Subject: Fluorescence
Maria Brunskog <curare.brunskog [at] spray__se> writes >>On microscopic examination of cross-sections sampled from aged, >>japanned surfaces on furniture, a bright and saturated red >>fluorescence colour has been observed. The light was in the lower >>UV-range, 330-390nm. At a higher UV-range 430-450nm the fluorescence >>was not visible. The red colour (like good quality wine) has been >>interpreted as silver. I would appreciate any comment from anyone >>with experience of metal/silver fluorescence, either from metal >>foil or powder incorporated in lacquer media. > >I do not know what silver metal would look like under these >conditions; however, I have not seen this in examinations of metal >objects in ultraviolet light. Mineralized silver might have a >characteristic fluorescence. As I recall cuprite (copper oxide) >appears bright red in uv light. Madder (red lake) also fluoresces >a bright red under ultraviolet light. Could a red glaze have been >applied over a metal foil? Metallic silver has the peculiar optical property that causes it to become totally absorbing in the UV at 330 nm--this is called its "plasma edge." I am not familiar with the fluorescence of silver metal oxides, but I would doubt that you are seeing fluorescence from a silver metal foil--in the near UV. M. Susan Barger, Ph.D. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:1 Distributed: Wednesday, June 6, 2001 Message Id: cdl-15-1-003 ***Received on Wednesday, 30 May, 2001