Subject: Marker for PEG
Karin Abelskamp <k.abelskamp [at] archeologie__nl> writes >Currently, ArchaeoSpecialists is carrying out experiments in >impregnating wood with PEG. To determine the extent of impregnation, >we would like to "mark" the PEG (4000) solution to make the PEG >easily recognized within the object after treatment (after >cross-section). I can imagine that this has been done before. Does >anyone have experience with the use of markers for this purpose? >What type did you use and why? Much of the research that has been done concerning the use of PEG to give dimensional stability to (archaeological) wood has been published in the postprints from the Wet Organic Archaeological Materials (WOAM) conferences. Three papers involving a staining technique to determine the extent of PEG impregnation of wood cell walls developed by Gregory Young at CCI have been published in these postprints for conferences in the years 1981, 1987 and 1998. The name of the conference has changed over the years but following are the three references, which are the same ones to which Cliff Cook referred on a previous instance of the Cons DistList: 1. Bilz, M.. T. Grant and G.S. Young, (1998), "Treating Waterlogged Basketry: a Study of Polyethylene Glycol Penetration into the Inner Bark of Western Red Cedar" in Proceedings of the 7th ICOM-CC Working Group on Wet Organic Archaeological Materials Conference, Grenoble, 1999, pp. 249-253. 2. Young, G.S. and Ritchie Sims, (1987), "Microscopical Determination of Polyethylene Glycol in Treated Wood--The Effect of Distribution on Dimensional Stabilization" in Conservation of Wet Wood and Metal: Proceedings of the ICOM Conservation Working Groups on Wet Organic Archaeological Materials and Metals, Freemantle, Western Australian Museum, 1989, pp. 109-140. 3. Young, G.S. and I.N.M. Wainwright, (1981), "Polyethylene Glycol Treatments for Waterlogged Wood at the Cell Level" in Proceedings of the ICOM Waterlogged Wood Working Group Conference, Ottawa, ICOM, 1982, pp. 107-116. Before describing the staining technique, I should point out two things related to your original question. First, the staining technique is applied to thin cross-sections of wood following PEG treatment, not to the PEG itself prior to treatment. Second, PEG 4000 (referred to as PEG 3350 in North America) is too large of a molecule to penetrate the wood cell walls (see reference #2 page 115 PEG 3350). Therefore, you should find that the PEG 4000 bulks the cell lumen but does not penetrate the cell walls. A lower molecular weight PEG, such as PEG 400, is normally used to penetrate the cell walls to give dimensional stability to the wood. Note that the stain preparation used in reference #3 was improved by the time of the later references. The following description is of the latest technique. A saturated solution of cobalt thiocyanate in dry ethyl ether was made. When staining was to be done, a portion of this stock solution was brought up to saturation with phenol (about 85% w/v). The cobalt thiocyanate gave a blue colour to the solutions. Thin transverse sections were cut from PEG treated wood that had been freeze-dried as is normal following a standard PEG treatment. These sections were immersed in the cobalt thiocyanate / dry ethyl ether / phenol solution. After one and a half hours, the sections were dipped in ether (to remove excess stain), then in xylene (to be compatible with the mounting medium) and then were mounted on microscope slides with Permount (Fisher Scientific mounting medium). The prepared slides were left overnight with a small weight (40 g) on the cover slips. Photomicrography was done the next day. Under the microscope, the normal colour of PEG treated cell walls is normally white to pale yellow in the absence of the stain. Thin sections that have been immersed in the cobalt thiocyanate stain but have not been PEG treated also are white to pale yellow since the stain is held by complexing only with the PEG. Only the thin sections that both have been stained with cobalt thiocyanate and have PEG retained in them show regions of blue. A better way to show the extent to which the PEG has penetrated the cells is to view the thin sections in fluorescence mode rather than brightfield mode on the microscope. Not only does the cobalt thiocyanate complex with the PEG but it also quenches the fluorescence of the lignin when the PEG stain complex resides in the cell wall. An incident illumination at about 400nm gives emitted radiation at about 550nm (yellow/green) from the fluorescing lignin. If PEG is present, the cobalt thiocyanate held by the PEG quenches the lignin fluorescence to give a dark green/black appearance in those areas. Low molecular weight PEG (such as PEG 400) can penetrate the cell walls via the cell lumen in intact wood samples. With wood treated with low molecular weight PEG, you should see progressively more quenching of the lignin fluorescence in the cell walls, spreading from the inside edge of S3 (if there is one), then throughout the thicker S2 layer as you extend the time that the wood is immersed in the PEG solution. With wood treated with only high molecular weight PEG (such as the PEG 4000 that you mention) which cannot penetrate the cell walls, the fluorescence should remain in the cell walls regardless of the length of time that the wood is immersed in the PEG solution. However, in the brightfield mode, you should be able to see the high molecular weight PEG bulking the lumen after drying. Malcolm Bilz Conservation Scientist Canadian Conservation Institute 1030 Innes Road Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0M5 Canada 613-998-3721 Fax: 613-998-4721 *** Conservation DistList Instance 20:41 Distributed: Sunday, February 25, 2007 Message Id: cdl-20-41-005 ***Received on Monday, 19 February, 2007