4.6 Article

Investigating the DMPO-formate spin trapping method for the study of paper iron gall ink corrosion

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY
Volume 40, Issue 11, Pages 9098-9110

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6nj01480a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. French state funds [ANR-11-IDEX-0004-02]
  2. French Ile de France region through DIM OxyMORE program

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Paper degradation by iron gall ink is a challenging issue for the conservation of ancient manuscripts. It is usually attributed to both FeII catalyzed oxidation and acid catalyzed hydrolysis of cellulose, yet the dominant degradation pathway remains an open question. In this work, electron spin resonance spectroscopy (ESR) was used to identify radicals involved in cellulose degradation. Papers impregnated with iron salts were put in contact with an aqueous solution of DMPO (spin-trap) and analyzed by ESR. No DMPO-OH center dot adducts were detected while the addition of formate, an intermediary target molecule, led on the contrary to the detection of a significant amount of DMPO-CO2 center dot- adducts. This reveals the predominant occurrence of reactive oxygen species (ROS) other than hydroxyl radicals (most likely superoxide or hydroperoxyl radicals). The production of DMPO-CO2 center dot- adducts was found to be oxygen dependent and to originate mainly from ferrous ions lixiviated from the impregnated papers. At high iron loads (above 1 mmol L-1), it was shown that quantification of these adducts should be done with great care because of a competing formation of hydroxylamine that jeopardizes the ESR signal. Complementary TPA hydroxylation measurements performed by HPLC on ink and iron sulfate impregnated papers revealed some production of hydroxyl radicals but at a concentration several orders of magnitude below that of the ROS detected with formation of DMPO-CO2 center dot- adducts. This HO center dot production was moreover not correlated with cellulose chain scissions, indicating that autooxidation by these radicals is not the main mechanism of cellulose depolymerisation in presence of iron gall ink.

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