compression yielding. As long as the RH remains between approximately
33% and 64%, the wood can respond dimensionally without its structure
being altered. However, if the RH increases above approximately 64%,
compression setmay occur, which is a permanent deformation of the wood.
Compression set also re-initializes the wood to a new, higher RH environ-
ment, causing the wood to behave like one acclimated to a higher RH.
The plots in Figure 4 wereobtained by recalculating Equation 1 for
the fully restrained white oak panel, now acclimated to 70% RH (the cir-
cumstances under which the panel acclimated to a higher ambient RH are
irrelevant—it does not matter whether the painting has always been main-
tained at 70% or whether it was temporarily stored in a damp location).T C T P P 5290 .0 0500 .0 0450 .0 0400 .0 0350 .0 0300 .0 0250.0 0200.0 0150 .0 0100 .0 0050
0 20 40 60 80 100Ges soFl ak e whi te
RH (% ) oi l pai ntMoisturecoefficientofexpansion White oak
ta ngential dire ctionHide gl ue0.0400.0350.3000.0250.0200.0150.0100.0050
0 20 40 60 80 100
RH (% )YieldStrai Fai lurenFigure 1
Moisture coefficients of expansion versus RH
for four materials: white oak in the tangential
direction, hide glue, gesso, and fifteen-year-
old flake white oil paint. The radial-direction
coefficient for white oak is approximately one-
halfof the tangential, and the longitudinal-
direction coefficient is about one-tenth of the
tangential. The swelling rate is the lowest in
the midrange RH levels.
Figure 2
Measured yield and breaking strains of
tangential-direction white oak versus RH
(axial tensile test).