The Deterioration
and Preservation of Paper: Some Essential Facts
Paper deterioration is still a problem. But, thanks to decades of scientific
research -- much of it supported by libraries and archives -- this deterioration
is no longer a mystery. The preservation strategy at the Library of Congress
has traditionally benefitted by insights provided by science. Our preservation
program has continued to evolve and reshape itself as the underlying
science on which it relies has steadily progressed.
From Rags to Ruin: Factors That Promote Paper Deterioration
It is often true that the older a book or manuscript is the better it
survives. Paper-based materials that are more than 150 years old are
in many cases in better shape than others that are less than 50. Why
do some papers deteriorate rapidly while others appear to be little affected
by the passage of time?
- Answers are found in the composition of paper, the causes of its
deterioration, and the conditions under which it is stored.
- Fibers made of cellulose chains degrade when exposed to an acidic
environment in the presence of moisture. In this acid hydrolysis reaction,
cellulose chains are repeatedly split into smaller fragments so long
as the source of acid remains in paper. This acid hydrolysis reaction
produces more acid in the process, and the degradation accelerates
in a downward spiral.
- The longer the cellulose chains that comprise paper, the stronger
and more supple the paper. This type of paper is also more able to
withstand degradation by acids and other abuse without showing visible
signs of wear and tear. Conversely, the shortest fibers are the most
vulnerable.
- Early papers were made from cotton and linen rags. Most early papers,
especially those made up to the middle of the 19th century, are still
strong and durable, especially if they were stored properly under conditions
that were not overly warm or humid.
- Cotton papers owe their longevity mainly to the length of the fibers
used in their manufacture. Even when the length of these fibers is
reduced on aging, it is still likely to be longer than that of fibers
in relatively young, modern papers.
- The shortest fibers are found in newsprint papers made from groundwood
pulps; this pulp is made by the mechanical grinding of wood that is
then made into paper without first purifying it chemically. Papers
made by this process are substantially weaker than those made of chemically
purified wood pulp, which is used to make the fine printing and writing
papers that we often see in books.
- Most modern book papers have a relatively short life span, which
can be further reduced by improper storage environments. The exception
to this general trend is alkaline paper -- that is, paper that contains
an alkaline reserve. This alkaline reserve, most frequently chalk,
neutralizes acids and also makes the paper look whiter.
- Like cotton papers, alkaline papers can last indefinitely. Acids
formed within the papers or those absorbed from the environment are
neutralized before they have a chance to degrade the cellulose chains.
Such papers often bear a permanence mark (an infinity symbol within
a circle).
- The primary source of acid in modern paper is the alum-rosin sizing
agent introduced in the manufacturing process. Size is added so that
writing and printing inks do not feather. In the presence of moisture,
the alum in the sizing agent generates sulfuric acid.
- Acids are also formed in paper by absorption of pollutants -- mainly
sulfur and nitrogen oxides. Newsprint paper is particularly vulnerable
to pollutants, which it absorbs vigorously from the environment as
evidenced by the brown and embrittled edges of bound newsprint volumes
and dime novels.
- A new discovery made in the research laboratories of the Library
of Congress shows that, as it ages, cellulose itself generates several
acids, such as formic, acetic, lactic, and oxalic acids.
- Measurable quantities of these acids were observed to form within
weeks of the manufacture of paper while stored under ambient conditions.
This research also shows that these acids continue to accumulate within
paper as they attach themselves to paper through strong intermolecular
bonds. This explains why acid-free (pH neutral) papers also become
increasingly acidic as they age.
- Acids are formed even in alkaline paper, although in this case they
are probably neutralized by the alkaline reserve before they can do
any damage to the cellulose molecule.
- In addition to acid hydrolysis, papers are also vulnerable to photolytic
degradation (damage by light), although newsprint papers are much more
subject to this form of degradation than most other papers used to
print books.
- Oxidation is also believed to play a role in the degradation of paper,
although its role is limited as compared with acid hydrolysis, except
probably in the presence of nitrogen oxide pollutants.
Development of solutions for preservation of books and paper
To study the effect of different chemical species and storage environments
on the life of paper, it is necessary to replicate, in a few short weeks
or months, the natural aging of paper, which takes place in real life
over several decades. Such "accelerated aging," performed in a laboratory
setting, has helped us comprehend the manner in which different papers
age. It has also helped us design real life solutions that are rooted
in scientific fact. Before such testing, preservation solutions were
based essentially on subjective perceptions colored by personal judgements
that were as likely to be wrong as right.
- Accelerated life testing is commonly applied to most commercial products
in order to improve their quality and to enable the manufacturer to
provide a reliable warranty period. If the accelerated testing is properly
designed and performed, the product, be it a TV or a toaster, will
not be likely to fail before its warranty period.
- Accelerated testing for paper, however, is much more complicated
than testing for a single brand of toasters, for example. This is because
the same test must work with a wide variety of papers. Also, there
can be no misunderstanding about when a toaster has failed. Whereas
for paper, every person has his or her own perception of when it is
too brittle to be used.
- As with any other science, the science underlying such accelerated
testing for paper has evolved gradually -- in this case over several
decades.
- The first accelerated tests were undertaken in the late 1920s at
the former U. S. National Bureau of Standards, which has since been
renamed the National Institute of Science and Technology.
- Ever since, there have been two schools of thought on accelerated
aging of paper -- those who thought that it provided a reliable tool,
and others who believed that it did not and could never duplicate natural
aging.
- For several decades these tests involved aging of paper samples at
elevated temperatures. William Barrow used similar testing in the 1940s
to project lifetimes of paper samples, which have since proven to be
erroneous. To this day, Barrow's data is used by detractors of accelerated
aging as proof of the fallibility of such testing.
- However, such critics overlook the changes that this test has undergone
since then. The problem with the earlier tests was that they ignored
the essential role that moisture plays in the acid hydrolysis of paper,
the major reaction by which paper ages. For the past few decades, accelerated
aging tests have been routinely performed in a humid environment.
- A five-year research effort completed in 2000 at the Library of Congress
undertook an unprecedented comparison of natural and accelerated aging
of paper. It analyzed the chemical products that form in the aging
of paper under the two sets of conditions and found extensive similarities.
- As an ultimate test, several naturally-aged papers were subjected
to additional aging in the laboratory. In each case, the complicated
mixture of degradation products formed originally during natural aging
just increased in concentration but retained its original identity.
All of the degradation products already formed during natural aging
increased proportionately. No new reaction products besides the ones
already formed in nature were formed in the accelerated aging process.
These experiments left no doubt about the similarity between natural
and artificial aging. It can be confidently stated now that accelerated
aging is a very good approximation of natural aging and that it is
a valid and reliable test for predicting paper longevity.¹
These experiments also clearly demonstrate that the rate of degradation
and embrittlement of paper increases with time because of the increasing
accumulation of acids in paper as it ages. This observation is contrary
to the subjective experiences of some observers who have suggested that
the aging of paper slows down with time and almost comes to a stop. No
scientific evidence exists to support such claims.
- Other findings from this research and earlier work published from
the Library of Congress show that paper bound in books ages faster
than loose sheets of paper in ventilated boxes. Paper inside a book
structure has a greater tendency to retain acids that develop as it
ages.
- This last observation was confirmed in an as-yet-unpublished survey
of cotton rag papers at the National Archives, and also in recent investigations
from Australia, the Netherlands, and elsewhere, cited in a recent research
review by Henk Porck. These reports suggest that paper at the center
of a book often tends to be weaker than the paper at the edges.²
- At first blush, this may seem to be contrary to the experience of
many people who have observed deteriorated edges of popular paperbacks
or bound newsprint volumes. The paper in these types of volumes contains
lignin, which absorbs pollutants such as sulfur and nitrogen oxides
more readily than fine papers on which most hardcover books are printed.
The deterioration at the edges of pages of such bound-format materials
is caused by acid hydrolysis that results from the accumulation of
acids formed from the absorbed sulfur and nitrogen oxides.
- The assumption that a bound book structure squeezes out air and thus
stabilizes the paper flies in the face of research cited above, which
has repeatedly shown that paper bound in books or aged inside airtight
enclosures ages faster than single sheets open to the environment.
The fact is that the book structure and other enclosures cannot protect
paper from the air, because the paper itself contains the moisture
that contributes to acid hydrolysis and, thus, destruction of the paper.
Even worse, the restricted environment within a bound book efficiently
retains the acidic degradation products, which accelerate its aging
even more.
Is There Any Hope?
Printing on and creating documents on alkaline or permanent papers is
obviously improving the situation, at least for modern materials that
are created on papers of higher quality. But what of the sizable backlogs
of retrospective materials on acidic papers that challenge the preservation
budgets of libraries and archives worldwide?
- Deterioration of paper due to its chemical composition and other
factors can be dramatically minimized by treating the paper with a
process that neutralizes the acids in the paper. Many of those materials
that are acidic but not already highly embrittled can be saved today
through use of a new technology known as mass deacidification.
- The deterioration due to accumulation of acids -- whether they are
acids absorbed from pollutants, introduced in the manufacture of paper,
or formed as paper ages -- can be arrested by deacidification. Any
paper can be made to last several times its anticipated life, however
indefinite that life may be calculated to be.
- Deacidification treatment enables libraries and archives today to
treat books and manuscripts so they will remain in usable condition
for several centuries rather than becoming brittle and unusable in
only fifty to a hundred years. If the information on a paper substrate
is to be saved by employing this technology, it is advisable to treat
it while the paper still has significant measurable strength.
The Synergy of Deacidification and Improved Storage
Institutions can extend the life of paper-based materials hundreds of
years by storing them in improved environmental conditions afforded by
new facilities like the Library of Congress modules at Fort Meade, Maryland,
and the Harvard depository. Why, then, should we bother with mass deacidification,
which also guarantees a life extension of several hundred years?
- Some materials will be deacidified and retained in existing facilities
under normal environmental storage conditions, while others may be
transferred to state-of-the-art cold storage facilities without ever
being deacidified. In either case, the rate of degradation will be
slowed appreciably and the life-extension factors will be impressive.
- While it may seem that the two efforts are duplicative, in practice
they are complementary preservation measures - i.e. both mass deacidification
and improved storage conditions contribute synergistically to the long-term
useful life of books and other paper-based materials.
For many of our more valuable and/or endangered collections and records,
these modern, cost-beneficial preservation options are not mutually exclusive.
Particularly for books and manuscript materials that are already in weak
or brittle condition, the best option is to use both approaches -- deacidify
them and store them under cooler, improved storage conditions.
¹ American Society for Testing and Materials Institute for Standards
Research (ASTM/ISR). ASTM Research Program into the Effect of Aging
on Printing and Writing Papers: Final Reports on Accelerated Aging Test
Method Development. West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania: ASTM/ISR, 2001
[in process].
² Henk J. Porck and René Teygeler. Preservation Science Survey. Washington,
DC: Council on Library and Information Resources, 2000. Pp. 5-6.