A study of the interaction between rabbit glue binder and blue copper pigment under UV radiation: A spectroscopic and PCA approach Manzano Moreno, Eloisa Romero-Pastor, Julia Navas Iglesias, Natalia Africa Rodríguez Simón, Luis Rodrigo Cardell Fernández, Carolina FT-IR spectroscopy Spectrocolorimetry Principal component analysis Azurite pigment Glue binder Historical paintings Financial support for this work was provided by Spanish Science Ministry Projects BHA2003-08671 and HUM-2006-09262/ARTE, the Andalusian Research Group RNM-179, and a research contract from the Junta de Andalucia awarded to C. Cardell. The effects of a UV-accelerated ageing test on model samples of azurite glue tempera, pure azurite and pure rabbit glue, all elaborated according to medieval recipes, were studied. The color changes and modifications in composition and texture for both pure and mixed samples are shown and discussed. Special attention is given to the physico-chemical interactions occurring when azurite and glue are combined. Ageing effects on the model samples after up to 3000 h of UV irradiation were periodically analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with X-ray energy dispersive spectrometer (EDS) microanalysis, X-ray diffraction (XRD), reflectance spectrophotometry and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). Once the ageing process ended, a chemometric study using principal component analysis (PCA) of the FT-IR data was carried out independently for every model sample and for all the azurite-laden samples. Loadings from the significant principal components were analyzed to identify the FT-IR frequency (cm−1) involved in the degradation process. PCA proved capable of identifying significant changes in pure glue samples. Also this work showed the lack of photochemical effects of UV irradiation on both pure azurite samples and those mixed with glue, in agreement with the SEM-EDS, XRD and colorimetrics results. Nevertheless PCA revealed that the azurite FT-IR spectral variability decreased in the presence of glue, being more affected by exposure to the IR region between 2100cm−1 and 3600cm−1, where the azurite band is located. In addition, PCA managed to separate the azurite/glue mixture samples from pure azurite samples. 2025-09-09T07:50:08Z 2025-09-09T07:50:08Z 2010 journal article E. Manzano et al. / Vibrational Spectroscopy 53 (2010) 260–268. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vibspec.2010.04.003 https://hdl.handle.net/10481/106167 10.1016/j.vibspec.2010.04.003 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ open access Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional Elsevier