Subject: Seminar on bleaching
Seminar Bleaching in paper conservation Vienna, Austria Feb 11-13, 2009 The seminar will be held from 11-13 Feb. 2009 at the Department of Chemistry, University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, BOKU, Muthgasse 18, A-1190 Vienna, Austria. For further information in German and English, please visit the homepage of the BOKU (enter "BOKU" and "paper conservation" in Google) or contact Antje Potthast <antje.potthast:host:boku.ac.at>. Referees: Prof. Dr. G. Banik (Vienna), Dr. I. Bra1/4ckle (Berlin), Prof. Dr. A. Potthast (Vienna), Dr. U. Henniges (Vienna) Bleaching is one of the oldest restoration treatments. However, its application has also remained highly controversial. Fundamental questions have been raised in the context of bleaching treatments: how do different bleaching agents impact different types of paper, and which conclusions can be drawn for practical application? What are the chemical mechanisms that determine bleaching treatments, and how does it effect the technical optimisation of conservation treatments? Is there any "benign" bleaching process that can achieve the desired brightening of paper without detrimental chemical impact on the paper components? These questions will be explained systematically within the framework of an interdisciplinary workshop. Lectures on the chemistry of different bleaching procedures will be combined with practice workshops. Seminar participants will gain personal experience in the application of bleaching methods. Additionally, the analytical results of recent research into changes of the molecular weight of cellulose and its carbonyl and carboxyl content as a consequence of oxidative and reducing bleaching treatments obtained at BOKU will be presented. The workshop intends to contribute to an understanding of the theoretical foundations of different (historically relevant) bleaching procedures in conservation. The seminar aims at enabling participants to relate concepts and methods of bleaching treatments to the results of analytical investigation. The systematic approach combines chemistry knowledge and practical expertise that will also include consideration of aesthetical and other decision-making parameters. Participants will have the opportunity to develop decision-making criteria to further evaluate bleaching treatments in their short and long term consequences. The focus will lie on the following topics: Introduction into cellulose chemistry Theory of bleaching in a conservation context Impact of bleaching treatments on cellulosic fibre matrix, on the development of oxidized functionalities, and on the degree of polymerisation of cellulose Decision making in the conservation context Application of selected bleaching techniques on representative model materials Evaluation of treatment results and implications for decision making Dr nat.techn. Dipl.Rest. Ute Henniges Department of Chemistry University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences Muthgasse 18 A-1190 Vienna *** Conservation DistList Instance 22:9 Distributed: Saturday, August 9, 2008 Message Id: cdl-22-9-010 ***Received on Friday, 8 August, 2008