Publication: Aging of Wood for Musical Instruments: Analysis of Changes in Color, Surface Morphology, Chemical, and Physical-Acoustical Properties during UV and Thermal Exposure
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MDPI AG
Abstract
The acoustic features of old resonance wood in violins exhibit a superior quality when
compared to those from new resonance wood. This study focuses on an assessment of the sound
quality of two types of wood for musical instruments, spruce and maple (class A and D), before
and after aging via thermal and UV exposure. The samples were characterized before and after UV
aging in terms of color change (using a Chroma meter), surface morphology (using a MarSurf XT20
instrument), chemical changes (monitored by FTIR spectroscopy), and sound propagation speed
(using an ultrasound device). After UV treatment, the wavier surface increased the area of exposure
and degradation. Also, the color changes were found to be more accentuated in the case of spruce
compared to sycamore maple. The FTIR results indicated more advanced aging processes for spruce
when compared to maple under the same experimental conditions. This difference resulted mostly
from the increased formation of carbonyl-containing chromophores via oxidative processes in spruce
rather than in maple, which is in agreement with the color change findings. Exposure of both species
to thermal and UV radiation led to an increase in sound propagation speed, both longitudinally and
radially, and to a greater extent in wood quality class A when compared to quality class D.
