lZ M 10.86 9 " 1 1127, " " " " 31 K 3.89135 K 10.34 " 2~ 9 K 3.69Z5 K 9.6Z

~`- 30 A 3/4" 2 1/2~ " " MDI 4.5 3 K 3.17~ 8 K 10.71 * Dry M.C. average for 37 pane1s.
** 30-day c~nditi~ned M.C. average for 53 panels.

1 3 ~

From the above, it is shown that excellent electrical conductivity can be imparted to both thi~ and thick particle boards by incorporating therein a reasonable percentage of finely divided carbon product. Also, test values in the "30-day resistance" column indicates the electrical conductivity of thicker boards is just as stable as that of thinner boards on e.posure to high humidity over time.
Although board and panel products manufactured in the manner described above have superior, uniform, and regulatable properties of electrical conductivity, their properties can be improved still further by applying a coating of electrically conducting particles to their exterior surfaces after manufacture. Such a coating may comprise finely divided carbon particles, finely divided electrically conducting metal particles, and the like.
In one manner of application, finely divided carbon particles of the categories above described are merely sprinkled on the surface of the board, or wiped thereon after the board has been sanded to finished thickness.
Alternatively, aluminum particles in the form of a paste may be wiped on the surface.
Such a treatment compensates for the swelling tendency of wood particle boards on being e~posed to moisture. Upon such swelling, fresh areas of wood are e~posed which are not coated with electrically conductive material and accordingly may offer resistance to the passage of electric current.

-42- -131~7~
Another series of eY.periments was conducted to deter-mine the long-term ef~iciency of the presently described electrically conductive particle boards. The boards were those whose properties are summarized in Table 11~ These results indicate continued e~icient action over a period of two years.

Table 11 Two-year Performance of Electrically Conductive Particleboards Maintained Continuously at 65 to 75F and 55Y, Relative Humldity Orig;nal Dry Two-year Conditioned Expt. Board Conductivity Moisture Board Conductivity Moisture No. Thickness Ohms/sq~m. Content Thickness Ohms/sq.cm. Content 1 B 0.732" 3 K 3.17%* 0.757" 8 K 10.2,~
2 B Q.362" 33 K 3.17 0.380" 115 K 11.1,~
3 B 0.347" 52 K 3.17 0.358" 110 K 11.5~ -* Dry M.C. Average for 37 experimental panels.
Note: Panel properties remained nearly constant from about 6 months to 2 years.

, -44~ 76~

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, ~ X o r~ ~ O h 1 ~ d~ t~
~~ ~ . a~),4 ~a ~1 ~ K K K ~
~ W ~1 ~; ~ o V
t, - ~ ,1 o . . . . . o C P
.~~q ~ u~ o ~ d' O
,~ P~~ ,1 ~ ~

o\o o IJ D q U C H ~ ~ P C

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o r~ ~ ~ ~ o R U ~ U C) o~

X o ~ I~ co o ~n Z ~ In n ~ ~ ~ m -45- 131~7~2 Having thus described our invention in preferred embodiments, we claim as new and desire to protect by Letters Patent:
X

Claims (26)

1.
The electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board comprising, in percent by weight, dry solids basis, a dry-formed, hot-consolidated mixture of:

Finely divided, electrically conductive carbon particles 0.2-5 particle board adhesive 1.5-15 lignocellulose particles balance the lignocellulosic particles having maximum dimensions of 3-1/2 inches and comprising at least one member of the group consisting of, lignocellose chips having width to length ratios within the range of from 1-1 to 1-20, lignocellose flakes having width to length ratios within the range of from 1-1 to 1-20, lignocellose strands having width to length ratios of from 1-1 to 1-40, and minimum widths of one millimeter, the carbon particles having specific surface areas of at least 20 square meters per gram, the board having a thickness of from 1/8-inch to 2 inches and a density of from 35-65 lbs./cu.ft.
2.

The electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board of claim 1 wherein the lignocellulose particles comprise wood particles.
3.

The electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board of claim 1 wherein the lignocellulose particles comprise bagasse particles.
4.
The electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board of claim 1 wherein the lignocellulose particles comprise rice hull particles.
5.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 including up to 20 percent of steam-con-ditioned, disc-refined wood fibers.
6.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the lignocellulosic particles comprise wood chips.
7.
The electrically conductive lignocellosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the lignocellulose particles comprise wood flakes.
8.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the lignocellulose particles comprise wood strands.
9.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the carbon particles comprise furnace black particles.
10.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the carbon particles comprise carbon black particles.
11.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the carbon particles comprise lamp black particles.
12.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the carbon particles comprise graphite particles.
13.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the carbon particles comprise pulverulent charcoal.
14.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the carbon black particles comprise pulverized coke particles having a minimum specific surface area of 10 square meters per gram admixed with at least 10%
by weight, based on the weight of the carbon component of the mixture, of carbon black having a specific surface of at least 40 square meters per gram.
15.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 including a surface coating of an electri-cally conductive material.
16.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 including a surface coating of carbon particles.
17.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 including a surface coating of electrically conducting aluminum particles.
18.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the adhesive comprises a urea formaldehyde particle board adhesive.
19.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the adhesive comprises a melamine-formaldehyde particle board adhesive.
20.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the adhesive comprises a phenol formaldehyde particle board adhesive.
21.
The electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board of claim 1 wherein the adhesive comprises a phenol-resorcinol-formaldehyde particle board adhesive.
22.
The electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board of claim 1 wherein the adhesive comprises a methylene diphenyl diisocyanate particle board adhesive.
23.
The electrically conductive lignocellulosic particle board of claim 1 wherein the adhesive comprises a lignin-polyisocyanate particle board adhesive composition.
24.
The electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board of claim 1 wherein the board is laminar and the adhesive comprises a methylene diphenyl dissocyanate particle board adhesive in a core layer and a phenol-formaldehyde particle board adhesive in a face layer.
25.
The electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board of claim 1 wherein the board is laminar and the adhesive comprises a methylene diphenyl dissocyanate particle board adhesive in a core layer and a melamine formaldehyde particle board adhesive in a face layer.
26.
The electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board of claim 1 wherein the lignocellulose particles comprise wood particles having a moisture content of up to 15 percent by weight and the particle board product has a density of 35 to 65 pounds per cubic foot and an electrical resistance of from 1,000 to 10 million ohms per square centimeter.
CA000588760A 1988-01-22 1989-01-20 Electrically conductive lignocellulose particle board Expired - Fee Related CA1318762C (en)

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