Subject: Adhesive for glass
In DistList Instance 12:13, Robert K. MacDowell <macdowell_r [at] mediasoft__net> writes >Occasionally we are faced with important items of glassware having >cracks that do not result in actual breakage of the object. We would >like a good approach to wicking an adhesive into the cracks and >having it cure slowly (to allow the wicking process time to >complete). I am not enthusiastic about the use of epoxy because of >the risk of yellowing. I have worked with this problem and with the adhesives mentioned as well as others and would add the following notes (in no particular order) to what's been said by Koob, Deller, and Sloan: 1) All of the epoxies will yellow to lesser or greater extent eventually (see Jane Downs, CCI in Studies in Conservation 29, 1984), but most of the color change I've observed phenomenon occurs at the surface, so a thicker cross section may hold its appearance better than a thin one. 2) The match of refractive index, resin to glass, is a more important factor than yellowing (see Norman Tennent in Adhesives and Consolidants, IIC 1984). 3) The index of glass varies widely with its chemistry, the index of epoxy resins fit into a narrower band and cannot be manipulated much. 4) Hxtal NYL epoxy is more viscous than many of the others making it not my first choice for penetration in tight places. 5) There is no reason to believe that UV curing monomers are much more color stable than epoxies. 6) The use of B72, or any other solvent-based application system will yield a cosmetic result that is likely to be unsatisfactory because as the solvent evaporates the adhesive film left behind becomes incoherent. 7) The difference between the thermal expansion characteristics of resins and glass may lead to a failure of adhesion inside the crack, leaving you a little worse off than where you started. Kory Berrett Berrett Conservation Studio 3054 Reisler Road, Oxford PA 19363 610-932-2425 *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:15 Distributed: Wednesday, August 5, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-15-001 ***Received on Monday, 3 August, 1998