Archaeological objects are a unique source of information for long-term corrosion studies. The present work concerns a hoard of Roman imperial coins, contained in a vase, excavated in the neighbourhoods of Rome. Aim of the research is to explain different conservation conditions by correlating visually perceivable parameters, such as corrosion morphology and extent with compositional information obtained by non-destructive investigations. The best preserved coins were found to have high zinc, low lead and small amounts of tin consistently with what occurs in modern brasses; it was observed that the latter prevents selective corrosion of zinc, otherwise causing heavy surface deterioration.

The effect of tin on dezincification of archaeological copper alloys

M Ferretti;
2009

Abstract

Archaeological objects are a unique source of information for long-term corrosion studies. The present work concerns a hoard of Roman imperial coins, contained in a vase, excavated in the neighbourhoods of Rome. Aim of the research is to explain different conservation conditions by correlating visually perceivable parameters, such as corrosion morphology and extent with compositional information obtained by non-destructive investigations. The best preserved coins were found to have high zinc, low lead and small amounts of tin consistently with what occurs in modern brasses; it was observed that the latter prevents selective corrosion of zinc, otherwise causing heavy surface deterioration.
2009
Istituto per le Tecnologie Applicate ai Beni Culturali - ITABC - Sede Montelibretti
Istituto di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale - ISPC
Copper
Tin
Zinc
De-alloying
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/14372
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