Around the Mall & Beyond
Protecting museum treasures - paintings by the masters, antique furniture, the delicate wings of a tropical beetle - requires the strictest climate control, right? Maybe not, say these scientists
- By Michael Kernan
- Smithsonian magazine, March 1996, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
"Let's look at the physical and mechanical problem of relative humidity and temperature fluctuations," said Mecklenburg in his brisk way. "No serious work had been done on this. We were the first."
Different materials, different problems. Oil paints, acrylics and other painting media can be damaged by extreme cold, Mecklenburg explained, but they are not especially vulnerable to moisture.
What? I've never heard that. I thought paintings were delicate, I said.
"Well," replied Mecklenburg, "when I was a painting conservator I always wondered why the works from Holland were often in better shape than the ones from Italy. I found out that paint does not respond much to moisture changes. But the Dutch panels tend to have less gesso (a coating applied before painting) than the Italian ones. That gesso is the weak link. It doesn't easily expand and contract in response to large changes in the environment."
Speculating that perhaps things aren't necessarily ruined by slight expansion and contraction, that perhaps they need not be "restrained" in an atmospheric straitjacket, so to speak, the team has been measuring the stresses that many materials — bones, mineral specimens, aircraft surfaces, marine paint, beetle wings and so on — endure before they finally undergo plastic deformation and actually split.
Mecklenburg: "The question then is whether you can directly relate environmental factors to the basic mechanical problems of materials. The answer is: absolutely. We have developed completely new thermodynamic models that show the exact relationship of temperatures and relative humidity to the mechanical properties of materials."
What's more, the findings have been computerized, producing analytical models for all sorts of materials, enabling Mecklenburg and his team to literally predict the splitting point of, say, yak leather. Armed with exact knowledge of the safety margins, museums no longer have to overcorrect. The difference in costs is staggering.
"The energy cost of this building alone is $1.2 million a year," noted Mecklenburg. "Each little room has its own micro-HVAC system. The newer buildings have insulation to prevent condensation on the walls. The older ones don't. In the old Arts and Industries Building, moisture condenses between the ceiling and the roof, and in the summer it actually rains in there."
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