Subject: Consolidation of stone
Jim Mann <jmann [at] amdel__com> writes >I am looking for guidance on a method of determining the depth of >penetration of consolidants into building stone (on site) without >causing damage such as by coring. We did some work about 10 years ago on the problem of non-destructive determination of the penetration depth of consolidants in stone. The technique used was infrared thermography in the 8-10 micrometer band range and the results of our feasibility study were presented at the 8th International Conference on Thermal Engineering and Thermography, Budapest, Hungary, June, 1993. An abstract appeared on pages 41-42 of the Abstract volume. The method is based on the difference between the thermal diffusivities of consolidated and unconsolidated stone. Here is a short description of the experiment we performed. Sandstone cores of differing lengths from 6-36 mm were consolidated uniformly and inserted into closely fitting holes in large sandstone blocks with the core surfaces flush with the tops of the blocks. The surface of each block, representing the surface of an insitu wall, was warmed uniformly by a bank of flood lamps and the temperature difference between the consolidated core and the unconsolidated stone surrounding the core was monitored by the IR imaging system as a function of time for about 5 minutes. The surface temperature never exceeded 40 Celsius. On plotting a function of this temperature difference versus time, we obtained a set of curves that showed maxima at particular times, which were characteristic of the core lengths (penetration depths) and the amplitudes at the maxima were related to both the consolidant loading levels and core lengths. We tried two different consolidants and found that the results were the same, qualitatively, but different quantitatively, indicating different thermal diffusivities of the two consolidated stone samples. This was a feasibility study and we demonstrated that the method did indeed work but we have not done any further work on the method. The procedure can be carried out in the field but the equipment is costly and some calibration would be required to get quantitative results for particular consolidant-stone systems. I think that the method is capable of imaging a large surface and showing qualitative variations in penetration depth, which would appear as surface temperature fluctuations on the imager. IR imaging technology has improved considerably since we did our work and I think 3-5 micrometer imagers would be OK and much smaller and less expensive than the medical imager we used. Bill Ginell Getty Conservation Institute 310-440-6262 *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:44 Distributed: Wednesday, February 14, 2001 Message Id: cdl-14-44-006 ***Received on Thursday, 8 February, 2001