Subject: Cotton gloves
Susan Stock <susans [at] rom__on__ca> writes >Paul Green <p.r.green [at] leeds__ac__uk> writes > >>A colleague of mine recently visited the States and was given some >>lint-free cotton gloves with finger grips to handle manuscript >>material. He found these much better than ordinary lint-free cotton >>gloves or latex rubber gloves. ... > >Has anyone analyzed the composition of the 'grips'? Many years ago, >I found that 'grip marks' were left on silver, indicating the >presence of sulphur in the grip material. ... And David Harvey <top10denverdave [at] aol__com> writes: >>I too have observed problems with cotton gloves with the griping "dots". They leave significant corrosion patterns on metals (especially silver objects) and leave readily observable residue patterns on glass, ceramics, polished wood, and gilt objects. One manufacturer identifies the material in the dots as a "rubber compound". << >I too have observed problems with cotton gloves with the griping >"dots". They leave significant corrosion patterns on metals >(especially silver objects) and leave readily observable residue >patterns on glass, ceramics, polished wood, and gilt objects. One >manufacturer identifies the material in the dots as a "rubber >compound". ... During a recent IR spectroscopic analysis site visit I was handling glass microscope slides with gloves having knobby fingergrips and I noticed the creation of a spotted pattern on the glass. I pressed one of these nodules against the ATR crystal of my TravelIR spectrometer and obtained a spectrum of phthalate plasticized poly(vinyl chloride). When I removed the glove from the crystal a residue was left which produced a spectrum of phthalate plasticizer. As a result of recent notices on the Conservation DistList I decided to repeat the analysis for confirmation. I obtained three gloves of this type from staff at CCI. These three gloves look identical to each other and had been previous used. Unfortunately their containers have been lost and their source is unknown. They are made of four separate pieces of fabric--two pieces with nodules, two without. The palm and palm side of four fingers are made from one piece of knobby fabric and the palm side of the thumb from a second. The back of the hand is made of a single piece of fabric without nodules and the back of the thumb is made from another piece of the same fabric. There are three gathers about 2.5 inches long along the top of the knuckles parallel to the fingers. One glove has a label bearing the inscription--"84%Cotton 16%PVC Made in China RN#65739". Nodules of all three were analyzed as described above and have the same composition. The nodules are made of phthalate plasticized poly(vinyl chloride). All leave a residue of dioctyl phthalate on the ATR crystal after being pressed against it. In some cases the residue also seems to contain particles of plasticized poly(vinyl chloride), presumably fragments of the nodules that have broken off and deposited on the crystal. Stock suggests that grip marks on silver indicate the presence of sulfur. This may be true if the nodules are made of something that contains sulfur, such as sulfur vulcanized rubber, perhaps the "rubber compound" cited by Harvey. However, in the case of the gloves I analyzed, sulfur tarnishing is unlikely. A much more likely scenario is corrosion by acidic products from hydrolysis of the phthalate ester plasticizer (perhaps catalyzed by the metal). Yvonne Shashoua described the production of phthalic acid from hydrolysis of phthalate plasticizers in her PhD thesis entitled "Inhibiting the deterioration of plasticized poly(vinyl chloride)", pp 36-37. Whether a product is likely to transfer material to an object can be assessed by using the technique of pressing the product against a freshly cleaned microscope slide or polished metal surface (or any other polished surface of interest) then observing the polished surface by holding it so that the specular reflection from a broad light source such as a window can be seen. If material is transferred it will be revealed by imperfections in the reflection. This will show transfer by simple contact. A different test where the product is dragged across the polished surface will show if material can be transferred by rubbing, which might happen with soft materials, such as the nodules on the gloves. Neither test shows if material can be transferred to rough surfaces by abrasion. R. Scott Williams Senior Conservation Scientist (Chemist) Conservation Processes and Materials Research Canadian Conservation Institute 613-998-3721 Fax: 613-998-4721 *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:10 Distributed: Wednesday, July 31, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-10-003 ***Received on Tuesday, 30 July, 2002