Introduction/Problem
As conservators are aware, loans can be both a blessing and a
curse for museums. Recently, a museum curator who was faced
with a challenging loan request asked me for assistance.
Another well-respected museum wanted to borrow a small group of
old master prints for a short exhibit, but unfortunately the
prints would need to be displayed in a building with no HVAC
system. The exhibit was scheduled to run for two weeks in
the fall, during which time the average temperature in the region
normally fluctuates between 40 and 80° F and the relative humidity
(RH) between 30 and 80%. We calculated the likely cumulative
increase in temperature 1 and
agreed that the resulting risk to the prints would be minimal.
However, the inevitable fluctuations in RH were a major concern
for the prints, especially as they would be hinged into window
mats.
Objective
We wanted to create an environment where even with radical
temperature fluctuations, changes in RH would be minimal.
The RH in the lending museum is normally 50%+/-4 per annum and we
wanted to stay within that range. Using silica gel to
control sealed environments is a well known and accepted
conservation practice and we decided to test how well silica gel
would work using the museum's standard frames.
Experimental: Testing effectiveness of sealed enclosure with
silica gel
I first designed a test to evaluate the effectiveness of the
proposed methods. I selected a variety of materials with a
range of hygroscopicities: Kozo, Gampi, rag paper with letter
press printing, vellum and Glassine. The first four samples
were hinged to mat board with tissue and paste; the Glassine was
hinged with heat-set tissue activated with a tacking iron.
All samples and framing materials were conditioned to 50% RH
before testing.
Two sample sets were prepared; the first set was placed with a
datalogger in one of the museum's standard frames, glazed with
Plexiglas, and backed with corrugated board. Tyvek tape
replaced the wooden inset and screws that normally secure the back
of the frame. 2 The second
sample set was placed in an enclosure with two compartments as
shown in the illustration below. The first compartment held
the sample set and datalogger. 3
A second chamber behind the backing board held four Tyvek sachets
among which one half pound of silica gel was divided, and another
datalogger. 4 (Illustration
1) Marvelseal was wrapped around the back and sides of the
package, heat-sealed to the Plexiglas and reinforced with strips
of Tyvek tape.
Illustration 1: The chamber on
the left was placed on top of the chamber on the right, then
the entire package was sealed with Marvelseal and Tyvek tape.
In all, four Hobo dataloggers accompanied the materials; one
enclosed with each sample set, one in the silica gel chamber and
another outside the packages. Small digital hygrometers were
mounted with each sample set, visible through the Plexiglas, and
another was kept outside the packages to allow visual monitoring
of the conditions.
Over the next three weeks I subjected the packages to fluctuating
conditions as much as possible. I took advantage of the
Spring weather conditions and moved the packages outdoors in the
cool early mornings. I placed the packages in humidity
chambers several times, sometimes heating them with incandescent
lamps or heating pads. This was not designed to be a fair
test of expected conditions, rather I tried to create extreme
conditions and compare the effectiveness of the sealed and
unsealed packages. Ultimately the packages were cycled
between 30 and 88% RH and between 60 and 90°F with some of those
changes occurring very quickly. As expected, the samples in
the package with silica gel fared well while the unsealed package
showed severe distortion, even to the extent that the heat-set
hinges holding the Glassine popped. The images below
illustrate the effects on each set. No photos were taken
before the experiment was begun, but the set on the left is
largely unchanged.
Sample in sealed frame with silica gel,
raking light
Sample in unsealed frame, raking light
Samples from center left,
clockwise: Vellum, Kozo, Glassine, rag paper with
letterpress printing, Gampi.
Experimental: Silica gel vs. blotter
The first experiment indicated that the sealed package with silica
gel would protect the prints adequately, but budget constraints
and health concerns5 made silica gel
somewhat problematic. Therefore, I investigated using
multiple sheets of blotter as a buffer. The experiment
described above was repeated using similar test samples and
frames, but this time both packages had a chamber behind the
backing board. The first chamber held the same four Tyvek
sachets filled with silica gel used in the first experiment, and
the second held blotter.6 All
materials were conditioned to 50% RH before being assembled and
sealed. (Illustration 2) Kozo was not included in this test
for two reasons; first it was unresponsive to the first test, and
second, this allowed a more prominent placement of the rag paper
with letterpress, the sample most indicative of how the old master
prints would respond.
Illustration 2: Packages sealed
with Marvelseal and Tyvek tape
Testing conditions were limited by logistics to some extent.
The packages were placed in a small building with open windows and
no HVAC for one month during which time conditions in the room
fluctuated between 58 and 78°F and 37 and 76% RH. For the
second month they were placed in a room where temperature was
controlled between 73 and 74°F with minor exceptions, but RH
varied between 54 and 79%. I made the decision to explore
more gradual conditions here that might mimic what will occur in
the exhibit, rather than the quick shocks of the incandescent
lights, heating pads and humidity chambers.
Results and discussion
While the results of the first experiment had been dramatic, the
results of the second were much more subtle. Inside the
silica gel package, datalogger readings showed that T fluctuated
between 60 and 78°F over the two month period, reflective of the
ambient conditions. For the first month, while the package was in
the room with no HVAC, the temperature rose during the day and
fell at night, reflective of the changing Spring weather.
Daytime highs were recorded between 63 and 78° F. and nighttime
lows between 58 and 74° F. The RH cycled accordingly; got
lower as the temperature rose and rose as the temperature fell,
but the changes were smaller than what would be expected.
For example, when the temperature jumped from 70°F to 78°F, the RH
only fell from 53 to 52%, not to 40 % as one might expect if
calculating from a psychrometric chart. In the second month,
when T was stable and ambient RH was generally above 65%, the RH
rose steadily from 53.5 to 55%.
The conditions inside the package with blotters were almost
identical to the package with silica gel. The temperature
ranged between 60 and 78°F over the two month period. The RH
began at 53%, showed the same cycling for the first month, and in
the second month slowly rose from 53.2 to 55%. At the end of
two months, when the packages were unsealed, they were left
unsealed, but with Plexi placed over enclosures in a room at 65%RH
for a week in order to see how quickly the materials equilibrated
to ambient conditions when not protected by the Marvelseal, but
only the weight of the Plexiglas on the frames. There are no
photos from when the packages were initially unsealed because it
would have meant lifting the Plexiglas and exposing the samples to
the ambient RH. During this week the humidity in both
enclosures rose steadily, but the package with the silica gel
stayed slightly lower and more stable than the package with the
blotters.
Sample sealed with silica
gel
Sample sealed
with blotter
The samples had been relatively flat when the packages were
un-sealed. The photographs here were taken after the samples
had sat unsealed but covered in a room at 65% RH and show the
resulting distortion, especially to the Gampi and Glassine
samples. The distortion appeared similar on both sets. There
are no photos from when the packages were initially unsealed.
Conclusion
I was not able to test for the full range of expected conditions,
but the results are encouraging. The slow rise in RH in the
second month of the second test probably indicates that the
packages were not sealed perfectly, or that the rough treatment
they received moving them from place to place weakened the
seals. Although the samples and framing materials were
conditioned to 50% RH before the testing, they tended to stabilize
at 52%RH when packaged. This most likely occurred because
the RH in the room where I was working tended to be between 60 and
65%. The wooden frames may not have been conditioned for a
long enough period of time.
One interesting finding came from the first experiment. When
I shocked the packages with severe increases or decreases in
temperature, the relationship between T and RH was opposite what
would be expected. According to the psychrometric chart, as
T rises, RH should fall, and vice versa. But when I
used a heating pad to raise the temperature inside the package
with the silica gel, the RH rose as well. As the temperature
inside the enclosure rose from 72 to 87°F the RH rose from 52 to
60%. The following morning when I put the packages outside
in the cool morning air, T went from 74 to 64°F and RH went from
54 to 50%. My suspicion is that what I was seeing was a
temporary "reconditioning" of the silica gel but the equilibrium
moisture content of the sample materials was not significantly
affected. This observation is supported by the fact that
while quick and severe fluctuations appear on the datalogger
charts, the sample materials inside the sealed package remained
relatively undistorted. The samples inside the unsealed
frame, where highs and lows were sustained for longer periods of
time, were severely distorted.
At the end of the second experiment when the packages were
unsealed but left with Plexi covers in a humid room, the silica
gel package appeared to control the RH more effectively. The
two frames were not constructed identically and is not clear
whether this is the result of the buffering capacity of the silica
gel, or the amount of air exchange in each package.
This was not a rigorous study, but a quick experiment designed to
test potential enclosure strategies for a single, short-term loan
and to satisfy some personal curiosity. The photography was
not as systematic as would have been useful. The charts from
the dataloggers are not reproduced here because they are difficult
to read in small formats. Although there are recommendations
available for how much silica gel to use, the choice of the number
of sheets of blotter was more intuitive. All these flaws
should be considered if the study is repeated.
1 The temperature in the lending museum is set
at 72°F. The temperature in the borrowing institution is
likely to get to 80°F for three hours a day at most for the two
week period, but the temperature is likely to be below 72°F for at
least 18 hours each day. 2 The frames are designed to hold matted prints
and had to be modified to accommodate the thickness of a
datalogger. So the wooden inset that normally is
screwed in behind the backing board was transferred to the front
of the backing board to create space behind the Plexiglas. 3 Sides were constructed from mat board to
accommodate the thickness of the datalogger. 4 The total dimensions of both chambers of the
enclosure were 16 x 20 x 2" and an excess amount of silica gel was
used.
Weintraub, S. (2002). Demystifying silica gel. Retrieved July 24,
2013, from http://www.apsnyc.com/uploads/Demystifying%20Silica%20Gel.pdf
(Reprinted from Object
Specialty Group Postprints, 9.) 5 Material safety data sheet: Silica gel
dessiccant. (1997, September 2).
Retrieved July 24, 2013, from http://www.atmos.umd.edu/~russ/MSDS/
silicagel28200.html 6 The total dimensions of the first package were
16 x 20 x 2" and one pound of silica gel was placed inside the
chamber. The total dimensions of the second package were 16
x 20 x 1 1/2" and eight sheets of blotter were cut to fill the
chamber. The number of blotter sheets was chosen according
to what would fit in the chamber without crowding.