Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Analysis of acids and degradation products related to iron and sulfur in the Swedish warship Vasa

  • and
Published/Copyright: November 6, 2008
Holzforschung
From the journal Volume 62 Issue 6

Abstract

Aqueous wood extracts from the historic Swedish warship Vasa have been analyzed by 1H-NMR spectroscopy, ion chromatography, and matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry as part of studies on the chemical degradation related to increased levels of iron and sulfur. The results show that low molecular organic acids have accumulated in the Vasa wood after the 1961 salvage. The increased acidity was found in a context of chemical degradation of the wood polymers and the conservation agent polyethylene glycol (PEG) in iron-rich parts of the timber. Formic, glycolic and oxalic acid are all possible end-products of oxidative degradation of wood polymers, whereas hydrolysis of acetyl groups in xylan may have contributed to increased concentrations of acetic acid. MALDI-TOF spectra of PEG displaced towards low-molecular PEG oligomers, as reported earlier, were accompanied by increased levels of formic acid, indicating oxidative degradation of PEG. PEG with a carboxylic acid end group (PEGC) was observed to a minor degree in the wood. However, analysis of stored conservation treatment solutions showed high concentrations of PEGC yielding significant contributions to the acidity during the 1960s conservation period. PEGC was probably formed as a result of microbial processes during the early conservation regime. Calculations using concentrations and well-established acidity constants show that oxalic and formic acid are the primary contributors to a low pH in the wood. The increased acidity in the interior of the wood was found in the absence of sulfur compounds but in a context of iron. The majority of the sub-samples with significant levels of sulfate in the surface region with a prospective sulfur oxidation, however, showed neither a decreased pH nor significant depolymerization. This indicates that oxidation pathways of organically bound sulfur do not necessarily produce strong acids, and thereby free protons, as the final product. These observations imply opposing effects of iron and reduced sulfur species, with iron acting as a initiator in oxidative reactions of Fenton type, whereas the reduced organic sulfur compounds may act as anti-oxidants.


Corresponding author. Department of Chemistry, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, P.O. Box 7015, SE-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden

Received: 2008-3-6
Accepted: 2008-8-6
Published Online: 2008-11-06
Published in Print: 2008-11-01

©2008 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Original Papers
  2. Soda–AQ delignification of poplar wood. Part 1: Reaction mechanism and pulp properties
  3. Soda-AQ delignification of poplar wood. Part 2: Further degradation of initially dissolved lignins
  4. Effect of autohydrolysis of Eucalyptus globulus wood on lignin structure. Part 1: Comparison of different lignin fractions formed during water prehydrolysis
  5. Effect of autohydrolysis of Eucalyptus globulus wood on lignin structure. Part 2: Influence of autohydrolysis intensity
  6. Extraction of galactoglucomannan from spruce wood with pressurised hot water
  7. Determination of ethylenic residues in wood and TMP of spruce by FT-Raman spectroscopy
  8. Quantitative assessment of total phenol contents of European oak (Quercus petraea and Quercus robur) by diffuse reflectance NIR spectroscopy on solid wood surfaces
  9. Valence band spectroscopy on lignin
  10. Analysis of acids and degradation products related to iron and sulfur in the Swedish warship Vasa
  11. Fenton-induced degradation of polyethylene glycol and oak holocellulose. A model experiment in comparison to changes observed in conserved waterlogged wood
  12. Towards novel wood-based materials: Chemical bonds between lignin-like model molecules and poly(furfuryl alcohol) studied by NMR
  13. Manufacture of laminated strand veneer (LSV) composite. Part 1: Optimization and characterization of thin strand veneers
  14. Manufacture of laminated strand veneer (LSV) composite. Part 2: Elastic and strength properties of laminate of thin strand veneers
  15. Flexural, in-plane shear and nail shear properties of falcataria-rubberwood laminated veneer board for flooring
  16. Impedance spectroscopy and circuit modeling of Southern pine above 20% moisture content
  17. Sorption and thermodynamic properties of juvenile Pinus sylvestris L. wood after 103 years of submersion
  18. Iron and calcium translocation from pure gypsum and iron-amended gypsum by two brown rot fungi and a white rot fungus
  19. Ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer of indoor wood-decay fungi
  20. Short Notes
  21. Analysis of thermally treated wood samples using dynamic FT-IR-spectroscopy
  22. Observation of the influence of temperature on the mechanical properties of wood adhesives by nanoindentation
  23. Book review
  24. Identification of the timbers of Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific
  25. Personalia
  26. Prof. Dr. Olaf Schmidt retired at 65
  27. Contents Volume 62
  28. Contents Volume 62 (2008)
  29. Meeting
  30. Meetings
  31. Acknowledgement
  32. Acknowledgement
  33. Author index
  34. Author index
  35. Species index (scientific names)
  36. Species index (scientific names)
  37. Subject index
  38. Subject index
Downloaded on 14.4.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/HF.2008.130/html
Scroll to top button