Subject: Fluorochromes in solvent gels
Sophie Haake <sophie.haake [at] iname__com> writes >For a paper that I write at the University of Applied Art and >Science in Hildesheim, I am testing the effect of solvent gels on >stone. I would like to mix a fluorochrome into my solvent gel to >visualize under ultraviolet light the amount of gel residue left in >the pores of the stone. A caution about using dyes to monitor gel residue--the dye may associate closely with the polymer molecules of the gel, but may also be carried by the solvent away from the gel and deposited, so that you have an "apparent" residue that is only dye; conversely, the dye might be carried up into the bulk of the dried gel that is removed, and not stay with the residue, giving you less visualized gel residue than you really have. (Mixtures generally do not stay perfectly mixed when in contact with a separating medium, such as a porous object, especially when solvent evaporation is involved.) I would tend to think you are more likely to get falsely high readings, as the dye molecule is smaller than the carbopol and more likely to get trapped in pores. I don't have a solid suggestion, but recommend you focus on making the residue visible after "treatment" by experimenting with stains that react with the carbopol. Mary T. Baker +20 2 380 5807 (Egypt) direct phone Mailing Address: Chemonics International, Egypt/MVE 1133 20th Street, NW, Suite 600 Washington, DC 20036 Shipping Address: 49, Road 81, Apartment #1 Maadi, Cairo Egypt *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:31 Distributed: Wednesday, November 29, 2000 Message Id: cdl-14-31-001 ***Received on Tuesday, 21 November, 2000