Subject: Alkaline board and protein
For a few years now I have read the admonition that we should avoid using alkaline buffered papers and boards in direct contact with protein-bearing artifacts. This has an obvious chemical rationale and therefore some legitimacy as a precaution. However in my casual questioning over these years I have not found a conservator who has observed damage due to contact between buffered boards and proteins found in wool, silk, leather, gelatin, etc. What if alkaline board contact does in fact deteriorate proteinaceous materials, but at a very slow rate? What if the rate were equal to or less than the rate of deterioration due to protein oxidation in unpolluted air--a deterioration mechanism that we recognize but do not guard against? Should we spend money and time retro-fitting storage containers simply on the basis of a theoretical deterioration mechanism when we have not established even a rough intuitive sense of the reaction rate? To establish some sense of this rate I am asking the Conservation DistList readership if you have ever observed such damage? Such anecdotal reports would be very useful in themselves and more so because I have not found published or unpublished attempts to predict such reaction rates experimentally. dp *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:48 Distributed: Thursday, January 6, 1994 Message Id: cdl-7-48-007 ***Received on Monday, 3 January, 1994