Data di Pubblicazione:
2021
Abstract:
The protection of stone cultural assets is related to the transformation of the surface characteristic from hydrophilic to hydrophobic/superhydrophobic through the application of a coating.
The suitability of a coating depends not only on its capability to dramatically change the surface
wettability, but also on other parameters such as the modification of kinetics of water absorption, the
permanence of vapor diffusivity, the resistance of the coating to aging and the low volatile organic
compound emissions during its application. In this work, an oligo(ethylensuccinamide) containing
low molecular pendant perfluoropolyether segments (SC2-PFPE) and soluble in environmentally
friendly solvents was tested as a protective agent for historic stone artifacts. Magnetic resonance
imaging and relaxometry were employed to evaluate the effects of the surface wettability change,
to follow the water diffusion inside the rock and to study the porous structure evolution after the
application of SC2-PFPE. A sun-like irradiation test was used to investigate the photo-stability of
the product. The results demonstrate that the highly photo-stable SC2-PFPE minimizes the surface wettability of the stone by modifying the water sorptivity without significantly affecting its
porous structure and vapor diffusivity. The improved performance of SC2-PFPE in comparison to
other traditional coatings makes it a potential candidate as an advanced coating for stone cultural
heritage protectio
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
perfluoropolyethers; cultural heritage; stone protection; oligo(ethylensuccinamide); magnetic resonance imaging; magnetic resonance relaxometry; sorptivity; photo-stability
Elenco autori:
Cao, Yijian; Camaiti, Mara
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