返回届次CSCP-ICC-2024-099

Barnacle Attachment and Its Corrosion Effects on the Surface of the Yangtze Estuary II Shipwreck

作者

Meng ZhaoYang ZhaiJing ZhaoLuo ZhaoKexin ZhangYan GeHongjie Luo

单位

1 Shanghai Institute of Ceramics、Chinese Academy of Sciences、Shanghai 200050、China、No. 585 Heshuo Road、Jiading District、Shanghai 2 Shanghai Museum、Shanghai 200003、China、No. 201 Renmin Avenue、Huangpu District、Shanghai 3 Shanghai Cultural Heritage Conservation and Research Centre、Shanghai 200031、China、No. 48 Yueyang Road、Xuhui District、Shanghai 4 University of Shanghai for Science and Technology、Shanghai 200093、China、No. 516 Jungong Road、Yangpu District、Shanghai

关键词

Yangtze Estuary II shipwreckmicrobial mineralizationcorrosion process

收录来源

International Corrosion Congress · 第22届国际腐蚀大会

摘要

Wooden shipwrecks submerged in underwater environments are susceptible t o physical and biological corrosion. This study investigates the microscopic morphology and structural composition of barnacles and the wooden surface of the Yangtze Estuary II shipwreck. Analytical techniques, including optical microscopy (OM), scanning e lectron microscope equipped with an energy dispersive spectrometer (SEM-EDS), X-ray diffraction (XRD), X -ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Fourier infrared transform spectroscopy (FTIR) and photoluminescence spectroscopy (PL), were employed to analyze the corrosion processes. The findings have unveiled a distinct pattern of black corrosion, prominently concentrated within the interface region where barnacles attach to the wooden shipwreck. This corrosion primarily consists of FeS, FeS 2 and Fe3S4 and exhibits a notable tendency to expand along the wooden surface to interior region. Additionally, a striking ultraviolet fluorescence phenomenon emanates from the barnacle cement within the adhesion region of barnacles and the wooden surface. This observation has led to the hypothesis that the origin of this black corrosion is intricately linked to the barnacle cement, its role in biological corrosion, and subsequent biomineralization processes. To conclude, this study provides an intricate account of the micro bial corrosion process influenced by barnacle cement in the context of the wooden shipwreck. The research findings offer valuable insights that can serve as a point of reference in identifying the sources of disease and implementing protective measures for waterlogged wooden cultural relics.

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