Hardwood

wood from dicot trees; can be hard or soft (ranges from quite soft to extremely hard)

Hardwood is wood from deciduous trees and broad-leaf evergreen trees.[1] All hardwoods are angiosperms (flowering plants), the largest group of land plants. Hardwood is contrasted to softwood, which comes from conifers, cone bearing seed plants. Hardwoods are not always harder than softwoods, balsa wood being an example of this.[2] Hardwood trees are more varied than softwoods and there are about 100 times more species of hardwood than there are softwoods.[3] Hardwoods usually have broad leaves. Hardwoods all have enclosed nuts or seeds, where softwoods are gymnosperms, naked seed plants.leis

A small stand (group) of hardwood trees.
The difference between hard and soft wood under a microscope; oak on top, pine underneath.[3]
SEM image (top) and Transmission Light Microscope image (bottom) of vessel elements in Oak

Each species of hardwood has its own set of properties, however they have some properties in common. Hardwoods normally have broad leaves and come from deciduous or broad-leafed evergreen trees. Hardwoods grow slower than softwoods. Evergreen softwoods grow faster than deciduous hardwoods, and can grow to a larger size.[4] Some hardwoods are excellent for carving. One of the hardest hardwoods is black ironwood which is recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the heaviest wood.[5] Ironwoods are so dense that they sink in water rather than float as other woods do.[6]

The properties of the wood are caused by its structure. Hardwoods have a denser structure, which is the reason they are usually harder and heavier. Hardwood has xylem vessels which are used to transport water. Their cell walls are strongly lignified: lignin is a hard material used to support plants above the surface. The quantity of lignin is probably the main factor in their hardness.

Softwoods have a vascular structure which looks similar to a bunch of drinking straws held together. They also have lignin, but of a slightly different type, and less of it than most hardwoods.

Species of hardwood change

Common species of hardwood found in the USA,[7] and Europe. Many species are also found in other areas of the world. This is not a complete list of all hardwood trees.

Alder Ash Aspen Beech Birch Boxwood Cherry
Cottonwood Elm Hackberry Hickory Hard maple Horse chestnut Oak
Sassafras Maple Olive tree Poplar American tulipwood Walnut Willow

Uses of hardwood change

 
A mahogany sofa showing detailed carving

The use of hardwood is much reduced in the modern world. The destruction of tropical and temperate forests has made it expensive and scarce. Many things once made of hardwood are now made of ceramics, plastic or softwood.

Hardwoods are often used to make items that get used a lot because of their density. These items include furniture, flooring, and utensils. They are also used in construction.[3] Hardwoods are also less likely to decay or rot than softwoods.[3] Furniture made by hardwood joinery is more expensive than that made from softwoods.[3]

Utensils for use in preparing food can include things such as the vessel in the gallery below used by the Ede people to grind corn and grains for food. Other utensils include: spoons, chopsticks, bowls, plates and cups. Because of the dense nature of the wood used such a vessel can be used for many years without breaking. Other examples include the handle of the Luzon knife seen in the gallery. Because of the nature of sound transmission provide a good wood for musical instruments such as violins, guitars, pianos and hand drums such as the Djembe drum pictured in the gallery below.

Flooring is often made of hardwood because it can stand up to years of people walking on it with their shoes. An example is the flooring made from tiger-wood seen in the gallery below. Hardwoods are also used to make wood veneers to glue over other, cheaper woods, making them less expensive than solid hardwood while still giving them the appearance of a particular species of wood. This has become a common way of using tropical hardwoods that have a limited supply of trees due to deforestation occurring in many tropical countries.[8] In Europe, hardwoods account for 29% and softwoods 71% of wood consumption.[9] Hardwood has very short fibers about 1mm in length and is so also used to make fine paper such as writing paper, tissue, and printing paper.[9] Paper with longer fibers such as paper bags, cardboard and shipping containers is made of softwoods.

Gallery change

A variety of objects made from different types of hardwood.

Related pages change

References change

  1. Izzy (2008-02-12). "Hardwoods". Camberwell Material Library. Archived from the original on October 28, 2011. Retrieved October 15, 2011.
  2. "Hardwoods". www.mr-dt.com. Retrieved October 16, 2011.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Coombes, Allen J. (2010). The illustrated Encyclopedia of Trees and Shrubs. Salamander Books. ISBN 978-1840651621.
  4. "Year 10 Manufacturing (Resistant Materials)". Design Technology Department. Retrieved October 16, 2011.
  5. "Botanical Record Breakers - Part 1 of 2". Palomar College. Archived from the original on December 19, 2010. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  6. W.P. Armstrong (2010-04-28). "Hardwoods Trees & Shrubs With Dense, Hard Wood". Palomar College. Archived from the original on July 26, 2014. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  7. "About U.S. Hardwoods". American Hardwood Export Council. 2002. Archived from the original on November 22, 2011. Retrieved October 16, 2011.
  8. "Words into Action". The Tropical Forests Trust. March 2011. Archived from the original on March 4, 2013. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Pulping properties of hardwoods and softwoods". Paper Online. Archived from the original on August 31, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  • Jane F.W. 1970. The structure of wood. 2nd ed, edited by K. Wilson & D.J.B. White. London: Adam & Charles Black. ISBN 9780713609127

Other websites change