Material properties and durability of 19th–20th century Tibetan manuscripts

被引:0
|
作者
Yujia Luo
Irena Kralj Cigić
Quan Wei
Marjan Marinšek
Matija Strlič
机构
[1] Ministry of Education,School of Materials Science and Engineering, Engineering Research Center of Historical Cultural Heritage Conservation
[2] Shaanxi Normal University,Institute for Sustainable Heritage
[3] University College London,Faculty of Chemistry and Chemical Technology
[4] University of Ljubljana,undefined
[5] Sichuan Museum,undefined
来源
Cellulose | 2023年 / 30卷
关键词
Papers used in tibetan books; Material property; Degradation; Conservation; Heritage science;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Most currently available research into Tibetan paper focuses on the earliest books from an archaeological perspective. On the other hand, scientific studies of the 19th−20th century Tibetan paper are largely missing, specifically with respect to material properties and paper permanence. To explore these, both conventional and modified methods were applied using reference historic material collection. Material properties such as fibre morphology, paper pH, degree of polymerisation (DP), water and ash contents were investigated. The measurement methods for starch and protein content were explored—and we report on a quantification method for the determination of starch content in paper. The degradation behaviour of Tibetan paper was studied using accelerated degradation experiments at two sets of conditions (80 ˚C, 65% RH and 60 ˚C, 80% RH) for up to 84 days in order to explore the applicability of existing dose-response functions. The results demonstrate that examined 19th−20th century papers used in Tibetan books, were prepared using diverse fibres, similar to traditional Chinese paper. Most of paper sheets presented laminated structures, where starch was used as the predominant glue. The layers within one paper sheet are identical, as evidenced by similar pH and DP values among layers in one sheet. The studied collection of papers tends to have similar properties to modern Chinese paper since most of both types of papers present pH 6.5–8 and DP 1000–2000. The accelerated degradation experiment shows that papers used as writing support in Tibetan books follows the same principle of degradation as western paper has demonstrated, i.e., the rate constants of degradation depend on paper pH, temperature, and relative humidity of the environment. This research expands our understanding of this collection and inform preventive conservation of modern Tibetan manuscripts.
引用
收藏
页码:11783 / 11795
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Material properties and durability of 19th-20th century Tibetan manuscripts
    Luo, Yujia
    Cigic, Irena Kralj
    Wei, Quan
    Marinsek, Marjan
    Strlic, Matija
    CELLULOSE, 2023, 30 (18) : 11783 - 11795
  • [2] Characterisation of 19th and 20th century Chinese paper
    Brown, Natalie
    Lichtblau, Dirk
    Fearn, Tom
    Strlic, Matija
    HERITAGE SCIENCE, 2017, 5
  • [3] Characterisation of 19th and 20th century Chinese paper
    Natalie Brown
    Dirk Lichtblau
    Tom Fearn
    Matija Strlič
    Heritage Science, 5
  • [4] The Demolition of the Leon City Wall Gates in the 19th and Early 20th Century: An Irreparable Loss of Heritage
    Morais Vallejo, Emilio
    ANALES DE HISTORIA DEL ARTE, 2012, 22 : 9 - 39
  • [5] China's brick history and conservation: laboratory results of Shanghai samples from 19th to 20th century
    Shu, C. X.
    Cantisani, E.
    Fratini, F.
    Rasmussen, K. L.
    Rovero, L.
    Stipo, G.
    Vettori, S.
    CONSTRUCTION AND BUILDING MATERIALS, 2017, 151 : 789 - 800
  • [6] Microbial diversity in biodeteriorated Greek historical documents dating back to the 19th and 20th century: A case study
    Karakasidou, Kiriaki
    Nikolouli, Katerina
    Amoutzias, Grigoris D.
    Pournou, Anastasia
    Manassis, Christos
    Tsiamis, George
    Mossialos, Dimitris
    MICROBIOLOGYOPEN, 2018, 7 (05):
  • [7] Multi-analytical study of 14th to 19th century illuminated Moroccan manuscripts
    Serhrouchni, Ghizlane Idrissi
    Hajji, Latifa
    Talbi, Mohammed
    Lhassani, Abdelhadi
    El Kouali, M'Hammed
    Pessanha, Sofia
    Carvalho, Maria Luisa
    Manso, Marta
    EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL PLUS, 2019, 134 (10)
  • [8] Free-living colonies of native honey bees (Apis mellifera mellifera) in 19th and early 20th century Sweden
    Niklasson, Mats
    Svensson, Emil
    Leidenberger, Sonja
    Norrstrom, Niclas
    Crawford, Elizabeth
    JOURNAL OF INSECT CONSERVATION, 2024, 28 (03) : 389 - 400
  • [10] MULTI - ANALYTIC STUDY OF ORIENTAL MANUSCRIPTS IN BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA DATING FROM THE 15TH - 19TH CENTURY
    Ibragic, Saida
    Alijagic, Ajla
    Ljubuskic, Nejra
    Avdic, Lamija
    Huseinagic, Edib
    Hodzic, Ruhulah
    Ranogajec, Jonjua
    Vucetic, Snezana
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONSERVATION SCIENCE, 2024, 15 (03) : 1213 - 1228