It’s an important question. Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) in households are emitted by everyday products like cleaning agents, paints, glues, air fresheners, and personal care items (perfumes, hair sprays). Key sources also include furnishings made of plywood, particle board, upholstered furniture, new flooring etc. Many people assume that materials made from recycled plastics might also release strong odours or volatile compounds.


Total volatile organic compounds emission from Particle Boards. View Source
Many people assume that materials made from recycled plastics might also release strong odours or volatile compounds. In practice, unWOOD behaves very differently.
Independent laboratory testing has shown negligible VOC emissions from the material. One of the first things people notice when they handle unWOOD is simple: it does not have any smell.
Interestingly, this is not always the case with many conventional wood-based boards such as plywood, MDF, or particle board. These materials rely on polymer resin binders to hold wood fibres together, and those resins can release volatile compounds over time. Very few boards are made to strict emission standards and are expensive, but in majority of the cases, people have experienced the characteristic “new furniture” or “closed room” smell without necessarily knowing its source.
You can observe this in everyday life. Lock your house before going away for a long vacation. When you return and open the door, the first instinct is often to open the windows for ventilation. That slightly chemical, slightly stuffy smell in a closed room can come from trace volatile compounds slowly released by materials inside the house.
Now consider the assumption many people make about recycled plastics. Most expect them to smell even more strongly. And in some recycled plastic products, that can indeed happen. When plastic waste is processed without careful control of volatiles, residual compounds can remain trapped in the material and become noticeable later.
The reason unWOOD behaves differently lies in the manufacturing process. During production, the plastic waste undergoes controlled thermal processing in which volatile compounds are separated and captured. These volatile fractions are removed during the material preparation stage before the structural profiles are formed.
By the time the material becomes unWOOD, most of the volatile components have already been extracted from the solid matrix. This processing step is a critical distinction. It allows mixed plastic waste to be transformed into a stable structural material with very low emissions, suitable for long-term use in furniture and infrastructure applications.
- Dr Babu Padmanabhan (Phd)
