Subject: Problems with epoxy in stone conservation
I used ground limestone as a filler in Araldite AY103 in order to fix stones with stainless steel dowels. This caused cracks in the stone, parallel to the steel rods. Here are some more details: Object: posts of a fence around a grave monument. Measures: 20/20/140 cm Steel rod: diameter 1cm Stone material: oolithic limestone (oospatit) Origin: Savonnieres, Lorraine, France (west of Nancy) Geologic classification: Jura, Portlandium 85-90% CaCO3, 0.3% Goethit (Fe-oxide-hydroxide), gypsum. Porosity: 20-25% (stone is very "soft") The same stone, ground, was used to fill the epoxy. A geologist, engaged in the treatment of Savonnieres-limestone, told me about difficulties in treating this stone with PMMA. He thinks that organic components in the stone are responsible for this. Petr Kotlik, Czech Republic, who has experiences with "artificial sandstone" (epoxy, quartz sand), reported of epoxy filled with much sand destroyed by swelling in water after hardening. I tried this, too, but found that my epoxy-mass had no porosity and didn't take any water. At last I suppose that a chemical reaction between the epoxy components and the CaCO3 caused the expansion; maybe heat caused expansion of the steel? I wonder if anybody has an idea. Olaf Pung, Stone conservator in education at Fachhochschule Hildesheim, Germany *** Conservation DistList Instance 11:72 Distributed: Tuesday, February 24, 1998 Message Id: cdl-11-72-014 ***Received on Thursday, 19 February, 1998