| Literature DB >> 31963186 |
Giulia Festa1, Giovanni Romanelli2, Roberto Senesi1,3,4, Laura Arcidiacono5,6, Claudia Scatigno1,3, Stewart F Parker2, M P M Marques7,8, Carla Andreani1,3.
Abstract
Advances in research in Cultural Heritage see increasing application of a multidisciplinary approach and the combined use of physical and chemical characterization of artefacts that can be used to define their structure and their state of conservation, also providing valuable information in selecting the most suitable microclimatic conditions for the exhibition environment. This approach provides a platform for a synergic collaboration amongst researchers, restorers, conservators, and archaeologists. Existing state-of-the-art technologies for neutron-based methods are currently being applied to the study of objects of historical and cultural interest in several neutron-beam facilities around the world. Such techniques are non-invasive and non-destructive and are, therefore, ideal to provide structural information about artefacts, such as their composition, presence of alterations due to the environmental conditions, inclusions, structure of the bulk, manufacturing techniques, and elemental composition, which provide an overall fingerprint of the object's characteristics, thanks to the nature of the interaction of neutrons with matter. Here, we present an overview of the main neutron methods for the characterization of materials of interest in Cultural Heritage and we provide a brief introduction to the sensors and detectors that are used in this framework. We conclude with some case studies underlining the impact of these applications in different archaeological and historical contexts.Entities:
Keywords: cultural heritage; neutron techniques; non-destructive and non-invasive characterization
Year: 2020 PMID: 31963186 PMCID: PMC7014385 DOI: 10.3390/s20020502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The total neutron cross section of a series of materials as function of the incident neutron energy, as measured on the VESUVIO spectrometer [16]: a 5-mm-thick iron slab (blue), a 0.5-mm-thick polyethylene foil (black) [17] and a 0.01-mm-thick gold foil (gold). The energy ranges for cold, thermal, and epithermal neutrons are also indicated.
Figure 2Neutron radiography and tomography. (Left) diagram of a standard radiographic and tomography set-up; (Right) radiography and tomography on a sealed Egyptian vase [32].
Figure 3Neutron diffraction results (Right) on an Etruscan metallic bronze fragment (Left) [51].
Figure 4Prompt gamma activation analysis (PGAA) (Right) of a wooden sample that has been treated with surface coatings (Left).
Figure 5(Left) The “prophet head”, by Lorenzo Ghiberti, part of the gilded-bronze door of the Florence baptistery; (Right) diffraction patterns of strain scan along the base-plate vertical section of the relief [76].
Figure 6Egyptian objects from the Kha and Merit grave goods. Left: sealed ceramic vase investigated through neutron techniques, neutron radiography, and PGAA plot with the labels of the detected isotopes [32,79]; Right: Egyptian metallic vase (situla), neutron radiography and one of the acquired diffraction patterns [25].
Figure 7(Left) human bone in the sample holder; middle: location in the skeleton of the bones studied; and (Right) vibrational spectra of samples coming from this same skeleton (Leopoli-Cencelle, Italy), over a wide range of firing temperatures (400 °C to 800 °C) [57,82].