Pigment-size effect on the physico-chemical behavior of azuritetempera dosimeters upon natural and accelerated photo aging
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Cardell Fernández, Carolina; Herrera, Agustín; Guerra, Isabel; Navas Iglesias, Natalia Africa; Rodríguez Simón, Luis Rodrigo; Elert, KerstinEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Azurite pigments Glue binder Paint dosimeters Particle size Photo-aging tests
Fecha
2017Referencia bibliográfica
C. Cardell et al. / Dyes and Pigments 141 (2017) 53-65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dyepig.2017.02.001
Patrocinador
Spanish Research Projects AERIMPACT (CGL2012-30729), EXPOAIR (P12-FQM-1889); European Regional Development Fund (ERDF); Andalusian Research Group RNM-179; AERIMPACT Project (ref.BES-2013- 065507); EXPOAIR ProjectResumen
This paper presents the first comprehensive study on the role played by pigment particle size in
pigment-binder interactions, and thus susceptibility to aging of azurite-rabbit glue paint dosimeters
upon accelerated UV-aging versus outdoor sunlight exposure. A complementary multi-analytical
approach, including spectroscopic and surface analytical techniques, was applied to characterize commercial
azurite pigments, as well as blank and aged dosimeters. Results show the crucial role played by
azurite particle size on protein-copper complex formation, which governed physico-chemical properties
of paints and their aging behavior under different light-aging conditions. On UV-aged dosimeters, finer
particles promoted stronger binder structural changes, inducing more severe color changes (DE ¼ 6e17).
Azurite size also controlled crack formation which was more severe as pigment grain increased due to
greater accumulation of binder in inter-pore spaces. Outdoor exposure caused important binder loss (50
e60%) and initial transformation of azurite into malachite. Since analyzed pigment composition and
particle size differed from manufacturer data, we recommend their characterization prior to use in
conservation works and scientific studies. Based on these results, paints made of coarse azurite particles
are preferable since they are less prone to color change. Moreover, a small addition of fine-grained
pigments might reduce crack development upon aging.





