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Author: OrmontUS   😊 😞
Number: of 3853 
Subject: Superwood
Date: 10/14/25 10:08 AM
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No. of Recommendations: 13
https://edition.cnn.com/science/superwood-10-times...

Maryland-based InventWood has created a high-strength “Superwood.”

A US company has engineered a new type of wood that it says has up to 10 times the strength-to-weight ratio of steel, while also being up to six times lighter.

“Superwood” has just launched as a commercial product, manufactured by InventWood, a company co-founded by material scientist Liangbing Hu.

“It looks just like wood, and when you test it, it behaves like wood,” Lau added, “except it’s much stronger and better than wood in pretty much every aspect that we’ve tested.”

The wood was first boiled in a bath of water and selected chemicals, then hot-pressed to collapse it at the cellular level, making it significantly denser. At the end of the weeklong process, the resulting wood had a strength-to-weight ratio “higher than that of most structural metals and alloys,” according to the study published in the journal Nature.

Much like in Hu’s original experiment, the wood is strengthened via a chemical process that alters the basic structure of the cellulose and is compressed very tightly without springing back. “In theory, we can use any kind of wooden material,” Lau said. “In practice, we’ve tested with 19 different kinds of species of wood as well as bamboo, and it’s worked on all of them.”

InventWood says Superwood is up to 20 times stronger than regular wood and up to 10 times more resistant to dents, because the natural porous structure of the wood has been collapsed and toughened. That makes it impervious to fungi and insects. It also gets the highest rating in standard fire resistance tests.

Superwood currently costs more than regular wood and also has a larger manufacturing carbon footprint, but Lau said that compared to steel manufacturing, the carbon emissions are 90% lower.

Other types of engineered wood have existed as construction materials for a long time, but InventWood says that these are simply rearranged pieces of wood that are held together with adhesives, rather than wood that has been altered at the molecular level like Superwood. He added that the target is “not to be cheaper than wood, but to be competitive with steel,” when manufacturing scales up.

Initially, the company plans to focus on external applications such as decking and cladding, before moving on to internal applications such as wall paneling, flooring and home furniture sometime next year.

“Wood products can be considered a long-term carbon storage system, and construction with wood could see our cities ‘lock in’ carbon emission in buildings for long periods of time.” “The barrier to more timber buildings isn’t really the need for more strength, it’s that the construction industry is risk averse and slow to change.”

Jeff
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Author: PinotPete 🐝  😊 😞
Number: of 3853 
Subject: Re: Superwood
Date: 10/14/25 10:35 AM
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“Superwood” has just launched as a commercial product, manufactured by InventWood, a company co-founded by material scientist Liangbing Hu.

Sounds neat! The price may be a little daunting for most people:

"...there’s one big challenge that can prevent SuperWood from becoming a mainstream material — and that’s cost. Steel is priced between $1 to $2 per pound, while SuperWood currently stands at over $12.5 and can go up to $25 per pound."

https://forum.nachi.org/t/superwood-50-stronger-th...

Maybe it will enter the economies-of-scale period at some point to make it viable for regular building projects. Still, what looks like a good step in the right direction.

Pete
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Author: OrmontUS   😊 😞
Number: of 3853 
Subject: Re: Superwood
Date: 10/14/25 2:27 PM
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No. of Recommendations: 4
Superwood's density is around 1.25 g/cm³ (1250 kg/m³)—about three times as dense as regular wood.

Steel, by contrast, has a much higher density: approximately 7.85 g/cm³ (7850 kg/m³)

So, depending on which end of the range is used, Superwood is between the same and double the cost of steel for the same volume of material (though, since it is far weaker than steel, more of it would have to be used for equivalent strength.

That's why architects (should) use engineers.

Jeff
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Author: Timer321   😊 😞
Number: of 3853 
Subject: Re: Superwood
Date: 10/14/25 2:35 PM
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Jeff,

Processed and engineered bamboo 1100 kg/cm3
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Author: WendyBG HONORARY
SHREWD
  😊 😞

Number: of 3853 
Subject: Re: Superwood
Date: 10/14/25 5:51 PM
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Timer wrote, "Processed and engineered bamboo 1100 kg/cm3 "

That's roughly a ton for the size of the end of your thumb.

2,200 pounds per cubic centimeter.

!
That's why people should either double-check their posts or leave numbers to the scientists/ engineers.

Wendy
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Author: Timer321   😊 😞
Number: of 3853 
Subject: Re: Superwood
Date: 10/14/25 7:01 PM
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1100 kg/m cubed

Oh the humanity
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Author: Timer321   😊 😞
Number: of 3853 
Subject: Re: Superwood
Date: 10/15/25 1:47 PM
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That's why people should either double-check their posts or leave numbers to the scientists/ engineers.

That is quite the rebuke, cm versus m needs that rebuke? Really?

Should I jump on people who took college macro and micro econ classes and still do not know economics? The list would be very long.

But my attitude would have to be mean to go there with my fellow wo/man.

We can be bigger than that when mistakes are made.
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Author: PucksFool 🐝  😊 😞
Number: of 3853 
Subject: Re: Superwood
Date: 10/15/25 4:39 PM
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No. of Recommendations: 1
So it is manufactured lignum vitae.

From wikipedia:
Lignum vitae is hard and durable, and is also the densest wood traded (average dried density: ~79 lb/ft3 or ~1,260 kg/m3);[4] it will easily sink in water. On the Janka scale of hardness, which measures hardness of woods, lignum vitae ranks highest of the trade woods, with a Janka hardness of 4,390 lbf (compared with Olneya at 3,260 lbf,[5] African blackwood at 2,940 lbf, hickory at 1,820 lbf, red oak at 1,290 lbf, yellow pine at 690 lbf, and balsa at 100 lbf). The densest of all woods is Allocasuarina luehmannii.[6] Krugiodendron typically has a higher density, among many other woods that vary by sample.
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Author: OrmontUS   😊 😞
Number: of 3853 
Subject: Re: Superwood
Date: 10/15/25 6:00 PM
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No. of Recommendations: 1
A number of years ago, I picked up a couple of fancy knife blades with the idea that I would figure out what to use as handles at some later date. During a trip through Africa, I stumbled on a few blocks of blackwood and figured I could carve them. Later that year I found myself heading to Bali, Indonesia and figured that the famous wood carvers in the town of Mas (near Ubud) could do a better job than I could. I asked if they could carve "ebony" and they said "sure - it grew on Bali and they did it all the time. I brought a couple of the smaller blocks to a carver along with my sketches. When I returned the next day to pick them up, he was nearly in tears. He showed me his iron (not steel) chisels which now had buggered cutting edges from his efforts to carve the wood and gave me back his best efforts at creating the designs I had drawn. I figure, if I ever get around to working this stuff, I'll use a grinder.

Jeff
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