Subject: Tin mercury inlay
I am studying at the Royal Academy for Fine Arts in Antwerp, Conservation Department of Metals, Prof. P. Storme. In one of my projects I am working with a very special case of tin corrosion. The object is a cabinet manufactured by Hendrik van Soest in the first decade of the 18th century in Antwerp. An article on the investigation and photographs of this object are published under the title: "The tin mercury inlay of a cabinet manufactured by Hendrik van Soest: A case study" <URL:http://www.morana-rtd.com/e-preservationscience/> The inlays at this cabinet are made of an alloy containing tin, mercury and small amounts of copper and lead. Nowadays this material suffers a big variety of corrosion-forms. This is very untypical for tin objects, since tin is normally a very inert material, where the surface becomes passive by forming of oxidation products (SnO, SnO2). In the case of this cabinet, under a layer formed by romarchite and cassiterite (tin oxides), is a layer of tin oxide chloride hydroxide. The chlorides in the corrosion layer can be a result of the mercury content in the alloy since Hg attracts chlorides from the surrounding. When the tin corrodes the liquid mercury comes in drops out of the alloy and there is a chance for contact-corrosion where the tin, as the less noble metal, corrodes further. So, the main reason for this remarkable kind of tin-corrosion probably relates to the mercury in the alloy (there is also a possibility that the glue used to attach the panels works as an electrolyte and therefore also induces corrosion, but this is sure not the main reason for the degradation). Why there is mercury in the alloy has not been found out yet. The possibility that the inlay panels were made by using tin amalgam has been eliminated since the Hg amount is much to low for this kind of manufacturing technique and the appearance of the panels (visual and microstructure) would be different in this case. The conclusion that there was no reason to work with an amalgam in the beginning, led to the belief that there was a finishing technique used on the surface of the tin panels which contained Hg. The mercury migrated afterwards in the panels where the alloy was formed. Possibilities for such finishing treatments could be: 1. Silvering of the surface by using pastes or liquids which work by depositing silver on the surface through a chemical reaction. Therefore silver salts, for example, silver nitrate, silver chloride, etc.--if silver chloride was used, it would be also an additional reason for the presence of chlorides in the corrosion layer--are used. There are also recipes which work with mercury (salts). These treatments were also quite famous in the 18th century. (Silver was not found on the samples which were investigated, but those were all taken from a crack in one panel where it is possible that the thin layer of silver already disappeared). 2. Amalgamating the surface before silvering it, to get a better attachment of the silver layer. 3. Fake silvering, where the surface is amalgamated to get a silver-like appearance. These recipes work like those for silvering with the difference that instead of silver, mercury is used. 4. Tinning and polishing with amalgam. These finishing techniques were used for example on ancient Chinese bronze mirrors to get the surface bright and shiny. These treatments all work by rubbing a paste containing tin amalgam on a surface. In practical tests where these historical techniques where used it seemed that it is very difficult to silver tin with these kinds of pastes. If they worked, then you had to rub the surface for a long time with the paste, which would be a lot of work on the engraved panels on the cabinet. Amalgamating the surface also did not seem to be a very useful pre-treatment in these tests. A fake silvering was tested, where the surface got bright and shiny at first, but later developed a white fog on the surface which is unaesthetic. The treatment using tin amalgam was in this tests most successful. The polishing effect came after rubbing the paste for a very short time on the surface of the samples. The appearance afterwards was better than on all the other samples and remained after aging. It would be nice know if somebody has additional information or experience with related objects. My main interest is now in * Recipes which are meant for silvering tin. Most of the recipes are meant for silvering copper (alloys). Only one for silvering tin was found till now. * Information about cases where similar finishing techniques or recipes were used in Central Europe than in ancient China. (Polishing with tin-amalgam) * Information on objects where the surface was only amalgamated to get a polished effect. * Restoration and conservation treatments which were done on amalgams. In the case of tin amalgam inlays, I found nowhere a treatment to preserve the panels. Due to the heavy kind of corrosion, they were mostly changed [compared to the] new one without mercury. Sophie Weichhart Klapdorp 73 2000 Antwerp *** Conservation DistList Instance 20:43 Distributed: Tuesday, March 6, 2007 Message Id: cdl-20-43-020 ***Received on Monday, 26 February, 2007