Subject: Encapsulation
... My understanding of the LC research was that unalkalized/unbuffered materials backed with a sheet of buffered (permanent durable) paper would be expected to age at the same rate that identical unencapsulated material would age. I don't recall that the article assessed the possibility of accelerated aging of alkalized material over unencapsulated identical material. I would extrapolate from the (?still primitive) research on the effect of bulk (as in textblocks) on paper aging and the hypothesis that the byproducts of deterioration appear to drive accelerated deterioration that encapsulation would be expected to speed deterioration of anything, but you'd have to get a scientific opinion from somebody like Chandru Shahani at the Library of Congress. My own very limited experience suggests that encapsulation somehow results in higher humidity inside the capsule. At any rate, very brittle paper I encapsulate as an example of the short-term advantage of encapsulation for protecting fragile material from damage in necessary handling appears to humidify over time inside the capsule. At any rate, it becomes noticeably more limp and flexible (relative to identical unencapsulated sheets) over several months. I have no explanation, since I always encapsulate in my office, which is dry in winter and air-conditioned in summer, and where my workshop samples ("controls") are always stored. Polyester is a semi-permeable material, but why would the moisture transmission appear to go one way? I don't know of any conclusive research for this question. Please remember that my observations are wholly subjective and unscientific, but it's piqued my curiosity. I would not recommend encapsulation as a long-term storage strategy unless no alternative was practical (as in very brittle pages under demand for access that have been encapsulated and postbound). Karen Motylewski Northeast Document Conservation Center *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:51 Distributed: Tuesday, March 23, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-51-002 ***Received on Tuesday, 16 March, 1993