| Literature DB >> 32381765 |
Mark G Dowsett1, Pieter Jan Sabbe2, Jorge Alves Anjos2, Eleanor J Schofield3, David Walker1, Pam Thomas1, Steven York1, Simon Brown4, Didier Wermeille4, Mieke Adriaens2.
Abstract
Synchrotron X-ray diffraction (XRD) measured on the XMaS beamline at the ESRF was used to characterize the alloy composition and crystalline surface corrosion of three copper alloy Tudor artefacts recovered from the undersea wreck of King Henry VIII's warship the Mary Rose. The XRD method adopted has a dynamic range ∼1:105 and allows reflections <0.002% of the height of major reflections in the pattern to be discerned above the background without smoothing. Laboratory XRD, scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectroscopy, synchrotron X-ray fluorescence and X-ray excited optical luminescence-X-ray near-edge absorption structure were used as supporting techniques, and the combination revealed structural and compositional features of importance to both archaeology and conservation. The artefacts were brass links believed to be fragments of chainmail and were excavated from the seabed during 1981 and 1982. Their condition reflects very different treatment just after recovery, viz. complete cleaning and conservation, chemical corrosion inhibition and chloride removal only, and distilled water soaking only (to remove the chlorides). The brass composition has been determined for all three at least in the top 7 µm or so as Cu(73%)Zn(27%) from the lattice constant. Measurement of the peak widths showed significant differences in the crystallite size and microstrain between the three samples. All of the links are found to be almost chloride-free with the main corrosion products being spertiniite, sphalerite, zincite, covellite and chalcocite. The balance of corrosion products between the links reflects the conservation treatment applied to one and points to different corrosion environments for the other two. open access.Entities:
Keywords: SR-XRD; brass; conservation; corrosion; cultural heritage; marine archaeology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32381765 PMCID: PMC7206548 DOI: 10.1107/S1600577520001812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1Brass samples believed to be various forms of chainmail links. (a) MR81A1436, the cleaned and conserved link; (b) MR81A2249, similar but not cleaned; and (c) MR82A6000, having the appearance of copper.
Sample details
The final column describes the sample at the time of analysis.
| Sample number | Treatment on recovery | Appearance |
|---|---|---|
| MR81A1436 | Ultrasonic cleaning in 10% | Dull brass. No obvious attack by |
| MR81A2249 | Soaking in BTA aqueous solution [strength and time not recorded but likely in the range 1–5% and 2 weeks–1 day depending on the strength (Jones, 2003 | Black with small blue–green patches. Red–brown where black layer had flaked off [Fig. 1 |
| MR82A6000 | Soaked in distilled water in 1989 with several changes (Jones, 2003 | Dull brownish red friable surface, typical of cuprite (Cu2O) [Fig. 1 |
Figure 2Data from the copper reference (no smoothing has been applied). The inset has been normalized to the beam monitor, then multiplied by a constant to restore the integrated count. The main figure has been background subtracted and shows two consecutive scans, 5–90° then 90–5°. Note the growth of gerhardite at Q = 0.9 Å−1 and 1.81 Å−1 as the scans proceed.
Approximate mean atomic composition in wt% from SEM-EDS and XRF
‘–’ denotes undetected. The + and − values show the extremes.
| MR81A2249 | MR81A1436 | MR82A6000 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | 24 | +7 −4 | 22 | +2 −2 | 4.35 | +0.15 −0.15 | |
| N | 13 | +1.5 −3.5 | Trace | 4.2 | +0.4 −0.4 | ||
| O | 20 | +4.5 −5.4 | 13 | +2 −2 | 8.4 | +1.4 −1.4 | |
| Na | Trace | Trace | – | ||||
| Mg | 0.4 | +0.07 −0.16 | – | – | |||
| Al | 0.5 | +0.2 −0.2 | 0.7 | +0.4 −0.3 | – | ||
| Si | 0.7 | +0.3 −0.4 | 2 | +1.6 −1.1 | 0.28 | +0.09 −0.09 | |
| P | Trace | – | – | ||||
| S | 2.1 | +0.6 −0.4 | 0.46 | +0.1 −0.1 | 1.34 | +0.16 −0.16 | |
| Cl | 1.4 | +1.7 −1.1 | 0.25 | +0.04 −0.03 | – | ||
| K | 0.2 | +0.05 −0.06 | 0.14 | +0.02 −0.03 | – | ||
| Ca | 0.8 | +0.19 −0.24 | 0.4 | +0.11 −0.13 | 0.24 | +0.08 −0.08 | |
| Fe | 1.2 | +0.74 −0.78 | 0.7 | +0.04 −0.2 | 1.12 | +0.41 −0.41 | |
| Ni | Trace | Trace | – | ||||
| Cu | 22 | +11 −14 | 45 | +4 −5 | 66.6 | +0.6 −0.6 | |
| Zn | 13 | +9 −7.5 | 16 | +1 −2 | 12.3 | +1.7 −1.7 | |
| As | Trace | Trace | – | ||||
| Se | Trace | Trace | – | ||||
| Sn | – | – | 1.1 | +0.01 −0.01 | |||
| Pb | Trace | Trace | – | ||||
Cl and Na correlated in one position.
Levels on the conserved link are <0.1× those on the corroded link.
Figure 3Main diffraction peaks from the three samples showing the brass structure to be face-centred cubic (α-brass). The quasi-Lorentzian shape and symmetry of the peaks is evident. The FWHM values for the reflections from MR81A1436 are visibly larger. The presence of copper metal as well as brass on MR82A6000 is immediately apparent.
Figure 4Diffraction rings of the 200 reflections for (a) the copper reference and (b) MR82A6000 showing both copper and brass. In both cases the copper rings are textured with spots whereas the brass ring is smooth and featureless (ironbow scale).
Figure 5Low-intensity regions of Fig. 3 ▸ after background subtraction. (a) MR81A2249. The spertiniite reflections are indicated by filled triangles. (b) MR81A1436. The red crosses here and in pane (c) show the reflections from acetal copolymer. (c) MR82A6000 link, which appeared to be copper but was actually brass.
Figure 6(a) Spotty lead ring in the diffraction image taken at 2θ = 29.136° from the corroded link MR81A2249. The ring lies just below CuS 103/ZnO 100 and above CuS 102. (b) Detail of the arrowed spot and a section through it showing an FWHM of 1 pixel or less.
Figure 7XEOL-XANES spectra from the corroded link (blue curve) with nantokite (green curve) and cuprite (red curve) references. The XEOL-XANES spectra show a strong similarity to the spertiniite XANES spectra published by Farges et al. (2007 ▸). There is no sign of nantokite and the edge shift is consistent with a Cu (II) compound such as spertiniite.
| MR81A2249 | MR81A1436 | MR82A6000 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Zn (wt%) |
| Zn (wt%) |
| Zn (wt%) | |
| 311 | 0.36761 | 28.170 | 0.36752 | 27.802 | 0.36718 | 26.402 |
| 222 | 0.36736 | 27.145 | 0.36730 | 26.898 | 0.36709 | 26.028 |
| MR81A1436 + MR81A2249 | MR82A6000 | |
|---|---|---|
| Average (wt%) | 27.50 ± 1 | 26.2 ± 1 |