The Impact of Humidity in the Thermal Ageing of Celluloid: An Inter-Scale Investigation
Anna Piccolo, Patrizia Tomasin, Alfonso Zoleo, Enrico Miorin, Luca Nodari

TL;DR
This paper studies how different humidity levels affect the aging of celluloid, showing that higher humidity speeds up degradation and causes visible and molecular changes.
Contribution
The study provides a multi-scale analysis of celluloid degradation under varying humidity, linking macroscopic and molecular changes.
Findings
Higher humidity levels (70%) cause faster deformation and bubble formation in celluloid samples.
At 50% humidity, significant molecular changes and cracking occur, linked to denitration and oxidation.
Macroscopic effects like yellowing and surface roughening correlate with microscopic degradation processes.
Abstract
The role of humidity on the ageing of celluloid is investigated by performing accelerated ageing tests on mock-up samples. At 70 °C, three levels of relative humidity (RH) are selected: 30%, 50%, and 70%. Samples are monitored for the macro- and micro- changes occurring through ageing to relate the visible modifications to the molecular ones. Infrared and Raman spectroscopy, microscopy, mass and contact angle measurements, profilometry, and colourimetry are combined for this purpose. While the ageing test at 30% RH results in a slight embrittlement of the samples and small spectral changes, the one at 50% RH induces significant modifications at the molecular level and the formation of cracks, while the one at 70% RH causes a fast deformation of the samples and the development of bubbles. Although quite diverse, such results prove to be related to the same chemical processes:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Cellulose Research Studies · Cultural Heritage Materials Analysis · Building materials and conservation
