Subject: CFC's and Wei To
In _Restaurator_ (which I'm certain all of you read) about three years ago, I wrote an analysis of Cunha's report of the state of mass deacidification. At that time there were two contenders: Wei T'o and DEZ. That is still the case. Read my article for the details ("Mass Deacidification: A Critical Evaluation of the Cunha Report"); I'm at home as I write this and my copy of the article is at the lab, so I am unable to give a more complete citation. The National Library and Public Archives of Canada have installed a second and improved mass deacidification system based on Wei T'o chemistry, which achieves nearly total recovery for reuse of the unused chemistry. For mass deacidification, then, Wei T'o remains ahead of the pack. I do not have time to read all of the journals which occasionally publish interesting reports about mass deacidification (only the 30 or so to which I subscribe), but to my knowledge, only one third party evaluation of Wei T'o and DEZ has been conducted to date, and that was by the Japanese. I had the report translated for the _Restaurator_ article. The findings were that Wei T'o works well and DEZ does not work well. I am as concerned as anyone about the environment. I have chaired two solid and toxic waste committees over the years, and currently sit on an Oregon Department of Environmental Quality committee which is supervising the dismantling of a wood treatment plant which used pentachlorophenol for many years; I want my children and grandchildren to live in good health. However, when the military is permitted to use CFC's as a solvent; when usage of CFC's as pharmaceutical lubricants, gauze bandage adhesives and adhesive removers, release agents for plastic and elastomeric molds, etc. are already exempt.... These uses consume tens of thousands of tons per year; Wei T'o consumes less than 10 tons per year. We can wait for that holistic solution in the sky or we can do what little may be done with current technology/chemistry to preserve the record of 19th/20th c. human activity (I am not so concerned about pre-1800 material). Although Dr. Richard Smith is a friend of mine, we have had a congenial argument for some years now, and it is this: non-aqueous treatments create their own problem in that they increase the reservoir of deliquescent salts in paper and that increases the risk of mechanical damage within the sheet. However, without deacidification I suspect that the risk is greater and that is why I support mass-non-aqueous deacidification; it gives us time to find a better alternative. Jack C. Thompson *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:33 Distributed: Thursday, December 17, 1992 Message Id: cdl-6-33-010 ***Received on Saturday, 12 December, 1992