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Published bySimon McCormick Modified over 9 years ago
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this ppt presentation has 187 slides, some with notes. It is much more than my short presentation. It includes sections on identification, degradation, conservation and storage and display. It is meant as an aide memoire as many of the slides are to support discussions. Should you need any help or further explanation please email me on cjw@smile-plastics.co.uk Please accept that this ppt presentation is my copyright. I am normally happy to visit collections which may include plastics materials and to give advice on identification and associated guidance. Please understand that I do not have any organisation to fund these visits so I shall have to make a charge for this service. Compared to the risks associated with degrading collections, this charge should be considered an investment! Colin Williamson, Mansion House, Ford, Shrewsbury, SY5 9LZ cjw@smile-plastics.co.uk
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Plastics Colin Williamson
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materials Plastics Colin Williamson
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materials production techniques Plastics Colin Williamson
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materials production techniques identification Plastics Colin Williamson
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all you ever wanted to know about plastics
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all you ever wanted to know about plastics in 3 x 20 minutes
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all you ever wanted to know about plastics in 3 x 20 minutes + questions +discussion
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only 2 types of plastic thermosetting
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only 2 types of plastic thermosetting thermoplastic
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thermosets moulded whilst soft and hot ‘set’ demoulded hot once heated and ‘cured’ won’t melt again generally compression moulded
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thermosets Bois Durci rubber & vulcanite phenol formaldehyde - Bakelite urea formaldehyde - Bandalasta GRP – glass fibre reinforced polyester epoxies – adhesives polyurethane
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compression moulding - thermosets
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Phenol formaldehyde – Bakelite thermoset
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thermoplastics melted to form shape cooled to set in mould can be re-melted
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thermoplastics injection mould film blow bottle blow extrude calendar rotomould compression mould combination
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injection moulding thermoplastics
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extrusion - thermoplastics
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calendar – sheet
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thermoforming thermoplastics sheet
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thermoplastic materials cellulose esters – Celluloid, CA polyethylene - polythene polypropylene polystyrene – also expanded, HIPS & ABS pvc – flexible or rigid PMMA – acrylic (Perspex)- sheet polycarbonate polyamide – nylon etc., etc., etc.
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Identification
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Identification education thirst for knowledge
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Identification education thirst for knowledge conservation
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Identification non-destructive non-invasive
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Identification appearance dating - style & design
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Identification appearance dating – trade marks, patents
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British Patents prior to 1916 – annually 1916100,0011950634,001 1920136,8521955721,191 1925226,5711960826.321 1930323,1711965978,901 1935421,82719701,175,851 1940516,33819751,378,941 1945566,45119802,023,381
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1842 – 18671868 - 1883
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A letter occupying the top of the diamond indicates the year A1845J1854S1849 B1858K1857T1867 C1844L1856U1848 D1852M1859V1850 E1855N1864W1865 F1847O1862X1842 G1863P1851Y1853 H1843Q1866Z1860 I1846R1861
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If a number occupies the top of the diamond, the right field indicates the year A1871I1872U1874 C1870J1880V1876 D1878K1883X1868 E1881L1882Y1879 F1873P1877 H1869S1875
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Bandalasta – urea/thiourea f
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Xylonite – cellulose nitrate
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Identification appearance colour and transparency
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Transparent (i.e. glass clear) as thick solids (>2mm) PMMA – acrylic, Perspex, Plexiglas polystyrene polycarbonate cast phenolic – normally tinted polyester cellulose esters silicones, polyurethane
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transparent solids polystyrene polycarbonate
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Transparent (i.e. glass clear) as thin film or sheet as solid + PVC both rigid and flexible polypropylene regenerated cellulose (Cellophane) polyethylene PET (polyethylene terephthalate)
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Only opaque (at best, translucent) phenol + urea formaldehyde – moulded gutta percha vulcanite Bois Durci + most compositions bitumen + cold moulded compositions composites, including GRP ABS foams
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Colour phenol formaldehyde – Bakelite – dark cast pf – shades of amber pigment or compound wood or cloth fillers
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phenol formaldehyde – Bakelite dark colours
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Cast phenol formaldehyde – amber shades
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pf – colour in blotches
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thiourea formaldehyde colour pigment particles
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wood flour filled shellac
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cloth filled pf
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cloth filled pf - Tufnol
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Identification appearance surface finish
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knife marks in CN sheet
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‘orange peel’ on urea formaldehyde
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‘sink marks’ modern inj. mld
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Identification appearance degradation
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cellulose nitrate – acidic, wet
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cellulose nitrate, acidic, wet
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cellulose acetate, plasticiser, dry
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CA – distortion due to shrinkage after plasticiser migration
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CA, plasticiser migration, constrained shrinkage
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Casein, moisture
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Identification appearance function
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Identification appearance production method
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Thermoformed sheet cellulose nitrate – very common pre 1950 casein – very limited bending polystyrene – very common post 1950 uPVC – very common post 1950 PMMA – Perspex, common post 1950 many other modern materials can be post formed from sheet
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Blow moulded polyethylene – eg detergent bottles PET – eg fizzy drink bottles also uPVC, polypropylene, polycarbonate
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Rotation Moulded polyethylene, e.g. canoes, road cones plasticised pvc, e.g. footballs, dolls also nylon and polycarbonate
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Injection moulded most thermoplastics except casein and cellulose nitrate thermosets after 1960
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Compression moulded almost all plastics materials but commercially not viable for modern thermoplastics. typical of thermosets
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Casting polyester (especially embedding resins) PMMA (especially embedding resins) cast Phenolic polyurethane foam, e.g. shoes
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‘old vulcanite plaque’
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‘old vulcanite plaque’ - bubbles
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‘old vulcanite plaque’ – reverse raised rim
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‘old vulcanite plaque’ – reverse raised rim, crack, sawdust
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‘old vulcanite plaque’ raised rim, crack, sawdust modern polyester
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extrusion most thermoplastics parallel marks along the long axis film and sheet rod and profile fibres
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Identification physical properties
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hardness some plastics are softer than a finger nail polyethylene polypropylene gutta percha (except very old) plasticised pvc polyurethane rubber
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smell phenol cast phenolic sulphur vulcanite camphorcellulose nitrate vinegarcellulose acetate (degrading) waxypolyethylene
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Identification physical properties specific gravity solvents heat & fumes odours melting point analytical methods e.g. FTIR
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Identification - Dating Pre 1840 Compositionswax, resins, shellac, gums, glue, drying oils Papier Maché Hoof and Horn Tortoiseshell Amber 1840 – 1880 More compositions, especially shellac based Gutta percha Bois Durci Vulcanite
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Identification - Dating 1880 – 1900 Cellulose nitrate Compositions decrease 1900 – 1920 Cellulose nitrate increases Cellulose acetate Casein Bitumen
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Identification - Dating 1920 – 1939 Phenol formaldehyde (cast phenolic, Bakelite) Thio-urea/urea formaldehyde Cellulose acetate injection moulded Melamine formaldehyde (polystyrene, polyethylene, pvc, pmma etc. ) 1945 – 1960 Thermosets decline Semi-synthetics decline Thermoplastics increase Composites introduced Foams, thermoplastic and thermosetting
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why identify ?
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to identify potential problems
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why identify ? to identify potential problems to identify problem materials
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problem materials cellulose nitrate – Celluloid cellulose acetate pvc polyurethane foams
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questions
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there’s no such thing as a stupid question
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questions there’s no such thing as a stupid question only stupid answers
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Degradation surface bloom distortion splitting colour change embrittlement crazing
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Degradation surface bloom distortion splitting colour change embrittlement crazing
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cellulose nitrate – acidic, wet
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cellulose nitrate, acidic, wet
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cellulose acetate, plasticiser, dry
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Degradation surface bloom distortion splitting colour change embrittlement crazing
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CA – distortion due to shrinkage after plasticiser migration
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CA, plasticiser migration, constrained shrinkage
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Degradation surface bloom distortion splitting colour change embrittlement crazing
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Horn brooch front
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Horn brooch back
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CN billiard ball, zinc oxide
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CA negative film
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CN delamination
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Degradation surface bloom distortion splitting colour change embrittlement crazing
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CA, UV colour fade
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CN, iron stain
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CN
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Polypropylene, UV, phototenderised
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Rubber, oxygen + UV
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Vulcanite, UV + water
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Vulcanite, UV + moisture
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pf (Bakelite) UV
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pf (Bakelite) UV on pigment
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Degradation surface bloom distortion splitting colour change embrittlement crazing
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cn – stage 1
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cn – stage 2
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cn stage 3
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cn movie film – stage 1
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gutta percha sheet, oxygen
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Irradiated polyethylene
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uPVC, UV
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Degradation surface bloom distortion splitting colour change embrittlement crazing
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Casein, moisture
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Degradation surface bloom distortion splitting colour change embrittlement crazing weeping
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Degradation Weeping – typically CA plasticiser loss
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Stability of Plastics
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Cellulose Nitrate (Celluloid) hydrolysis Nitrogen oxides off gas Nitrous and nitric acids
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Cellulose Nitrate (Celluloid) off gassing - corrosion moist haze acidic surface cuboid cracking movie film dry deepfreeze
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Cellulose Acetate hydrolysis acetic acid - vinegar plasticiser migration
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Cellulose Acetate smell of vinegar weeping dry plasticiser on surface distortion blisters
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PVC originally unstable but UV and ΔH stabilisers added plasticiser migration rigid – darkens & embrittles flexible – stiffens/liquefies
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Polyurethanes unstable as foam as high surface area and O 2 exposure darken, powder, crumbling
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Other polymers all UV sensitive transparent worse than opaque amorphous (e.g. PMMA, P’s, Polycarb) – solvent sensitivity
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Caring basic considerations storage inc. passive cons. cleaning handling degradation indicators display
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Basic considerations identify the material before acquisition
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Basic considerations identify the material before acquisition only acquire non-degrading items
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Basic considerations identify the material before acquisition only acquire non-degrading items physical damage better than chemical
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Basic considerations identify the material before acquisition only acquire non-degrading items physical damage better than chemical exposure stress, labels, paint, adhesive
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Caring basic considerations storage inc. passive cons. cleaning handling degradation indicators display
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storage no sunlight, heat, & damp no lights in stores 30-50% RH <5 o C < 30% slows degradation
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storage no sunlight, heat, & damp no enclosed wrappings allow off gassing except for passive conservation
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storage no sunlight, heat, & damp no enclosed wrappings acid free tissue
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storage no sunlight, heat, & damp no enclosed wrappings acid free tissue not touching other items
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storage not touching other items plasticiser migration degradation bi-products colour bleed
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storage no sunlight, heat, & damp no enclosed wrappings acid free tissue not touching other items supported
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storage supported stress sculpted bed cushion strongest points open framework check materials (cf display)
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storage no sunlight, heat, & damp no enclosed wrappings acid free tissue not touching other items supported indicators
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storage indicators cresol paper cresol string
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storage no sunlight, heat, & damp no enclosed wrappings acid free tissue not touching other items supported indicators passive conservation
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storage passive conservation scavengers activated charcoal – poss CN CA Zeolites – ok CA film long term Ageless – ok for rubber NOT CN CA
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storage no sunlight, heat, & damp no enclosed wrappings acid free tissue not touching other items supported indicators passive conservation gloves
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storage gloves lint free - snagging non-absorbent (acids)
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Caring basic considerations storage inc. passive cons. cleaning
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Caring cleaning advisable for conservation but curatorial ?
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Caring cleaning water (sparingly) generally safe BUT
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water generally safe BUT not immersion ? surface dyed casein not vulcanite not foam not degrading CN
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Caring cleaning olive oil ok for sticky labels BUT beware ESC
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Caring cleaning wax polish ?
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Caring basic considerations storage inc. passive cons. cleaning handling degradation indicators display
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Caring display 50 lux max 30-50% RH constant 20 0 C clean(ed) air acid fumes, organic vapours
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Caring display suitable plastics for direct contact polyolefines (check stability and creep) polyethylene foam PET – polyester eg, Melinex, Mylar nylons
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Caring display un- suitable plastics for display/support cellulose esters e.g.celluloid plasticised PVC polyurethane foam paint – esp solvent
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So, you’ve got plastics in the collection ???
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So, you’ve got plastics in the collection ??? What to do
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Survey identify materials
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Survey identify materials identify degradation
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Survey identify materials identify degradation determine risk
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Category A – High Risk Degradation started Likely to affect other materials
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Category A – High Risk Degradation started Likely to affect other materials Cellulose Nitrate – ‘celluloid disease’ Attacked metals, wrapping
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Category A – High Risk Actively degrading –record and discard -active conservation -isolate No active degradation –storage -6 monthly inspection -indicators -active conservation -cleaning
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Category B – Medium Risk Likely to degrade but products of degradation inoffensive
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Polyurethane Foam Store in reduced O 2 environment Ageless no light
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PVC Unplasticised – UV sensitive Plasticised (flexible) Plasticiser loss -embrittlement Eventually liquifies
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