Subject: Creosote vapors
Wendy Claire Jessup <prevcon [at] earthlink__net> writes >Has anyone done any research on the affects of creosote vapors on >furnishings, paintings, textiles, etc.? I am working on a >conservation assessment for an historic house museum where in the >1960s the joists in the dirt crawlspace beneath the house were >replaced by joists treated with creosote. 40 years later the >creosote odor is very strong on the first floor of the building. The >building is located in an area with high ambient RH year-round. I >have found references to human health only and have reviewed MSDS >for creosote-coated wood products and information on products of >combustion when creosote-treated wood is burned. Any help/advice >you can give me will be greatly appreciated. Although I've not had any experience in this type of issue (despite the unpleasant experience of visiting a creosote production plant), I did have a quick check on SciFinder Scholar. You may have already checked this source but I thought I'd send what I found. There isn't much, the only reference (from CAplus - Chemical Abstracts Plus) that sounded particularly useful: Penetrability of ordinary paper under the influence of lipids in liquid or vapor form. Devaux, Henri. Compt. rend. (1952), 234-685-9. Journal language unavailable. CAN 46:34294 AN 1952:34294 CAPLUS Abstract: Water penetrates into paper wet with an oil but does not penetrate when the paper is treated with a solid or semisolid lipid, such as stearic acid or petrolatum. Vapors of organic liquids (such as C6H6, toluene, Et2O, petroleum ether, or creosote) likewise aid penetration when H2O is already in contact with the paper, whereas vapors of solids (such as camphor) render the paper impermeable. Paper in contact with H2O exposed to vapors of liquids and then dried remains permeable to water for many years. If dry paper is exposed to vapors, it remains impermeable. The search terms were "conservation objects affected by creosote vapours" and returned 87 references much of them related to wood preservation. If you are not familiar with SciFinder Scholar it is available through most university libraries and covers broad range of scientific journals. Hopefully this will be of some use to you, The other two references: Effect of creosote and gasoline vapors on mushrooms. Read, W. H. Exptl. Research Sta., Turner's Hill, Cheshunt, Herts, Ann. Rept. (1941), Volume Date 1940, 26-59-60. Journal language unavailable. CAN 36:8911 AN 1942:8911 CAPLUS Abstract: A peculiar distorted woody condition of mushrooms, in which the stems were greatly enlarged, the caps were in many cases small and split, and the gills were practically nonexistent, could not be traced to the presence of creosote acids, creosote neutral oils, creosote or gasoline in prepns. used as preservatives for the bed boards and superstructure of the mushroom house. In many cases, however, the young mushrooms were killed by the vapors of these substances and occasionally where the amt. applied was small the caps of white mushrooms were browned. The order of toxicity was creosote acids, creosote, creosote neutral oils and gasoline. Effects of creosote and CCA on moisture movement in southern pine and red oak. Hornicsar, Carole A.; Blankenhorn, Paul R.; Webb, David A. Sch. Forest Reso., Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA, USA. Wood and Fiber Science (1987), 19(1), 1-8. CODEN: WFSCD4 ISSN: 0735-6161. Journal written in English. CAN 106:103992 AN 1987:103992 CAPLUS Abstract: A vapocup apparatus was used to deterioration rates of moisture movement and water vapor permeability values of red oak and southern pine treated with 6.4 kg/m3 chromates Cu arsenate (CCA) or 168.2 kg/m3 creosote loading. The rates of mass transfer increased exponentially with increasing relative humidity (50-90%). The rate of moisture movement was greater for southern pine then for red oak, and greater for CCA-treated specimens than for creosote-treated specimens. The water-vapor permeability values were calcd. and the values increased exponentially as relative humidity increased. For both species, CCA-treated specimens had the highest water-vapor permeability values and creosote-treated specimens the lowest. Rachel White PhD Student Microstructural Analysis Unit University of Technology Sydney Sydney, Australia *** Conservation DistList Instance 18:19 Distributed: Monday, October 25, 2004 Message Id: cdl-18-19-001 ***Received on Friday, 15 October, 2004