Subject: Mass deacidification test
Columbia Awarded $10,877 for a test of the AKZO mass deacidification process The New York State Program for the Conservation and Preservation of Library Research Materials has given Columbia a grant for $10,877 to conduct a pilot test run of the Akzo Chemicals DEZ mass deacidification process over the next eight months. New York University and the State University of New York at Stony Brook will cooperate with Columbia in the project. Each library will select approximately 130 volumes to be treated; the materials will be assembled and shipped to Akzo from Columbia. Before treatment the libraries will test the pH of the volumes' paper to determine how acidic the paper is and will record other facts about their condition. After treatment the pH will be re-tested and the completeness of the treatment evaluated. The volumes will be physically marked in two ways to indicate that they have been deacidified. (1) The volume will be marked with the infinity symbol on the spine. (2) A small label on acid-free paper will be attached inside the back cover of each volume. It will state the vendor and method of deacidification, as well as the initial pH and the pH after treatment. The sample volumes will be chosen from the libraries' general collections, and will consist of volumes which need commercial rebinding. Selecting items ready for rebinding eliminates concern about any potential damage to the covers and adhesives because they will be removed during rebinding in any case. Since Preservation staff in the three participating libraries regularly identify and review damaged volumes, there will be relatively little disruption of normal routines. Another benefit of using volumes scheduled for rebinding is the knowledge that items have been selected which are used and valued by the libraries' patrons. The participants will obviously need to avoid selecting volumes which are in such heavy demand that they cannot be absent from the collection for the time needed for treatment plus rebinding, and they will exclude any volumes with high artifactual value, but they will be treating items which have a known track record and are important parts of their collections. The results of this pilot will be disseminated to the eleven New York State Comprehensive Research Libraries in time to plan for a potential full-scale mass deacidification project. The eleven libraries are: Columbia, Cornell, New York Public, the New York State Library, New York University, Syracuse University, the University of Rochester, and the SUNY campuses of Albany, Binghamton, Buffalo, and Stony Brook. Groundwork for this project was laid during a seminar on mass deacidification held in Albany in October 1992. Representatives of preservation and collection development from all eleven Comprehensive Research Libraries attended, and heard presentations from Robert Milevski (Princeton University) on technical issues; James Stroud (University of Texas) on current test runs of manuscripts and archives; Richard Frieder (Northwestern University) on the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) cooperative project; Eugene Wiemers (Northwestern) on selection for mass deacidification; and Ross Atkinson (Cornell University) on how deacidification fits in the larger preservation and collection development context. Copies of the Proceedings of the Seminar are available upon request from Janet Gertz while supplies last. *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:16 Distributed: Thursday, July 29, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-16-003 ***Received on Thursday, 29 July, 1993