Wood adhesives play a crucial role in the engineered wood industry, and their development and production standards are essential to ensuring the quality of engineered wood products. Currently, the wood-based panel industry primarily relies on “three aldehyde” adhesives—urea formaldehyde resin, phenol-formaldehyde resin, and melamine-formaldehyde resin—among which urea-formaldehyde resin and its modified products account for more than 70% of total adhesive consumption in the wood industry.
Urea formaldehyde resin offers many advantages, such as low cost, rapid curing, high panel bonding strength, a simple production process, abundant and readily available raw materials, and ease of use. However, it cannot be overlooked that the biggest concern with urea-formaldehyde resin at present is its high formaldehyde emission.
Formaldehyde is a colorless, highly volatile gas with a pungent odor. It is a highly toxic gas with carcinogenic and teratogenic properties. Engineered wood panels are primarily used in furniture and interior decoration materials; during their use, they continuously release free formaldehyde, leading to indoor formaldehyde levels exceeding safety standards. Therefore, it is imperative to modify urea-formaldehyde resins to produce adhesives with low or non-toxicity, high bonding strength, and good water resistance.
Adding additives to adhesives is a simple and effective modification method that can increase the resin’s initial tack, improve panel pre-pressability, prevent glue bleed-through, reduce resin shrinkage, and lower free formaldehyde content.
In industrial production, when using urea-formaldehyde resins to manufacture plywood, wheat flour is typically added as a filler in the adhesive, generally at a rate of 20% to 30%. According to incomplete statistics, over 2 million tons of wheat flour are used annually in plywood production, resulting in a significant waste of China’s edible resources.
Consequently, researchers have been actively seeking low-cost alternatives to wheat flour in the wood adhesive industry, including tea waste, bark powder, corn cobs, wood fiber, bamboo powder, and inorganic additives. The emergence of these new eco-friendly additives will help promote the green development of the engineered wood and wood products industry.