Engineered wood products for circular construction: a multi-factor evaluation of lamination methods

Abstract Engineered wood products (EWP) constitute a diverse range of structural element types attractive for the current construction industry. However, the use of permanent adhesive resins limits their ability to perform within a circular economy, and the glue-laminating process requires fossil-fu...

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Main Authors: Dan Bergsagel, Felix Heisel, Jasper Owen, Maxwell Rodencal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-07-01
Series:npj Materials Sustainability
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s44296-025-00067-7
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author Dan Bergsagel
Felix Heisel
Jasper Owen
Maxwell Rodencal
author_facet Dan Bergsagel
Felix Heisel
Jasper Owen
Maxwell Rodencal
author_sort Dan Bergsagel
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Engineered wood products (EWP) constitute a diverse range of structural element types attractive for the current construction industry. However, the use of permanent adhesive resins limits their ability to perform within a circular economy, and the glue-laminating process requires fossil-fuel-based adhesives that release potentially harmful gases. This paper presents a multi-factor evaluation of alternative lamination methods featuring an enhanced longitudinal shear transfer mechanism to produce beam elements with comparable structural performance while improving circular and environmental performance. The research focuses on EWP beam elements following three sequential studies: (1) an evaluation of interlocking surface patterns to improve non-adhesive lamination in two stages, interlocking pattern shapes (17 samples) and interlocking depths (24 samples); (2) an evaluation of structural performance of different lamination methods in bending (glue (GL), metal nails (MN), wood nails (WN), plastic straps (PS)) for a 4.5 ft two-layer beam formed of 2 × 4 lumber feedstock (using a 1/16in deep square grooved pattern and flat interface for reference (five samples each)), whereby the grooved interlocking samples with mechanical fasteners performed considerably well in both modulus of rupture (MOR) and modulus of elasticity (MOE) compared to the reference flat adhesive lamination method, 31% and 19% lower, respectively; and (3) a comparison of qualitative and quantitative parameters on structure, economy, environment and circularity. Together, the study identified a grooved shear interface with wood nail fasteners as a preferred lamination method for EWPs in circular construction (GrooveLam). These results are considered appropriate for the future development of larger dimension and longer length multi-lamination structural bending elements.
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spelling doaj-art-d4256cbddd76419e812de04cf9bfa3a52025-08-20T03:46:20ZengNature Portfolionpj Materials Sustainability2948-17752025-07-013112510.1038/s44296-025-00067-7Engineered wood products for circular construction: a multi-factor evaluation of lamination methodsDan Bergsagel0Felix Heisel1Jasper Owen2Maxwell Rodencal3Circular Construction Lab, Department of Architecture, Cornell UniversityCircular Construction Lab, Department of Architecture, Cornell UniversityCircular Construction Lab, Department of Architecture, Cornell UniversityCircular Construction Lab, Department of Architecture, Cornell UniversityAbstract Engineered wood products (EWP) constitute a diverse range of structural element types attractive for the current construction industry. However, the use of permanent adhesive resins limits their ability to perform within a circular economy, and the glue-laminating process requires fossil-fuel-based adhesives that release potentially harmful gases. This paper presents a multi-factor evaluation of alternative lamination methods featuring an enhanced longitudinal shear transfer mechanism to produce beam elements with comparable structural performance while improving circular and environmental performance. The research focuses on EWP beam elements following three sequential studies: (1) an evaluation of interlocking surface patterns to improve non-adhesive lamination in two stages, interlocking pattern shapes (17 samples) and interlocking depths (24 samples); (2) an evaluation of structural performance of different lamination methods in bending (glue (GL), metal nails (MN), wood nails (WN), plastic straps (PS)) for a 4.5 ft two-layer beam formed of 2 × 4 lumber feedstock (using a 1/16in deep square grooved pattern and flat interface for reference (five samples each)), whereby the grooved interlocking samples with mechanical fasteners performed considerably well in both modulus of rupture (MOR) and modulus of elasticity (MOE) compared to the reference flat adhesive lamination method, 31% and 19% lower, respectively; and (3) a comparison of qualitative and quantitative parameters on structure, economy, environment and circularity. Together, the study identified a grooved shear interface with wood nail fasteners as a preferred lamination method for EWPs in circular construction (GrooveLam). These results are considered appropriate for the future development of larger dimension and longer length multi-lamination structural bending elements.https://doi.org/10.1038/s44296-025-00067-7
spellingShingle Dan Bergsagel
Felix Heisel
Jasper Owen
Maxwell Rodencal
Engineered wood products for circular construction: a multi-factor evaluation of lamination methods
npj Materials Sustainability
title Engineered wood products for circular construction: a multi-factor evaluation of lamination methods
title_full Engineered wood products for circular construction: a multi-factor evaluation of lamination methods
title_fullStr Engineered wood products for circular construction: a multi-factor evaluation of lamination methods
title_full_unstemmed Engineered wood products for circular construction: a multi-factor evaluation of lamination methods
title_short Engineered wood products for circular construction: a multi-factor evaluation of lamination methods
title_sort engineered wood products for circular construction a multi factor evaluation of lamination methods
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s44296-025-00067-7
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AT felixheisel engineeredwoodproductsforcircularconstructionamultifactorevaluationoflaminationmethods
AT jasperowen engineeredwoodproductsforcircularconstructionamultifactorevaluationoflaminationmethods
AT maxwellrodencal engineeredwoodproductsforcircularconstructionamultifactorevaluationoflaminationmethods