Abstract
This study examines the stack-wide effects due to the humidification and cooling of air as it passes through a 6 m wide stack of Australian ironbark timber for conditions that are representative of those for solar drying (dry and wet-bulb temperatures of 60 and 50°C, respectively). A solar kiln model for a greenhouse-type design has been modified to account for the drying of timber boards and the possibility of stack-wide effects, in terms of moisture-content differences in the streamwise direction of air flow through the stack. The maximum difference between the moisture contents of the leading and trailing boards is predicted to be 0.011 kg kg−1 for these conditions, compared with timber moisture contents of 0.15–0.35 kg kg−1. Hence, the stack-wide effect is insignificant for these conditions in this greenhouse kiln design and may be ignored, reducing the simulation time by over 50%. In addition, 14 elements within a finite-difference model for the drying of the timber boards (25 mm thick) gives predictions of the drying time that are acceptably accurate, while minimizing the computational time.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors would like to thank Boral Timber and the Faculty of Engineering, University of Sydney, for their financial support.