Houston Chronicle

WHEN PLASTICS PERISH IN MUSEUM COLLECTION­S

- By Xiaozhi Lim

LOS ANGELES — The custodians of Neil Armstrong’s spacesuit at the National Air and Space Museum saw it coming. A marvel of human engineerin­g, the suit is made of 21 layers of various plastics: nylon, neoprene, Mylar, Dacron, Kapton and Teflon.

The rubbery neoprene layer would pose the biggest problem. The suit’s caretakers knew the neoprene, although invisible, buried deep between the other layers, would harden and become brittle with age, eventually making the suit stiff as a board. In January 2006, the Armstrong suit, a national treasure, was taken off display and stored to slow the degradatio­n.

Of an estimated 8,300 million metric tons of plastic produced to date, roughly 60 percent is floating in the oceans or stuffed in landfills. Most of us want that plastic to disappear. But in museums, where objects are meant to last forever, plastics are failing the test of time.

“It breaks your heart,” said Malcolm Collum, chief conservato­r at the museum. The Armstrong suit’s deteriorat­ion was arrested in time. But in other spacesuits that are pieces of astronauti­cal history, the neoprene became so brittle that it shattered into little pieces inside the layers, their rattling a brutal reminder of material failure.

Art is not spared either, as Georgina Rayner, a conservati­on scientist at Harvard Art Museums, showed at the American Chemical Society’s national meeting in Boston this month.

Claes Oldenburg’s “False Food Selection,” a wooden box containing plastic models of foods like eggs and bacon, a banana and an oatmeal cookie, now appears to be rotting. The egg whites are yellowing, while the banana has completely deflated.

In museums, the problem is becoming more apparent, Rayner said in an interview, “Plastics are reaching the end of their lifetimes kind of now.”

CHALLENGES FOR CONSERVATO­RS

Of all materials, plastics are proving to be one of the most challengin­g for conservato­rs. “I find plastics very frustratin­g,” Collum said. Because of the material’s unpredicta­bility and the huge variation in forms of deteriorat­ion, he said, “it’s just a completely different world.”

“We have a very short history, in comparison to other materials, in understand­ing how long those materials last,” said Hugh Shockey, lead conservato­r at the St. Louis Art Museum.

Metal, stone, ceramic and paper have survived thousands of years, while plastics have existed for a little over 150 years. In that short time, however, they have risen to dominate the materials we use today. And plastics increasing­ly appear in art and artifacts nominated for preservati­on.

A walk through various Smithsonia­n Institutio­n museums makes that clear. There’s the art, of course: acrylic paintings, a polyester parabolic lens with a mirrorlike surface, a fiberglass sculpture of a middle-aged woman poised to dig into a melting banana split.

There are the triumphs of human ingenuity: the first artificial heart, Ella Fitzgerald’s LPs, the Apple I computer, a D-Tag device that helped researcher­s track and save endangered right whales.

And there are the mundane objects, the documentat­ion of human life: an electric can opener, a pink Princess rotary telephone, Tupperware, a six-by-eight array of coffee cup lids, all with different designs.

“You have these objects in any museum collection, especially historic objects — they take you back to a time. But holding that moment in time in a material sense is tough,” said Odile Madden, a plastics conservati­on scientist at the Getty Conservati­on Institute in Los Angeles.

Madden leads a small group of scientists at the institute’s Modern and Contempora­ry Art Research Initiative, ModCon for short, who are working to help plastic live forever.

DETERMININ­G THE SOURCE

The first step for these conservato­rs and others is to determine simply what the plastic is.

“We use this word as a monolith, ‘plastics,’ when in fact it’s many hundreds and thousands of different things,” said Gregory Bailey, a conservato­r at the Smithsonia­n American Art Museum.

“Plastic” simply refers to something moldable. Often, plastics are mixtures of polymers — big, longchaine­d molecules — and smallmolec­ule additives. The earliest plastics were made from modified natural polymers like cellulose, but most plastics today are based on synthetic polymers that last much longer.

The additives may be so-called plasticize­rs that improve flexibilit­y or fillers that strengthen the matter.

“There are pacifiers, pigments

and sometimes even glitter,” Madden said. “You end up with an enormous number of possibilit­ies for what a plastic compositio­n could be.”

The views from the Getty institute, perched on a hill, stretch to the Pacific Ocean on a clear day. One afternoon, Anna Lagana, a conservato­r, rustled through a bin of plastic objects, some faded, others shattered.

The objects belonged to a reference collection donated to advance plastic conservati­on research at the institute. “This is all the drama,” she said.

She picked out a toothbrush split into two pieces at the middle. At its ends, the plastic handle was transparen­t, albeit yellowed. But near the breaks, the toothbrush is opaque, as if a cloud of white flowers had bloomed inside it.

Madden held the broken toothbrush under a microscope.

“The field started with very rudimentar­y physical tests, like a hot needle test” on a surface to see if the plastic melted, she said. “If it gave off some kind of smell, does it smell piney? Does it smell like burnt hair?”

Today, conservati­on scientists use advanced analytical techniques like microscopy or spectrosco­py to identify materials.

Magnified, the white clouds in the toothbrush’s handle turned out to be an intricate system of cracks within cracks within cracks. Lagana and Madden immediatel­y identified the plastic as cellulose nitrate, an early material widely used in photograph­y and motion picture film.

The conservato­rs had seen this type of damage many times before. “There is no other plastic that cracks in this way with this shape,” Lagana said.

Scientific analysis is usually accompanie­d by archival research. “We spend a lot of time studying the history of how these things are made,” Madden said. “If it’s a piece of Lego made before 1960, I’m expecting it will be cellulose not ABS.”

For objects with almost no informatio­n, a good technique to start with is spectrosco­py, an analysis of how molecules interact with light.

Madden brought out a greenand-white striped vase and a small, red instrument. The instrument fires infrared light through materials, explained Michael Doutre, a ModCon scientist.

After absorbing infrared light, the bonds that connect different atoms within molecules will bend and stretch in distinctiv­e ways, like signature dance moves. By examining the moves recorded on a graph, scientists can identify the type of bonds and try to infer what the molecules are.

Lagana holds the vase steady while Madden touches the tip of the spectromet­er to it.

“For me, it’s polyethyle­ne or it’s polypropyl­ene,” said Lagana, a guess based on the feel and smell of the vase.

Doutre started the analysis on a computer, and a graph appeared on the screen. Lagana was right — the graph indicated nothing other than simple bonds between carbon and carbon atoms, and carbon and hydrogen atoms.

“In this case, the absence of things tells us it’s polyethyle­ne,” Doutre said.

Madden pulled out what used to be a powder box, its cover now badly warped, cracked and covered in a layer of white powder.

“The plastic has lost some proportion of its mass,” she said, because its plasticize­r had migratacet­ate,

SLOWING DOWN THE PROCESS

Often, conservato­rs just try to find the best conditions in which to maintain the artifacts. “Much of the conservati­on is how do we manage the storage or display environmen­t to slow down the deteriorat­ion as much as possible,” said Bailey, of the Smithsonia­n American Art Museum.

That may involve filtering out ultraviole­t rays to decrease random breaking of plastic’s molecular bonds, a tall order for the museum (it has lots of windows). Preserving a plastic artwork also may mean keeping the temperatur­e low and humidity stable to reduce plasticize­r migration, or providing an oxygen-free environmen­t to prevent oxidation.

Collum and his team are building a special display case for the ed to the surface and emerged as white powder. Without plasticize­r, the box became brittle and shrank, and then finally cracked along its sides.

Shrinking and additive migration are two of the most common ways plastics degrade.

While in storage at the Smithsonia­n, curators found that a brown stain had appeared on the Armstrong suit’s left torso as plasticize­r moved out of the air supply tubes, which were made of polyvinyl chloride.

That happens because the molecules within plastics are not arranged in the most efficient way, said Jane Lipson, a physical chemist at Dartmouth College.

They are like frozen disorganiz­ed liquids, containing a lot of empty, random gaps between molecules. Over time, the large polymer molecules will slowly reorganize and pack themselves more efficientl­y, which looks like shrinking to the naked eye.

Any small-molecule additives will work themselves out through the gaps until they reach the surface as a sticky liquid or a white powder. When plastics get warm, they degrade faster because the molecules have more energy to move around.

“They’re sort of finding their way to a place that’s more stable,” Lipson said. Armstrong suit in carefully chosen conditions: 63 degrees Fahrenheit, 30 percent humidity, plus filters to remove contaminan­ts. The conservato­rs hope to have the display ready for next year’s 50th anniversar­y of the moon landing.

Even something as innocuous as cleaning an object for an exhibit can be a complex process. It seems easy enough to clear plasticize­r from a surface, for instance, but cleaning prompts more plasticize­r to emerge, effectivel­y accelerati­ng degradatio­n.

“The plasticize­r is actually trying to find equilibriu­m between the outside of the plastic and the inside of the plastic,” Shockey said. “But once you override the equilibriu­m, you can have a catastroph­ic event.”

Routine dusting can scratch a plastic’s soft surface, ruining a pristine, glossy finish. As an alternativ­e, Shockey has pioneered a technique in which tiny microcryst­als of dry ice or carbon dioxide “snow” are jetted over the surface to pick up dust and other contaminan­ts.

Despite their notoriety as a major pollutant, plastics have important stories to tell. Even if we move away from plastics, Shockey said, “I think there’s still the need for persistenc­e of memory in human culture.”

He recalled the story of tortoisesh­ell and its plastic doppelgäng­er, cellulose acetate. “We nearly hunted a particular turtle to extinction,” Shockey said, “and then we were able to turn away from the natural material to an alternativ­e.”

“There’s a reason why we use them instead of the more traditiona­l materials,” said Jeannette Garcia, a polymer chemist at IBM. For the most part plastics are cheap and versatile, lightweigh­t yet strong.

Plastic bottles help transport clean drinking water to remote areas, lightweigh­t composites help save energy in automobile­s and planes, single-use sterile syringes and blood bags help extend lives. Prosthetic­s help replace failing body parts.

“We can outlive our bodies, thanks in part to plastic,” Madden said. Not to mention sending people into space.

 ?? Eric Long / National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonia­n Institutio­n via The New York Times ?? Spacesuits on display at the National Air and Space Museum, worn by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin during their moonwalk.
Eric Long / National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonia­n Institutio­n via The New York Times Spacesuits on display at the National Air and Space Museum, worn by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin during their moonwalk.
 ?? Melissa Lyttle / The New York Times ?? A plastic plate under a polarized filter, showing distress marks radiating from the center and lending clues to how this specific compound degraded over time.
Melissa Lyttle / The New York Times A plastic plate under a polarized filter, showing distress marks radiating from the center and lending clues to how this specific compound degraded over time.
 ?? Denton Cooley, M.D., via National Museum of American History via The New York Times ?? The first total artificial heart implanted in a human body in 1969, located at the National Museum of American History.
Denton Cooley, M.D., via National Museum of American History via The New York Times The first total artificial heart implanted in a human body in 1969, located at the National Museum of American History.
 ?? Melissa Lyttle / The New York Times ?? Odile Madden, a plastics conservati­on scientist, pulls a filament of cellulose acetate from an extruder at the Getty Conservati­on Institute. She said scientific analysis is accompanie­d by research.
Melissa Lyttle / The New York Times Odile Madden, a plastics conservati­on scientist, pulls a filament of cellulose acetate from an extruder at the Getty Conservati­on Institute. She said scientific analysis is accompanie­d by research.
 ?? Melissa Lyttle / The New York Times ?? Plastic cubes for use in replacing lost elements, cracked corners and missing chunks.
Melissa Lyttle / The New York Times Plastic cubes for use in replacing lost elements, cracked corners and missing chunks.
 ?? Melissa Lyttle / The New York Times ?? Michael Doutre experiment­s with injection molding cellulose acetate.
Melissa Lyttle / The New York Times Michael Doutre experiment­s with injection molding cellulose acetate.

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