Subject: Smithsonian press release
Regarding Mr. Druzik's posting on the new Smithsonian climate control guidelines: It seems to me there is some confusion here, and I think the conclusion that we can save bundles of money on future HVAC treatments (or that we have wasted bundles on past HVAC treatments) may be premature. David Earhardt, in his recent presentation at the IIC Congress in Ottawa, said (if I heard him right) that the most sensitive material they studied was rabbit skin glue, a material present in many works of art, and similar to other materials very common in our collections. Rabbit skin glue, he suggested, could undergo elastic deformations (reversible) within RH fluctuations of plus or minus 8%. Beyond that range, rabbit skin glue is permanently deformed. My conclusion from this is that plus or minus 8% should be our target range for RH, even if other materials can sustain elastic deformations at far wider fluctuations (e.g. cottonwood, plus or minus 15%). To achieve plus or minus 8% in most, if not all, climates, what are you going to eliminate? Certainly not humidification or dehumidification. You might do with less expensive, less sensitive humidistats, which would indeed be a capital savings, though not millions of dollars, I would guess. Even if it is a capital savings, it does not appear, from computer modelling studies commissioned by the Getty Conservation Institute (Ayers/Lau et.al., ca. 1991), that wider RH tolerances yield savings in energy costs: there was a negligible difference between plus or minus 2% and plus or minus 7%. The reference to protecting building materials from the climates provided by "specialized" systems may also be similarly optimistic: many modern buildings without vapor barriers cannot even tolerate 30% RH in cold winter climates without some risk of damage from condensation (our 1974 building, by Edward Larabee Barnes, is just such a building). Even if a building could tolerate 30%, say, but not 40%, again, what are you going to eliminate from the HVAC system? You're probably still going to need the humidification system, even to achieve your 30%. Thus, capital savings are not likely here either. Intuitively, holding 30% plus or minus 8% would be less expensive, in a typical northern climate, than holding 40% plus or minus 8% or 50% plus or minus 8%. But perhaps not: to cite Ayers et.al again, they found that in most climates, based on computer modelling, maintaining 50% is cheaper than maintaining 40% or 60%. They didn't look at seasonally-adjusted setpoints, though, so there *is* probably some savings in applying the lower winter RH setpoint. I think many of our institutions, even with our specialized equipment, have something like the environment now apparently recommended as a result of the Smithsonian's research. And most of us, I would hazard, still see damages occurring. We see flaking. We see splitting of wood. We see desiccation and maybe even mold. Many of us are doing the best we can, and we still have damages. Perhaps what we need are more studies like the ones commissioned by the Getty Conservation Institute, informing us of the true cost aspects of these new guidelines. It would be great if we could save that money for our many other needs, wouldn't it? Another aspect of climate control systems that is omitted in the Smithsonian press release is ventilation--to prevent air stagnation and to achieve particulate and gaseous filtration. Regardless of the level of relative humidity control and temperature control, we are always going to need to move filtered air through our spaces. We are always going to need air handlers, fans, filter sections, and ducted air supply and return. I believe there are recommended air change rates for library materials, in the order of 6 air changes per day, if I recall. I wonder if commercial or residential systems can achieve that level of ventilation? At the recent IIC Congress, we also heard a paper by Jonathan P. Brown on the difficulty of accurate RH measurement in museums due to instrument accuracy, problems in calibration, and RH variations from measurement point to measurement point. One could argue that these limitations in measurement invalidate our usual RH specifications. One could also argue that even with the tightest equipment and the most diligent calibration, we are probably already getting significant variations well beyond our tight specifications and well beyond what our point-specific hygrothermographs are telling us. William A. Real, Chief Conservator The Carnegie Museum of Art 4400 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh PA 15213 412-622-3267 Fax: 412-622-1979 Alt fax: 412-622-3112 *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:22 Distributed: Wednesday, September 28, 1994 Message Id: cdl-8-22-001 ***Received on Tuesday, 27 September, 1994