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By Tom Pawlak
Sodium borate is used in a number
of commonly used household products
from laundry detergent to
hand soap. It is also used to treat
wood against insect and fungal attack.
Sodium borate is refined from
borax, a natural mineral, which is
mined throughout the world. One
of the largest deposits is in the
Southwestern United States. (Think
20-mule team Borax, Death Valley
Days radio and TV shows).
For years, sodium borate has been
used in New Zealand to protect
construction timbers for new homes
against termites. Borate-treated
lumber is now available throughout
the US and Canada. Sodium borate
is environmentally friendly compared
to many penetrating wood
preservatives used in the lumber industry.
It works by poisoning the
food supply for insects and decay
fungi that ingest it.
Borate salt can also be used to treat
rot-damaged timbers on existing
structures prior to doing structural
repairs. Borates used for treating
wood are available in two forms: as
dry powders, which are often dissolved
in warm water prior to use,
and in liquid form with the borate
salts pre-dissolved in a liquid. The
pre-dissolved types are often petroleum-
based liquids involving
glycols. The benefit of petroleum-based
treatments is that they are less
prone to leaching out of the timber
if the treated wood is exposed to
flowing water over time. Unfortunately,
petroleum-based products,
especially those involving glycol,
can cause poor adhesion for adhesives
used in the restoration.
If you are interested in treating
rot-damaged wood with sodium
borate prior to consolidating with
epoxy, you will want to apply a water-
based solution made with dry
borate salt and warm water. Borate
salts can be difficult to find, but we
found an excellent source that ships
quantities as small as one pound
anywhere in the U.S.
Schroeder Log Home Supply in
Grand Rapids, Minnesota sells a
dry borate salt called PeneTreat.
Their phone number is
218-326-4434. PeneTreat is intended
to be dissolved in water to
create a working wood preservative
solution. We tested adhesion to
wood surfaces treated with
PeneTreat using WEST SYSTEM® epoxy
with a PATTI (Pneumatic Adhesion
Tensile Test Instrument) and
found no measurable loss of adhesion
when compared to similar
wood surfaces that were untreated.
Water-based borate treatments are
odorless and do not affect the natural
color of the wood. Borate-
treated wood does not corrode
metal fasteners like some wood
treatments do.
Borate salt solutions are applied
with a pressurized deck sprayer or
by brush. Ideally, the bulk of the rot
is excavated prior to treatment. Absorption
of the salt solution is enhanced
if the wood is warmed
slightly just prior to applying the
solution. Warming the area causes
air inside the wood to expand,
which helps the treatment to be
drawn into the wood as the wood
cools and the air shrinks. Drilling
small holes to act as channels helps
deliver the liquid deeper into the
decay and the holes act as reservoirs
and help the area be thoroughly saturated.
Usually two treatments are
applied within 4 to 24 hours of
each other. Treated sections need
time to dry before epoxy-based repairs
can begin. Sanding dust from
treated surfaces roughed up with
coarse sandpaper should feel dry to
the touch before epoxy-based repairs
can begin.
One of the rubs against water-based
borate salt treatments is that the sodium
borate can leach out over time
if water repeatedly flows by the
treated areas. Sealing the area with
multiple coats of paint or other
sealer products will trap it in the
wood. WEST SYSTEM epoxy applied
to treated areas effectively traps the
treatment in the wood due to the
epoxy's excellent moisture barrier
qualities. It may even help the borates
to diffuse deeper in the wood
because the chemical remains mobile
as long as moisture is present
inside the wood. Once the treated
wood is sealed, the borates are
trapped inside where they continue
to offer protection against attack.
NOTE: Diffusion of the borate salt
begins immediately upon application
and continues for several days.
Pre-existing insect larva and decay
fungi may not be killed during the
treatment process, but survivors die
when they ingest the treated wood.

image by Scott Sheppard
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