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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

The Role of Adsorption in Agarose Gel Cleaning of Artworks on Paper.

Year:
2025
Authors:
Duncan TT et al.
Affiliation:
Scientific Research · United States

Abstract

We present an exploration of an overlooked process in gel cleaning that promotes efficient cleaning of discoloration and stains from artworks on paper: adsorption. Agarose, in both solid and gelled forms, is an efficient adsorbent of crystal violet, which is used here as a marker to assess the capability of a system to immobilize solutes. Incorporating additional adsorbents, either 1% by mass microcellulose or silica gel, into the gel before casting greatly improves the efficiency of removing and retaining dye from water. This addition induces a slight (2×) increase in the elastic modulus but results in no impactful change in the handling properties for conservation practice. We show that the addition of silica gel increases the efficacy of removing water-soluble degradation products from a sheet of historic book paper. A case study of a water-damaged eighteenth-century print, with element maps collected using mapping µX-ray fluorescence analysis before and after gel cleaning, demonstrates that microcellulose-containing gels can be used to remove water-soluble salts from the print. This work provides a new methodology for tailoring gels to target specific conservation treatment outcomes. Specifically, efficient adsorption of solubilized material increases the efficacy of the gel cleaning and minimizes redeposition.

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Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/41441122