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Nanomaterials for Combined Stabilisation and Deacidification of Cellulosic Materials—The Case of Iron-Tannate Dyed Cotton

The conservation of textiles is a challenge due to the often fast degradation that results from the acidity combined with a complex structure that requires remediation actions to be conducted at several length scales. Nanomaterials have lately been used for various purposes in the conservation of cu...

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Autores principales: Palladino, Nicoletta, Hacke, Marei, Poggi, Giovanna, Nechyporchuk, Oleksandr, Kolman, Krzysztof, Xu, Qingmeng, Persson, Michael, Giorgi, Rodorico, Holmberg, Krister, Baglioni, Piero, Bordes, Romain
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7279213/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32397118
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano10050900
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author Palladino, Nicoletta
Hacke, Marei
Poggi, Giovanna
Nechyporchuk, Oleksandr
Kolman, Krzysztof
Xu, Qingmeng
Persson, Michael
Giorgi, Rodorico
Holmberg, Krister
Baglioni, Piero
Bordes, Romain
author_facet Palladino, Nicoletta
Hacke, Marei
Poggi, Giovanna
Nechyporchuk, Oleksandr
Kolman, Krzysztof
Xu, Qingmeng
Persson, Michael
Giorgi, Rodorico
Holmberg, Krister
Baglioni, Piero
Bordes, Romain
author_sort Palladino, Nicoletta
collection PubMed
description The conservation of textiles is a challenge due to the often fast degradation that results from the acidity combined with a complex structure that requires remediation actions to be conducted at several length scales. Nanomaterials have lately been used for various purposes in the conservation of cultural heritage. The advantage with these materials is their high efficiency combined with a great control. Here, we provide an overview of the latest developments in terms of nanomaterials-based alternatives, namely inorganic nanoparticles and nanocellulose, to conventional methods for the strengthening and deacidification of cellulose-based materials. Then, using the case of iron-tannate dyed cotton, we show that conservation can only be addressed if the mechanical strengthening is preceded by a deacidification step. We used CaCO(3) nanoparticles to neutralize the acidity, while the stabilisation was addressed by a combination of nanocellulose, and silica nanoparticles, to truly tackle the complexity of the hierarchical nature of cotton textiles. Silica nanoparticles enabled strengthening at the fibre scale by covering the fibre surface, while the nanocellulose acted at bigger length scales. The evaluation of the applied treatments, before and after an accelerated ageing, was assessed by tensile testing, the fibre structure by SEM and the apparent colour changes by colourimetric measurements.
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spelling pubmed-72792132020-06-15 Nanomaterials for Combined Stabilisation and Deacidification of Cellulosic Materials—The Case of Iron-Tannate Dyed Cotton Palladino, Nicoletta Hacke, Marei Poggi, Giovanna Nechyporchuk, Oleksandr Kolman, Krzysztof Xu, Qingmeng Persson, Michael Giorgi, Rodorico Holmberg, Krister Baglioni, Piero Bordes, Romain Nanomaterials (Basel) Article The conservation of textiles is a challenge due to the often fast degradation that results from the acidity combined with a complex structure that requires remediation actions to be conducted at several length scales. Nanomaterials have lately been used for various purposes in the conservation of cultural heritage. The advantage with these materials is their high efficiency combined with a great control. Here, we provide an overview of the latest developments in terms of nanomaterials-based alternatives, namely inorganic nanoparticles and nanocellulose, to conventional methods for the strengthening and deacidification of cellulose-based materials. Then, using the case of iron-tannate dyed cotton, we show that conservation can only be addressed if the mechanical strengthening is preceded by a deacidification step. We used CaCO(3) nanoparticles to neutralize the acidity, while the stabilisation was addressed by a combination of nanocellulose, and silica nanoparticles, to truly tackle the complexity of the hierarchical nature of cotton textiles. Silica nanoparticles enabled strengthening at the fibre scale by covering the fibre surface, while the nanocellulose acted at bigger length scales. The evaluation of the applied treatments, before and after an accelerated ageing, was assessed by tensile testing, the fibre structure by SEM and the apparent colour changes by colourimetric measurements. MDPI 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7279213/ /pubmed/32397118 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano10050900 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Palladino, Nicoletta
Hacke, Marei
Poggi, Giovanna
Nechyporchuk, Oleksandr
Kolman, Krzysztof
Xu, Qingmeng
Persson, Michael
Giorgi, Rodorico
Holmberg, Krister
Baglioni, Piero
Bordes, Romain
Nanomaterials for Combined Stabilisation and Deacidification of Cellulosic Materials—The Case of Iron-Tannate Dyed Cotton
title Nanomaterials for Combined Stabilisation and Deacidification of Cellulosic Materials—The Case of Iron-Tannate Dyed Cotton
title_full Nanomaterials for Combined Stabilisation and Deacidification of Cellulosic Materials—The Case of Iron-Tannate Dyed Cotton
title_fullStr Nanomaterials for Combined Stabilisation and Deacidification of Cellulosic Materials—The Case of Iron-Tannate Dyed Cotton
title_full_unstemmed Nanomaterials for Combined Stabilisation and Deacidification of Cellulosic Materials—The Case of Iron-Tannate Dyed Cotton
title_short Nanomaterials for Combined Stabilisation and Deacidification of Cellulosic Materials—The Case of Iron-Tannate Dyed Cotton
title_sort nanomaterials for combined stabilisation and deacidification of cellulosic materials—the case of iron-tannate dyed cotton
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7279213/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32397118
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano10050900
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