a material is hygroscopic if it tends to pick up water from the air. Wood tends to pick up and give off water to the air. Different kinds of wood will pick up more or less. Every kind of wood has a balance point where it will not pick up more water. This point depends on the temperature and relative humidity of the air. The more moist the air, the more the wood will pick up, up to a point.
yes,timber has the ability to release and absorb moisture depending on its immediate environmnet
Wood is a biological material.
Hygroscopic substances are used to absorb humidity.
An unknown being weighed is hygroscopic.
Potassium hydroxide is hygroscopic and deliquescent.
Table,wood,log,
The hair of the tail of horse is hygroscopic material.
a material is hygroscopic if it tends to pick up water from the air. Wood tends to pick up and give off water to the air. Different kinds of wood will pick up more or less. Every kind of wood has a balance point where it will not pick up more water. This point depends on the temperature and relative humidity of the air. The more moist the air, the more the wood will pick up, up to a point.
Hygroscopic and deliquescent
Sodium chloride has a rare dihydrate, obtained from cold solutions - NaCl.2H2O.
Absorbs moisture from the atmosphere
by coating or by using resin or by using hydrophobic material etc
a. Trees or wooded land considered as a source of wood. b. Wood used as a building material Basically - wood.
Non-Hygroscopic
Once you have a crafting bench, get two sticks and three of whatever material you will make your hatchet out of. Then go to your workbench and insert the sticks and material as follows: <material> <material> <nothing> <material> <stick> <nothing> <nothing> <stick> <nothing> You can only make hatchets out of wood, cobblestone, iron, gold and diamond. If you mean the hatchet that came out in the 1.6 update, You craft it like this: <Nothing> <Nothing> <Nothing> <Wood> <Wood> <Wood> It'll give you 2 trapdoors/ hatchets. <Wood> <Wood> <Wood>
Acetone is not known as hygroscopic.
abstract (or, in case you mean the material "concrete", it could be wood ;-)
Polyol Ester is also hygroscopic