Surface and Interface Treatments on Wooden Artefacts: Potentialities and Limits of a Non-Invasive Multi-Technique Study

Wooden artefacts embrace wide-ranging types of objects, like paintings on panel, sculptures, musical instruments, and furniture. Generally, in the manufacturing process of an artwork, wood is firstly treated with organic and inorganic materials to make it nonporous and morphologically homogeneous, a...

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Main Authors: Claudia Invernizzi, Giacomo Fiocco, Magdalena Iwanicka, Piotr Targowski, Anna Piccirillo, Manuela Vagnini, Maurizio Licchelli, Marco Malagodi, Danilo Bersani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-12-01
Series:Coatings
Subjects:
OCT
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/11/1/29
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spelling doaj-fe50c1617b6746e1847e7b40b5af7ccf2020-12-30T00:04:15ZengMDPI AGCoatings2079-64122021-12-0111292910.3390/coatings11010029Surface and Interface Treatments on Wooden Artefacts: Potentialities and Limits of a Non-Invasive Multi-Technique StudyClaudia Invernizzi0Giacomo Fiocco1Magdalena Iwanicka2Piotr Targowski3Anna Piccirillo4Manuela Vagnini5Maurizio Licchelli6Marco Malagodi7Danilo Bersani8Arvedi Laboratory of Non-Invasive Diagnostics, CISRiC, University of Pavia, Via Bell’Aspa 3, 26100 Cremona, ItalyArvedi Laboratory of Non-Invasive Diagnostics, CISRiC, University of Pavia, Via Bell’Aspa 3, 26100 Cremona, ItalyFaculty of Fine Arts, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Sienkiewicza 30/32, 87-100 Toruń, PolandInstitute of Physics, Department of Physics, Astronomy and Informatics, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Grudziądzka 5, 87-100 Toruń, PolandConservation and Restoration Center “La Venaria Reale”, Via XX Settembre 18, 10078 Venaria Reale, ItalyAssociazione Laboratorio di Diagnostica per i Beni Culturali, Piazza Campello 2, 06049 Spoleto, ItalyArvedi Laboratory of Non-Invasive Diagnostics, CISRiC, University of Pavia, Via Bell’Aspa 3, 26100 Cremona, ItalyArvedi Laboratory of Non-Invasive Diagnostics, CISRiC, University of Pavia, Via Bell’Aspa 3, 26100 Cremona, ItalyDepartment of Mathematical, Physical and Computer Sciences, University of Parma, Parco Area delle Scienze 7/A, 43124 Parma, ItalyWooden artefacts embrace wide-ranging types of objects, like paintings on panel, sculptures, musical instruments, and furniture. Generally, in the manufacturing process of an artwork, wood is firstly treated with organic and inorganic materials to make it nonporous and morphologically homogeneous, and, at last, the surface treatment consists of varnishes or coatings applied with the aims of conferring aesthetic properties and protecting wood from biological growth and external degradation agents, as well as mechanical damage. In this work, different wooden mock-ups were prepared by varying some parameters: concentration of filler and pigment, respectively, in the ground and paint layers, thickness of the protective varnish coat, and sequence of the layers. The mock-ups were subsequently exposed to time-varying artificial aging processes. The multi-analytical non-invasive approach involved spectroscopic (reflection FT-IR, Raman, and X-ray fluorescence), tomographic (optical coherence tomography) and colorimetric techniques. Data were interpreted using both univariate and multivariate methods. The aim was to evaluate potential and limits of each non-invasive technique into the study of different stratigraphies of wooden artworks. This approach was supported by microscopic observations of cross-sections obtained from selected mock-ups. The methodological approach proposed here would add valuable technical know-how and information about the non-invasive techniques applied to the study of wooden artworks.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/11/1/29wooden artefactsstratigraphic analysesnon-invasive techniquesOCTreflection FT-IRportable Raman
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claudia Invernizzi
Giacomo Fiocco
Magdalena Iwanicka
Piotr Targowski
Anna Piccirillo
Manuela Vagnini
Maurizio Licchelli
Marco Malagodi
Danilo Bersani
spellingShingle Claudia Invernizzi
Giacomo Fiocco
Magdalena Iwanicka
Piotr Targowski
Anna Piccirillo
Manuela Vagnini
Maurizio Licchelli
Marco Malagodi
Danilo Bersani
Surface and Interface Treatments on Wooden Artefacts: Potentialities and Limits of a Non-Invasive Multi-Technique Study
Coatings
wooden artefacts
stratigraphic analyses
non-invasive techniques
OCT
reflection FT-IR
portable Raman
author_facet Claudia Invernizzi
Giacomo Fiocco
Magdalena Iwanicka
Piotr Targowski
Anna Piccirillo
Manuela Vagnini
Maurizio Licchelli
Marco Malagodi
Danilo Bersani
author_sort Claudia Invernizzi
title Surface and Interface Treatments on Wooden Artefacts: Potentialities and Limits of a Non-Invasive Multi-Technique Study
title_short Surface and Interface Treatments on Wooden Artefacts: Potentialities and Limits of a Non-Invasive Multi-Technique Study
title_full Surface and Interface Treatments on Wooden Artefacts: Potentialities and Limits of a Non-Invasive Multi-Technique Study
title_fullStr Surface and Interface Treatments on Wooden Artefacts: Potentialities and Limits of a Non-Invasive Multi-Technique Study
title_full_unstemmed Surface and Interface Treatments on Wooden Artefacts: Potentialities and Limits of a Non-Invasive Multi-Technique Study
title_sort surface and interface treatments on wooden artefacts: potentialities and limits of a non-invasive multi-technique study
publisher MDPI AG
series Coatings
issn 2079-6412
publishDate 2021-12-01
description Wooden artefacts embrace wide-ranging types of objects, like paintings on panel, sculptures, musical instruments, and furniture. Generally, in the manufacturing process of an artwork, wood is firstly treated with organic and inorganic materials to make it nonporous and morphologically homogeneous, and, at last, the surface treatment consists of varnishes or coatings applied with the aims of conferring aesthetic properties and protecting wood from biological growth and external degradation agents, as well as mechanical damage. In this work, different wooden mock-ups were prepared by varying some parameters: concentration of filler and pigment, respectively, in the ground and paint layers, thickness of the protective varnish coat, and sequence of the layers. The mock-ups were subsequently exposed to time-varying artificial aging processes. The multi-analytical non-invasive approach involved spectroscopic (reflection FT-IR, Raman, and X-ray fluorescence), tomographic (optical coherence tomography) and colorimetric techniques. Data were interpreted using both univariate and multivariate methods. The aim was to evaluate potential and limits of each non-invasive technique into the study of different stratigraphies of wooden artworks. This approach was supported by microscopic observations of cross-sections obtained from selected mock-ups. The methodological approach proposed here would add valuable technical know-how and information about the non-invasive techniques applied to the study of wooden artworks.
topic wooden artefacts
stratigraphic analyses
non-invasive techniques
OCT
reflection FT-IR
portable Raman
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/11/1/29
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