Construction-grade plywood panels manufactured at five plywood mills w
ere analyzed for total phenolic compounds and free phenol detection. S
mall samples of plywood were ground into < 1-mm-size powders. The samp
les were subjected to an ambient temperature, methylene chloride extra
ction, and tested for free phenol content by a gas chromatography-mass
spectrometry method. The plywood samples were also analyzed for total
phenolic compounds by a distillation-colormetric method. The range of
total phenolic compounds was 6.8 to 2 5.3 mg/kg (parts per million),
and the range of free phenol was 0.090 to 0.73 mg/kg (parts per millio
n). The sources of phenolic compounds in plywood are wood components (
lignin and extractives), the phenol-formaldehyde resin adhesive, and t
he ligno-cellulosic adhesive fillers (bark tannins, furfural residue l
ignins, etc.). The source of free phenol in structural plywood is pres
umably the phenol-formaldehyde resin adhesive. The extraction procedur
es used in this study were extreme and are not typical for plywood in
service. Yet the levels of phenolic compounds and free phenol detected
were so low that they most often were beyond the quantitative accurac
y of the test methods and instruments, requiring extrapolative techniq
ues. The low levels are supportive of the fact that structural wood co
mposites bonded with phenol-formaldehyde resins (such as plywood) have
been found to be very safe environmentally for multiple uses.