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ACS News Service Weekly PressPac: December 02, 2009

Smell of old books offers clues to help preserve them


Analytical Chemistry

Scientists may not be able to tell a good book by its cover, but they now can tell the condition of an old book by its smell. In a report in ACS鈥� Analytical Chemistry, a semi-monthly journal: they describe development of a new test that can measure the degradation of old books and precious historical documents based on their smell. The nondestructive 鈥渟niff鈥� test could help libraries and museums preserve a range of prized paper-based objects, some of which are degrading rapidly due to advancing age, the scientists say.

Matija Strli膷 and colleagues note in the new study that the familiar musty smell of an old book, as readers leaf through the pages, is the result of hundreds of so-called volatile organic compounds (VOCs) released into the air from the paper. Those substances hold clues to the paper鈥檚 condition, they say. Conventional methods for analyzing library and archival materials involve removing samples of the document and then testing them with traditional laboratory equipment. But this approach destroys part of the document.

The new technique, called 鈥渕aterial degradomics,鈥� analyzes the gases emitted by old books and documents without altering the documents themselves. They used it to 鈥渟niff鈥� 72 historical papers from the 19th and 20th centuries, including papers containing rosin (pine tar) and wood fiber, which are the most rapidly degrading paper types in old books. The scientists identified 15 VOCs that seem good candidates as markers to track the degradation of paper in order to optimize their preservation. The method also could help preserve other historic artifacts, they add.


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Old books give off an unmistakable,
musty odor that scientists can use
to assess the book's condition.
Credit: Wikimedia Commons
(High-resolution version)