Micro-XRF and FT-IR/ATR analyses of an optically degraded ancient document of the Trieste (Italy) cadastral system (1893): a novel and surprising iron gall ink protective action
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
This paper aims to identify causes and processes of an undesired age-related optical phenomenon in which two
kinds of paper – awhite paper and a green one – and an iron-gall ink are involved togetherwith unavoidable environmental
agents. Documents under examination are dated 1893 and come from the Trieste cadastral system
archive (Ufficio del catasto tavolare di Trieste). The green paper, with a high content of lignin and kaolin is a preprinted
payment order used in accounting operations and it is adjacent to a white lignin-free paper. Diffused
brown stains appear on the white paper mainly from being in prolonged contact with the green one which
was handwritten using iron-gall ink. The green page induces a strong browning effect on the contact side of
the white one, except for inked areas. The manuscript black lines of the lignin-containing page seem to protect
the adjacent surface, where a mirror image appears. A particular type of mirror effect, which we propose to
call negative mirror effect, is clearly evidenced. Micro-XRF (micro-X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy) and FT-IR
ATR (attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy) techniques were used to achieve
information on both diagnostic inorganic and organic components. By way of our chemical model we can
hypothesise the migration of oxidised brown low molecular weight extra-cellulose compounds (from lignin
and/or hemicelluloses) from green recto to white verso pages. The browning process is only hindered in sharp
correspondence with the areas of the green recto folio written with the iron-gall ink: this ink acts as a physical
barrier to the migration or, as a second hypothesis, it is able to withhold the mobile organic compounds by
way of a specific but still unknown interaction. In the field of scientific research on metal-gall ink corrosion
this is a novel, interesting and surprising case of the reverse, in which the ink itself is not the cause of the
corrosion, but the unforeseen preventive agent.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Ancient paper
Manuscript analysis
Browning process
Iron-gall inks
Age-related optical degradation
Negative mirror effect
Elenco autori:
Gianpiero Adami; Andrea Gorassini; Enrico Prenesti; Matteo Crosera; Elena Baracchini; Alessandro Giacomello
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