Subject: Cellulose nitrate and cellulose acetate
Katrin Pietsch <katrin.pietsch [at] gmx__de> writes >I am a German student in photographic conservation and working on >some cellulose nitrate and acetate roll films (1940-50s) that I try >to relax and flatten with different procedures. >... >Can any one have experience or ideas about softening, redimensioning >of aged plastics or can offer citations to literature on the >subject? I worked with some material like this in flat sheet negatives, and I would caution you that aged cellulose nitrates/acetates are very unpredictable. As you know, some are susceptible to spectacular deterioration with eventual catastrophic results. This is easy to detect if it is on-going, but there appears to be a time period during which the base material is beginning to deteriorate, while it still looks and acts ok to the naked eye. As the material begins to deteriorate, it releases acid vapours which cause the gelatin image to become very soluble in water. Immersion in water or exposure to humidity could cause massive loss of the image layer. And the deterioration can be very random throughout the material. For instance, the beginning of a roll may be just fine while the inner part of the roll is beginning to deteriorate, so testing may not be conclusive. Before I stopped working on this problem, I was experimenting with a method to determine if cellulose nitrate was becoming unstable, and that was to enclose the material with an acid-indicating paper for a length of time. This method seemed to work but was not perfected. Perhaps a similar method could be developed to try to determine the chemical stability of each roll before treatment. As for actual relaxing, I did try once to restore flexibility to brittle cellulose nitrate with camphor vapours. This appeared not to work at all, though I may have gone about it the wrong way or given up too soon. Whatever you try, however, be cautioned that unstable cellulose nitrate itself can be completely de-polymerized in the presence of moisture. If the films are curled, brittle, discolored or have any sort of odor at all, chances are deterioration has already begun and there is probably little that can be safely done to help. An increase of a few degrees in temperature may help increase flexibility long enough to copy the film, but will cause enhanced deterioration in the long run, and any heat more than a few degrees should probably not be used on cellulose nitrate at all. Sorry to be so negative (no pun intended), and I hope you hear from some others who have found some safe methods for doing what you are trying to do. Linda S. Roundhill Art and Antiquities Conservation, L.L.C. 18121 157th Ave NE Woodinville, WA 98072 425-481-0720 *** Conservation DistList Instance 20:35 Distributed: Monday, January 15, 2007 Message Id: cdl-20-35-003 ***Received on Tuesday, 9 January, 2007