Publication Date:
2006
abstract:
Neutron radiation meets the demand for a versatile diagnostic probe for collecting information from the interior of large, undisturbed museum objects or archaeological findings. Neutrons penetrate through coatings and corrosion layers deep into centimetre-thick materials, a property that makes them ideal for non-destructive examination of objects for which sampling
is impractical or unacceptable. A particular attraction of
neutron techniques for archaeologists and conservation scientists
is the prospect of locating hidden materials and structures
inside objects. Time-of-flight (TOF) neutron diffraction allows
for the examination of mineral and metal phase contents, crystal
structures, grain orientations, and microstructures as well as
micro- and macro strains. A promising application is texture
analysis which may provide clues to the deformation history
of the material, and hence to specific working processes. Here
we report on instructive examples of TOF neutron diffraction,
including phase analyses of medieval Dutch tin-lead spoons,
texture analyses of bronze specimens as well as of 16th-century
silver coins.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Neutron diffraction; archaeometallurgy; Bronzes; Silver coins; material characterisation
List of contributors:
Bartoli, Laura; Siano, Salvatore
Published in: