Recycling of Bamboo (Bambusa vulgaris Schrad) recovered from scaffold into material for furniture production
Date
2013
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Faculty of Engineering and technology of LAUTECH
Abstract
"Interest is growing daily on the utilization of bamboo as a reliable supplement to wood in furniture production to
mitigate the scarcity of wood raw material supply. This study explored the viability of recycling bamboo
recovered from scaffold into intermediate raw material for indoor furniture production. Strips were processed
from the recovered Bambusa vulgaris Schrad and were subjected to conventional treatment methods with some
modification to simplify the treatment. The durability of the treated strip was evaluated in accordance with
ASTM D2017. A storage shelf was designed and fabricated using laminates made from the bamboo strips. The
diameter and wall thickness of the recovered bamboo culms ranges from 6.00cm -10.00cm and 10.00mm-
12.70mm respectively. The result shows that ordinary soaking of the strips in water for 3 weeks could make the
strips to be sufficiently resistant to termite attack but fairly resistant to powder post beetle. Application of
kerosene as a secondary treatment will make the resistance of the bamboo strip effective to powder post beetle.
A Complete-Knock-Down (CDK) Magazine shelf suitable for office use was fabricated using road side
carpentry workshop tools. This study was able to recycle Bambusa vulgaris recovered from scaffolding material
into suitable raw material input for the manufacturing of indoor furniture."