Wood is renewable, multifaceted and multifunctional. These three properties made the raw material one of the most important materials for mankind for centuries. It was only with the industrial revolution and the development of fossil resources that wood temporarily lost its importance as a material. But in the meantime, wood is once again valued as a sustainable resource. Currently, the raw material is in great demand and is becoming more and more expensive.
Prof. Dr. Richter heads the Chair of Wood Science at the TUM School of Life Sciences. In his lecture, he will show how wood is structurally and chemically constructed and how the material is used, for example, as a material for the construction industry. He also addresses the question of how wood can be used as efficiently as possible in a forest-based bioeconomy and how the technologization of this natural resource can succeed.
After the lecture, all participants are invited to put their questions to the speaker. The Q&A session will be moderated by TUM professor J. Philipp Benz.
Lecture date: Thursday, September 30, 2021, 7:00 p.m.
Location: Pavilion of the Freising Music School, Kölblstraße 2.
Due to Corona regulations, registration for the attendance event is required for the first time. Please register online, the information can be found at www.ls.tum.de/ls/presse/tumfreising/. The event will also be broadcast live via Zoom. You will also be able to ask questions of the speaker here.
The access data are:
https://tum-conf.zoom.us/j/65219439624?pwd=c3BuazFtc3V3RTZsdlNXdnJCVjAvQT09
Password: 707568
About the speaker:
Prof. Richter conducts R+D and knowledge transfer in wood science and wood industry. His focus in wood material science is to elucidate structure-property relationships of wood matrix polymers and technical polymers to improve e.g. adhesion, coating and modification technologies. In environmental sciences, he analyses the sustainability of processes and products of wood and building industries and their resource efficiency, e.g. by modelling and transforming cascading and end-of-life processes.
Richter studied wood science at the University of Hamburg and received his doctoral degree within the scope of a DFG-research project about dendroclimatology at the Iberian Peninsula. As a research scientist at Empa (Swiss Federal Lab for Material Science and Technology, CH), he spent a post-doc year at the Forest Products Lab in Madison, USA. In 2003, he became head of Empa´s Wood Lab and lecturer at ETH Zurich. In April 2011, he was appointed professor at the Chair of Wood Science and, in 2012, head of TUM’s wood research laboratory.
About the series:
The lecture series "TUM@Freising - Science Explained for ALL" is organized by the Technical University of Munich together with the City of Freising. At regular intervals, the TUM School of Life Sciences presents its research in the form of a lecture of interest to lay people. A subsequent discussion with the audience is expressly desired after each lecture. The lecture series is intended to give the citizens of Freising direct access to the scientific work at the Weihenstephan campus and offers the scientists public input for their research work.
Editing:
Susanne Neumann
TUM School of Life Sciences
Press and Public Relations