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Atomic oxygen removes soot from paintings.


Two rocket scientists Rocket Scientist

In the world of finance, these are people with science and math degrees who work in the finance field building highly advanced quantitative finance models. These models help banking, insurance and investment firms to price financial instruments.
 may have solved a particularly vexing problem facing art conservators. Many paintings damaged by smoke sit in storage, undisplayed and unappreciated, because no one has found a good way to clean them. Now, scientists from NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA
 in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Independent U.S.
 are finding that atomic oxygen, which exists in Earth's upper atmosphere and chews away materials on orbiting satellites, may give conservators the tool they need to tackle this problem.

Dabbing organic solvents onto a painting can clean off some kinds of soil, but it often does more harm than good (SN: 4/28/90, p. 261). A shower of atomic oxygen, on the other hand, can remove layers of soot without anyone's ever having to touch the surface. Sharon K. Rutledge of NASA's Lewis Research Center in Cleveland reported the finding at the Materials Research Society meeting in Boston last week.

After being approached by the Cleveland Museum of Art Located in the University Circle neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio, the internationally renowned Cleveland Museum of Art has a permanent collectionof more than 40,000 objects in 70 galleries. , Rutledge and her colleague Bruce A. Banks enlisted the help of the Cleveland Fire Department to expose samples of cotton canvas coated with acrylic gesso ges·so  
n. pl. ges·soes
1. A preparation of plaster of Paris and glue used as a base for low relief or as a surface for painting.

2. A surface of gesso.
 to smoke from a fire. Acrylic gesso is used to prepare surfaces for paint.

The samples hung on a wall inside the fire department's training facility while several pieces of furniture burned. A section of an oil painting was exposed to a motor oil fire, which covered it with a layer of black soot.

The researchers placed the samples in a vacuum chamber and bombarded them with atomic oxygen. They measured how well the samples reflected light before and after the cleaning. Black carbon from the oil fire came off in only 1 hour, whereas soot from the house fire took up to 23 hours, Rutledge says.

House fire residue is a mix of many materials and is therefore very difficult to remove, says Marion F. Mecklenburg of the Smithsonian Institution's Conservation Analytical Laboratory in Suitland, Md. Fumes fumes

odorous gases and other volatile materials; inhalation of irritating fumes causes coughing and, if sufficiently severe, irreversible pulmonary edema.
 from melting synthetic materials like polyester, nylon, and rayon deposit "a coat of hot plastic onto the surface," he says. Atomic oxygen reacts with the carbon-based materials, turning them into carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure. , carbon monoxide carbon monoxide, chemical compound, CO, a colorless, odorless, tasteless, extremely poisonous gas that is less dense than air under ordinary conditions. It is very slightly soluble in water and burns in air with a characteristic blue flame, producing carbon dioxide; , and water.

A hand-held atomic oxygen device that doesn't need a vacuum would make the technique practical for art conservation, says Rutledge. For now, though, the NASA researchers are trying to scale up their experiment by building a large vacuum chamber that can hold a painting measuring 5 feet by 7 feet.

Although atomic oxygen alters the paint slightly and the vacuum may dry it out, Mecklenburg says he thinks "it's worth exploring." Conservators may have to "accept a modicum mod·i·cum  
n. pl. mod·i·cums or mod·i·ca
A small, moderate, or token amount: "England still expects a modicum of eccentricity in its artists" Ian Jack.
 of damage. It's the lesser of two evils."
COPYRIGHT 1996 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:art conservation
Author:Wu, Corinne
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Dec 14, 1996
Words:434
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