1. Manufacture and Characteristics of Oil-Modified Refined Lacquer for Wood Coatings
- Author
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Chia-Wei Chang, Hsiu-Ling Lee, and Kun-Tsung Lu
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,Materials science ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Diluent ,food ,Linseed oil ,Materials Chemistry ,medicine ,Water content ,Lacquer ,Gloss (annotation) ,drying oil ,blending ,Drying oil ,oriental lacquer ,Lightfastness ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Pulp and paper industry ,Gloss (optics) ,0104 chemical sciences ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,wood coating ,surfaces,_coatings_films ,lcsh:TA1-2040 ,visual_art ,Castor oil ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,oil-modified refined lacquer ,lcsh:Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,0210 nano-technology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Oriental lacquer, a natural and renewable polymeric coating, comes from the sap produced by lacquer trees. For practical applications, oriental lacquer must be refined to reduce its water content and enhance its quality. In this study, drying oils were blended with oriental lacquer during a refining process to produce oil-modified refined lacquer (OMRL). Rhus succedanea lacquer, composed of 54.1% urushiols, 34.3% water, 7.2% plant gum, and 4.4% nitrogenous compounds, and drying oils, including tung oil (TO), linseed oil (LO), and dehydrated castor oil (DCO), were used as materials in this study. The effect of type and amount (0%, 10%, and 20% by wt %) of drying oils added to lacquer on lacquer properties were evaluated. Results show that the drying oils acted as a diluent, which reduced the viscosity, and enhanced workability, shortened touch-free drying time and accelerated the hardened drying of the OMRL. The results also indicated that the hardness, mass retention, Tg, tensile strength, abrasion resistance, and lightfastness of OMRL films decreased as more drying oils were blended with lacquer. Conversely, the bending resistance, elongation at break, impact resistance increased. Gloss was greatly improved through the blending of more drying oils with lacquer. In conclusion, the LO-modified refined lacquer (RL) had the highest film gloss and the DCO-modified RL had the shortest drying time for coating. Otherwise, the film properties were similar among the three types of drying oils.
- Published
- 2018
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