Producing Structural Grade Hardwood Lumber as a Raw Material for Cross-Laminated Timber: Yield and Economic Analysis

Authors

  • Sailesh Adhikari Brooks Forest Products Center, 1650 Research Center Drive, Blacksburg, VA 24060, USA
  • Brian Bond Brooks Forest Products Center, 1650 Research Center Drive, Blacksburg, VA 24060, USA https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6712-8250
  • Henry Quesada Purdue Extension - Forestry and Natural Resources, AGAD Room 227, 615 W. State Street, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3021-0215

Keywords:

Log yield study, Structural grade hardwood lumber (SGHL), Production of CLT raw material, Feasibility of SGHL production, Remanufacturing hardwood lumber, NHLA, NELMA, Mix-grade lumber production

Abstract

The economic feasibility of producing structural-grade hardwood lumber (SGHL) that qualifies as a raw material for structurally rated cross-laminated timber (CLT) was examined. 126 yellow poplar logs from diameters 12 to 15 inches were selected and divided into test and control samples. A log yield study was then conducted of the yield and revenue generated when producing lumber graded with National Hardwood Lumber Association (NHLA) rules, SGHL rules, and a mix of both rules (NHLA and SGHL-graded lumber). Producing mix-grade lumber added approximately 27% more revenue than producing NHLA-grade lumber on average if sawmills adopt a cant sawing method. Mix-grade lumber production resulted in 32% of the total volume produced as SGHL and the remaining 68% as NHLA lumber. As a result, 2 Common and lower-grade lumber board footage was reduced to only 29% in test samples and remained converted into SGHL compared to more than 85% of 2 Common and lower-grade lumber boards for control samples. 95% of the SGHL produced as mixed-graded lumber with NHLA-grade lumber met the specifications required to produce structural CLT, and the remaining 5% can be utilized to produce non-structural grade CLTs if they meet the minimum requirement of the materials for CLT production.

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Published

2023-11-03

Issue

Section

Research Article or Brief Communication