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Probabilistic Assessment of Engineered Timber Reusability after Moisture Exposure

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  • Yiping Meng
  • Chulin Jiang
  • Courtney Jayne Scurr
  • Farzad Pour Rahimian
  • David Hughes

Abstract

Engineered timber is pivotal to low-carbon construction, but moisture uptake during its service life can compromise structural reliability and impede reuse within a circular economy model. Despite growing interest, quantitative standards for classifying the reusability of moisture-exposed timber are still lacking. This study develops a probabilistic framework to determine the post-exposure reusability of engineered timber. Laminated specimens were soaked to full saturation, dried to 25% moisture content, and subjected to destructive three-point flexural testing. Structural integrity was quantified by a residual-performance metric that assigns 80% weight to the retained flexural modulus and 20% to the retained maximum load, benchmarked against unexposed controls. A hierarchical Bayesian multinomial logistic model with horseshoe priors, calibrated through Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo sampling, jointly infers the decision threshold separating three Modern Methods of Construction (MMC) reuse levels and predicts those levels from five field-measurable features: density, moisture content, specimen size, grain orientation, and surface hardness. Results indicate that a single wet-dry cycle preserves 70% of specimens above the 0.90 residual-performance threshold (Level 1), whereas repeated cycling lowers the mean residual to 0.78 and reallocates many specimens to Levels 2-3. The proposed framework yields quantified decision boundaries and a streamlined on-site testing protocol, providing a foundation for robust quality assurance standards.

Suggested Citation

  • Yiping Meng & Chulin Jiang & Courtney Jayne Scurr & Farzad Pour Rahimian & David Hughes, 2025. "Probabilistic Assessment of Engineered Timber Reusability after Moisture Exposure," Papers 2506.11061, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2506.11061
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    File URL: http://arxiv.org/pdf/2506.11061
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