Treating the untreatable in art and heritage materials: Ultrafast laser cleaning of "cloth-of-gold"
Date
2015
Authors
Kono, Mitsuhiko
Wain, L Alison
Rode, Andrei V
Baldwin, Kenneth
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American Chemical Society
Abstract
Laser cleaning provides art and heritage conservators
with an alternative means to restore objects when traditional
chemical and mechanical methods are not viable. However, long
(>nanosecond) laser pulses can cause unwanted damage from
photothermal processes and provide limited control over ablation
depth. Ultrashort (<picosecond) pulse lasers are emerging as a
more appropriate tool for cleaning historic artifacts because of their
unique ability to avoid heat- and shock-wave generation, thus
minimizing collateral damage of the underlayers, and to remove
material with near-nanometer precision. Here we demonstrate the
effectiveness of ultrashort pulses by cleaning 19th century military
gold braid without any detrimental effects on the gold foil or the
underlying silk thread structure. The results are compared with nanosecond-pulse laser treatment that damages the surface
structure. By introducing in situ feedback control of the laser ablation via laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS)
monitoring of the ablated plume, we are able to halt the cleaning process just as the contaminant layer is completely removed.
This technique allows ultrafast laser ablation to extend the armory of conservation treatments, enabling restoration of a range of
complex and fragile heritage objects previously untreatable by conventional means.
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Source
Langmuir
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Journal article
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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