Many works of art are complex systems consisting of a core completed by the overlapping of several painted layers. In this work, we apply an innovative method based on grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXRD) with synchrotron radiation (SR) to investigate polychrome stratigraphies with a completely non destructive approach. The SR-GIXRD measurements provided direct and unambiguous compositional and stratigraphic information of the crystalline species lying in different layers. The investigations per formed on a small fragment sampled from a painted terracotta statue allowed the identification of pigments, fillers, aggregates of the matrix and newly formed decay salts in micrometric-thin paint layers. Furthermore, the great potentiality of this study is the feasibility of depth profile investigations on multi layered painted samples from cultural heritage objects without resorting to cross sectional analyses. Currently, the method is non-destructive but it can be potentially non-invasive in situations where small moveable artworks can be placed into the measurement chamber of the SR-XRD beamlines. The overall study paves the way to a new scenario of artwork investigations, shedding light on new unexplored approaches for non-destructive studies of cultural heritage objects, their conservation history and their interaction with the environment.

What's underneath? A non-destructive depth profile of painted stratigraphies by synchrotron grazing incidence X-ray diffraction

Elena Possenti;Chiara Colombo;Claudia Conti;Marco Realini;
2018

Abstract

Many works of art are complex systems consisting of a core completed by the overlapping of several painted layers. In this work, we apply an innovative method based on grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXRD) with synchrotron radiation (SR) to investigate polychrome stratigraphies with a completely non destructive approach. The SR-GIXRD measurements provided direct and unambiguous compositional and stratigraphic information of the crystalline species lying in different layers. The investigations per formed on a small fragment sampled from a painted terracotta statue allowed the identification of pigments, fillers, aggregates of the matrix and newly formed decay salts in micrometric-thin paint layers. Furthermore, the great potentiality of this study is the feasibility of depth profile investigations on multi layered painted samples from cultural heritage objects without resorting to cross sectional analyses. Currently, the method is non-destructive but it can be potentially non-invasive in situations where small moveable artworks can be placed into the measurement chamber of the SR-XRD beamlines. The overall study paves the way to a new scenario of artwork investigations, shedding light on new unexplored approaches for non-destructive studies of cultural heritage objects, their conservation history and their interaction with the environment.
2018
Istituto per la Conservazione e la Valorizzazione dei Beni Culturali - ICVBC - Sede Sesto Fiorentino
Istituto di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale - ISPC
grazing incidence X-ray diffraction
synchrotron radiation
on multi layered painted samples
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/345174
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