Subject: Foams
I recall that there was an engineer at the Canadian Conservation Institute working on the problems of packing (for shipment) and foams. One interesting fact that came out of the study was that they found open cell foams to be more effective for cushioning than the more "traditional(?)" closed cell foams. The closed foams cushion by virtue of the compressibility of the air cell gas while the open cell foams cushion by virtue of polymer elasticity. The open celled foams tend to act like pistons while the closed cell foams often suffer from rebound (or bounce-back). The engineer who did the work on foam packing was Paul Marcon. Physically blown foams are generally safer than chemically blown foams because of residual chemicals that may be left. One example is that azodicarbonamide produces N2 gas but leaves other dicarbonamides as residues. There is also concern about some of the thermal blowing agents that are sulfur compounds. However the following foams are generally considered to be safe: Ethafoam phys blown with pentane (and replaced with air) Sentinel phys blown with butane (and replaced with air) Minicel chem Xlinked, chem. blown Volara radiation Xlinked, chem. blown Plastazote chem Xlinked (?), phys blown (N2) Nalgene (Clean Sheets I think), rad Xlinked (?), chem blown Plastazote has apparently caused slow tarnishing of metal coupons and may have a sulfur containing blowing agent. Xlinking tends to make the foam more rigid, increases the softening point, makes it more tear resistant, less soluble and often less abrasive. (Volara, for example, has much smaller bubbles.) Scott Williams at CCI also brought up a point about cut faces on foams. Several of the foams used in conservation are sold by the manufacturers in 2" thick sheets, which the distributor may cut into thinner slices. As I recall, the cut faces tended to be less abrasive and less apt to snag things than the manufactured face. Regarding actual bubble wrap, they found that object left too long in pure polyethylene bubble wrap caused the bubbles to flatten. (This is the problem of vapor porosity of polyethylene.) If objects must remain wrapped in bubble wrap for long periods, CCI suggested PVDC coated PE bubble wrap. The interior side (ie inside the bubbles) has been coated with PVDC to prevent the air from diffusing out. PVDC is a little more stable than PVC and since it is inside the bubbles, it hopefully not as much of a problem as PVC. BTW I hope you didn't get the idea that polyethylenes are bad. They are inherently good, safe materials, although like all materials, you may get bad batches or a grade not to your specification. You could run into the same problem with polyester too. Also, much of the work done by Paul Marcon involved the used of an inner and outer box. Among the problems to be solved was whether it was better to pad the contents of the inner box and then anchor the inner box in the outer box or to anchor the contents of the inner box and put the padding around the inner box. The latter case is the same as handling a traditional glass plate box (wood with grooves cut out for the plates), where you might want to protect the box and plates. However, even if the methods are not directly applicable to your problem, I think that the information would be useful. Oh yes, from a chemical point of view, Scott Williams has not found any reason to question the foams mentioned (with the exception of the Plastizote.) We (IPI) haven't really tested any of the foams. Certainly, they are much harder to evaluate in terms of additive exudation. This property we currently measure optically for films, but foams don't tend to be very transparent :-). *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:19 Distributed: Sunday, September 8, 1991 Message Id: cdl-5-19-007 ***Received on Thursday, 5 September, 1991