Subject: Fax paper
... Cheryl Jackson of the Australian National Archives did a simple research project reported in Abbey Newsletter v. 13., no. 8, 12/89. The 2 papers she tested were poor-quality wood pulp sized with alum rosin, but calcium carbonate fillers raised the pH to about 8.5. She seems to indicate that this is representative of the medium. The "image" layer is a heat-activated "colorless dye" with a "color-forming agent" suspended in a binder (no formulae or chemical identifiers given). Heat triggers visible color somehow. Most important of Jackson's findings seem to be that hot water and most reagents turn the image layer black, and some remove it all together. Simple washing and single-layer drying seemed to cause no problems, but the paper blocks in stacks. Images fade in high humidity, and high temperature causes predictable results, but UV doesn't selectively obscure the image -- just makes everything darker. She notes discoloration was worst where there were fingerprints. Jackson reports that the manufacturer of Kanzaki thermal paper doesn't estimate life expectancy of more than five years, even under "optimal" conditions. Karen Motylewski Northeast Document Conservation Center *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:5 Distributed: Saturday, June 19, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-5-009 ***Received on Friday, 18 June, 1993