Subject: Acetate negatives
Well, the short (and blunt) answer is "no". Once the film starts to go, there is nothing that you can about it, although cold, dry conditions will probably help. We haven't (and may not be able to) study the inter-relation between degradation in various states and cold storage. The problem is that there are 4 main reactions - hydrolysis of the side groups, hydrolysis of the polymer chain, oxidation of the side groups, and oxidation of the polymer links. Under humid conditions hydrolysis is the predominant reaction mechanism while under dryer conditions, oxidation is more important. Of course, oxidation is a much slower reaction than hydrolysis even when it is predominant. (Please ignore my spelling.) The relative rates of hydrolysis causing a) chain scission and b) glycosidic cleavage (or deacetylation and depolymerization respectively) depends on the storage condition. Even the number of layers of gelatin has an effect. Often sheet films are coated on both sides with gelatin (one is the emulsion and the other is the anti-curl layer.) Double-, single-, and un-coated film bases all behave differently with respect to the rate of depol. vs deacet. at different humidities. The other complication is that the deacetylation (de-esterification) reaction is autocatalytic while the glycosidic cleavage is not. In short, we don't know how cold storage will balance out with the various rates of deterioration. However, cold st. seems to be the best bet although the stress of taking the negative out of cold storage may cause severe channeling. BTW, in the next project we will be looking at the change in emulsion adhesion with deterioration. The Florida State Archives made some good observations that showed that bond adhesion often goes long before it shows up as channeling. They had taken some film out of storage for copying and it literally started channeling before their eyes. They took a second sheet out and every hour, drew a pencil line around the edge of the channeling lines (ultimately, the film looked like a topographic map). It only took a few hours for very severe channeling. The bond between the emulsion and the film base gave out long ago, but the final separation was brought about by the stress of changing the storage conditions. (The diff. between the storage and office conditions were really not that great, however.) .... Sorry the news isn't better. *** Conservation DistList Instance 4:56 Distributed: Sunday, April 28, 1991 Message Id: cdl-4-56-012 ***Received on Tuesday, 23 April, 1991