Subject: Morpholine in sprinkler system
Installing a sprinkler system has come up as a subject in one of the committees charged with planning a new addition to our library. I was not at the meeting, but one of the participants asked me about the effects of morpholine (diethyleneimide oxide) on paper-based material. The chemical is used for cleaning water systems such as sprinklers. Its obvious that water alone on books causes damage, but will morpholine cause further or delayed damage? **** Moderator's comments: Morpholine is an amine that was proposed as a reagent for mass deacidification (a process developed at the Barrows lab. There is a patent on the process and in a pinch I could probably find the company that holds it). Obviously, (at least I hope it's obvious) you would not want to dump morpholine on a stack, but whether the residual morpholine in the pipe represents a real threat, I couldn't say (hopefully someone else will) Thanks Jim *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:36 Distributed: Monday, January 11, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-36-007 ***Received on Friday, 8 January, 1993