Subject: Damaged microfilm set
John Haar wrote >... we've discovered a problem with one of our microfilm sets and >want to pass along the information so others who own the set can >check on the condition of their copies. Staff discovered that the >set, The Timothy Pickering Papers (69 reels), was emitting a >substance that had damaged both the cardboard reel containers and >the metal cabinet in which they were stored. I'm sure that what you must have is a set of the old Kalvar vesicular microfilm. Many institutions had their metal cabinets damaged by this film, which emits hydrogen chloride gas (or hydrochloric acid). The acid also destroys the cardboard boxes in which the film is kept, turning them into fragile shells which disintegrate when you touch them. We had some of this film, but had it replaced with silver halide microfilm. As far as I know the corrosive gas did not affect the non-vesicular film around it, but probably that film is now about to suffer from "vinegar syndrome," so you can't win! Your film wasn't a "faulty" film, in terms of being an unusual example of its kind, but rather that it was film of a particular formulation, which appeared in the late sixties I think, where the film began to give off hydrogen chloride gas--something which the manufacturers obviously didn't expect. You can find articles in various library journals about this. In the standard ANSI PH1.67, American National Standard for Photography (Film)--Processed Vesicular Film--Specifications for Stability, in Appendix F, Corrosiveness, you find this statement: "There have been some commercial vesicular films that have released hydrogen chloride during storage. This behavior has not had any known detrimental effect on the stability of the film itself. However, it did have a very corrosive effect on the film enclosure materials, particularly on metal film cans and storage cabinets." Because we couldn't afford metal cabinets for all of our films, we were lucky in that the only damage we suffered was minor signs of corrosion on our metal stack shelves. Most of the damage was to the boxes in which the film was stored. We ran through two sets of these before the micropublisher agreed that it was the film which was causing the problems, not the boxes. We insisted on having all the film replaced with silver halide film, because we were leery of any vesicular film at that point. Current vesicular films, however, do not have this problem because they have a completely different formulation from the old Kalvar film. Suzanne Dodson Facilities and Preservation Manager University of British Columbia *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:58 Distributed: Thursday, February 10, 1994 Message Id: cdl-7-58-005 ***Received on Tuesday, 8 February, 1994