Preserving cultural heritage: Analyzing the antifungal potential of ionic liquids tested in paper restoration

Early industrialization and the development of cheap production processes for paper have led to an exponential accumulation of paper-based documents during the last two centuries. Archives and libraries harbor vast amounts of ancient and modern documents and have to undertake extensive endeavors to...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2019-09, Vol.14 (9), p.e0219650-e0219650
Hauptverfasser: Schmitz, Kevin, Wagner, Sebastian, Reppke, Manfred, Maier, Christian Ludwig, Windeisen-Holzhauser, Elisabeth, Benz, J Philipp
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container_issue 9
container_start_page e0219650
container_title PloS one
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creator Schmitz, Kevin
Wagner, Sebastian
Reppke, Manfred
Maier, Christian Ludwig
Windeisen-Holzhauser, Elisabeth
Benz, J Philipp
description Early industrialization and the development of cheap production processes for paper have led to an exponential accumulation of paper-based documents during the last two centuries. Archives and libraries harbor vast amounts of ancient and modern documents and have to undertake extensive endeavors to protect them from abiotic and biotic deterioration. While services for mechanical preservation such as ex post de-acidification of historic documents are already commercially available, the possibilities for long-term protection of paper-based documents against fungal attack (apart from temperature and humidity control) are very limited. Novel processes for mechanical enhancement of damaged cellulosic documents use Ionic Liquids (IL) as essential process components. With some of these ILs having azole-functionalities similar to well-known fungicides such as Clotrimazole, the possibility of antifungal activities of these ILs was proposed but has not yet been experimentally confirmed. We evaluated the potency of four ILs with potential application in paper restoration for suppression of fungal growth on five relevant paper-infesting molds. The results revealed a general antifungal activity of all ILs, which increased with the size of the non-polar group. Physiological experiments and ultimate elemental analysis allowed to determine the minimal inhibitory concentration of each IL as well as the residual IL concentration in process-treated paper. These results provide valuable guidelines for IL-applications in paper restoration processes with antifungal activity as an added benefit. With azoles remaining in the paper after the process, simultaneous repair and biotic protection in treated documents could be facilitated.
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subjects Acidification
Antifungal activity
Antifungal agents
Antifungal Agents - chemistry
Antifungal Agents - pharmacology
Archives & records
Azoles
Biology and Life Sciences
Cellulase
Cellulose fibers
Clotrimazole
Cultural heritage
Cultural resources
Cultural resources management
Deacidification
Fungi
Fungicides
Heterocyclic compounds
Historic documents
Humidity
Ionic liquids
Ionic Liquids - chemistry
Ionic Liquids - pharmacology
Libraries
Life sciences
Lignin
Medicine and Health Sciences
Methods
Microbial Sensitivity Tests
Moisture control
Molecular Structure
Museums
Novels
Physical Sciences
Preservation
Production management
Protection and preservation
Research and Analysis Methods
Restoration
Solvents
title Preserving cultural heritage: Analyzing the antifungal potential of ionic liquids tested in paper restoration
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