Subject: Hydrogen peroxide as cleaning agent
Daniel-Harry Steward <posterdoctor [at] msn__com> writes >I use a solution of hydrogen peroxide to clean paper surfaces. The >paper is usually printed posters and the inks are not affected by >the cleaning wash. I have done numerous tests and the papers appear >to have no residual damage from the peroxide solution. Does anyone have other input with this procedure. Hydrogen peroxide is not a "cleaning agent," it is a *bleach*. It chemically oxidizes chromophores in the paper, changing them to *acids*. Raising the pH of hydrogen peroxide solution may favor the creation of ions, rather than free radicals, but no paper conservator would deny that damaging free radical chain reactions can occur. This is why bleaching may continue overnight, hours after the treatment has stopped. Rinsing with a fresh bath of calcium hydroxide at pH 8-9 and testing the rinse water with a peroxide indicator strip will allow you to ensure that the peroxides are no longer reacting in the paper. Neutralizing the bleach with a reducing agent is possibly more effective, and I know that there are several conservators who have tried oxidizing/reducing combinations with good results. Let me add that light bleaching, which is a milder form of peroxide bleaching also generates a lot of acids. A light bleaching bath with calcium hydroxide dropped from pH 8 to pH 5 in four hours under a UV-filtered light bank in our lab. Valinda Carroll Colonial Williamsburg Foundation *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:4 Distributed: Wednesday, July 3, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-4-003 ***Received on Friday, 28 June, 2002