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Cathodic chloride extraction treatment of a late bronze-age artifact affected by bronze disease in room-temperature ionic-liquid 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (EMI-TFSI)
Authors:Giuseppe Giovannelli  Lucia D’Urzo  Giovanna Maggiulli  Stefano Natali  Cosimo Pagliara  Ivonne Sgura  Benedetto Bozzini
Affiliation:1. Dipartimento ICMMPM, Università di Roma “La Sapienza”, v. Eudossiana 18, 00185, Rome, Italy
2. Brindisi Fuel Cell Durability Laboratory, Università del Salento, S.S. 7 Brindisi-Taranto km 7+300, 72100, Brindisi, Italy
3. Dipartimento di Beni Culturali, Università del Salento, via D. Birago 64, 73100, Lecce, Italy
4. Dipartimento di Matematica, Università del Salento, via Arnesano, 73100, Lecce, Italy
Abstract:This paper concentrates on a novel approach to the electrochemical treatment of bronze disease, based on the use of room-temperature ionic liquids (RTIL). In particular, we employed 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide as the electrolyte for the galvanostatic cathodic treatment of a late bronze-age artifact that had been exposed to marine environment during its history, dating back to ca. 1100 B.C. After an accurate metallographic and structural analysis of the as-found object—proving, among other findings, that bronze disease is essentially related to the presence of nantokite locked inside subsurface pits of typical equivalent diameter of several hundred micrometers, we subjected it to optimal electrochemical conditions, showing—on the basis of X-ray diffraction—that nantokite could be effectively removed and Cu(I) reduced to metallic Cu. Numerical computations in the full three-dimensional pit geometry, with realistic nonlinear electrochemical boundary conditions, provide the theoretical framework for the choice of RTIL—as opposed to aqueous solutions—and for the quantitative evaluation of Cl removal rates.
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