Silver is a soft, lustrous metal with the highest electrical and thermal conductivity. Due to these properties, it has many applications as a precious material both in pure and alloy form (ornaments, jewellery, utensils, coins), but also in several technological fields, considering silver compounds (e.g. photography, electric and electronic industry). As a consequence of this, silver and its by‐products are regularly exposed to different atmospheres where a wide spectrum of agents (e.g. moisture, temperature, air pollutants, UV light) may cause metal corrosion and alteration of their surface characteristics and properties. The aim of this research is to deepen the potential and applicability of micro‐Raman spectroscopy as a surface‐sensitive technique to investigate the initial steps of atmospheric corrosion throughout the identification of surface chemical reactions and corrosion products formed on silver substrates. In a previous study, micro‐Raman analysis was carried out on pure silver powder compounds, selected among the most expected corrosion products occurring on silver substrates, in order to optimize experimental conditions and to obtain reference spectra [1]. Subsequently highly pure silver samples were exposed for 24 h to different controlled laboratory atmospheres (synthetic air, relative humidity, SO2, H2S), particularly focusing on sulfur containing gases, and the resulting surface reactions. The experiments highlight micro‐Raman spectroscopy as a highly surface‐sensitive technique enabling to detect both adsorbed chemical species and crystalline corrosion products of only several monolayers of thickness. Furthermore, these investigations could show the trends of primary and secondary corrosion mechanisms and their mutual interaction occurring on silver substrates. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
A detailed understanding of the stability of glasses toward liquid or atmospheric attack is of considerable importance for preserving numerous objects of our cultural heritage. Glasses produced in the ancient periods (Egyptian, Greek, or Roman glasses), as well as modern glass, can be classified as soda-lime-silica glasses. In contrast, potash was used as a flux in medieval Northern Europe for the production of window panes for churches and cathedrals. The particular chemical composition of these potash-lime-silica glasses (low in silica and rich in alkali and alkaline earth components), in combination with increased levels of acidifying gases (such as SO(2), CO(2), NO(x), or O(3)) and airborne particulate matter in today's urban or industrial atmospheres, has resulted in severe degradation of important cultural relics, particularly over the last century. Rapid developments in the fields of microelectronics and computer sciences, however, have contributed to the development of a variety of nondestructive, surface analytical techniques for the scientific investigation and material characterization of these unique and valuable objects. These methods include scanning electron microscopy in combination with energy- or wavelength-dispersive spectrometry (SEM/EDX or SEM/WDX), secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS), and atomic force microscopy (AFM). In this Account, we address glass analysis and weathering mechanisms, exploring the possibilities (and limitations) of modern analytical techniques. Corrosion by liquid substances is well investigated in the glass literature. In a tremendous number of case studies, the basic reaction between aqueous solutions and the glass surfaces was identified as an ion-exchange reaction between hydrogen-bearing species of the attacking liquid and the alkali and alkaline earth ions in the glass, causing a depletion of the latter in the outermost surface layers. Although mechanistic analogies to liquid corrosion are obvious, atmospheric attack on glass ("weathering") is much more complex due to the multiphase system (atmosphere, water film, glass surface, and bulk glass) and added complexities (such as relative humidity and atmospheric pollutant concentration). Weathered medieval stained glass objects, as well as artifacts under controlled museum conditions, typically have less transparent or translucent surfaces, often with a thick weathering crust on top, consisting of sulfates of the glass constituents K, Ca, Na, or Mg. In this Account, we try to answer questions about glass analysis and weathering in three main categories. (i) Which chemical reactions are involved in the weathering of glass surfaces? (ii) Which internal factors (such as the glass composition or surface properties) play a dominant role for the weathering process? Can certain environmental or climatic factors be identified as more harmful for glasses than others? Is it possible to set up a quantitative relationship or at least an approximation between the degree of weathering and the factors described above? (iii) What ...
Highlights► Thermal and photo degradation of PVAc paint samples were studied by Py–GC/MS with double-shot and single-shot techniques. ► Changes of the PVAc paint samples before and after UV ageing were revealed. ► The effects of pigments and ageing status to the degradation of PVAc paint samples were illustrated.
Two potash-lime-silica model glasses with compositions similar to those of medieval stained glass were exposed at 26 test sites all over Europe and in North America for 3-6 years. The objectives of this large-scale field exposure programme were: (a) a qualitative analysis of the weathering products formed on the surface of the samples in the (environmental) scanning electron microscope in combination with energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis (ESEM/EDX or SEM/EDX, respectively); (b) a statistical evaluation of the weathering phenomena by applying a multiple linear regression (MLR) analysis to find correlations between the degree of weathering, which was measured in terms of surface coverage with reaction products, and environmental parameters such as the concentration (c) of the acidifying gases SO(2), NO(2) and O(3), the temperature (T) and the relative humidity (RH); and (c) the calculation of a time-dependence function of the weathering process of these glasses. Mainly sulfates of calcium and potassium such as gypsum (CaSO(4).2 H(2)O), arcanite (K(2)SO(4)) and syngenite (CaSO(4).K(2)SO(4).H(2)O) could be identified in the SEM and ESEM. Carbonates, nitrates and many particles deposited on the glass surface were found as well. MLR calculations exhibit significant dependencies of the degree of weathering on T, RH, c(NO(x)), c(SO(2)) and c(O(3)). Applying a time-dependence function of the general form y= a. t(b) (t=time) results in a value of approximately 0.42 for the exponent b, which comes close to values expected from various studies in the literature.
An overview of the techniques used in art and archaeology is presented and the applicability of X-ray radiography, X-ray fluorescence (XRF), and X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD) as a tool for nondestructive investigations of objects of art and archaeology is discussed. X-ray radiography, for example, is a standard technique widely used and accepted by art historians, archaeologists, curators, and conservators as this method enables information about the manufacturing process and the condition of an object without “touching” the artifact. XRF and XRD enable a nondestructive determination of the material composition of artifacts and the determination of the crystalline structure of the components too. Air path systems and instruments with the micro-beam of X-ray and synchrotron radiation were applied for the analysis of easel paintings, pigments in paint layers, glass artifacts, and coins.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.