Subject: Archaeological silver objects
Lisa A. Young asked for advice on cleaning badly corroded silver artefacts. I think that when talking about cleaning, the first question is "what surface would be cleaned". So if you want to recover the ancient shape and the surface details of the object, it is important to find where the ancient surface (called the "original surface") can be preserved amongst the corrosion products. It is often difficult especially when dealing with archaeological silver. The corrosion crust is often a mixture of silver sulphide and silver chloride in that case. The X-rays can help you to determine the extent and the conservation state of the remaining silver core but unfortunately will not always give you valuable information about the location of the original surface. A mechanical cleaning on a small area can allow you to discover this original surface. But be careful with a mechanical cleaning on that kind of very fragile objects. The chemical way is often the safest way here. If you need to get rid of the silver sulphide/chloride chemically, you can try to use reducing agent like the sodium dithionite or a complexing agent like thiourea. With thiourea, it must be slightly more efficient at a acidic pH than at higher pH due to the good stability of the silver sulphide at high pH. An electrolytic treatment can also be considered in a sodium nitrate solution (1M for instance) at a cathodic potential of - 1.2 Volt ESS (versus a mercurous sulphate electrode in a saturated potassium sulphate solution). Regis Bertholon Archaeological metal conservator Institut de Restauration et de Recherches Archeologiques et Paleometallurgiques and teacher at MST Conservation Restauration des Biens Culturels University Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne Fax : +33 3 44 57 48 02 *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:23 Distributed: Tuesday, September 1, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-23-003 ***Received on Monday, 31 August, 1998