Jdj. Van Den Berg et al., Determination of the degree of hydrolysis of oil paint samples using a two-step derivatisation method and on-column GC/MS, PROG ORG C, 41(1-3), 2001, pp. 143-155
An elegant method is described for the determination of the degree of hydro
lysis of(unsaturated) triacylglycerols, and their oxidation products, prese
nt in linseed oil based paints. The analytical strategy, a transethylation
of esterified fatty acids followed by a trimethylsilylation of free fatty a
cids and their salts, is first tested on reference materials comparable or
identical to the compounds present in fresh and aged oil paints. Reproducib
ility and repeatability are examined on free- and methylated fatty acids, a
sodium- and lead salt and several triacylglycerols. Unwanted trimethylsily
lated products could be observed for the triacylglycerols and other esterif
ied fatty acids up to a maximum of 6%. Free fatty acids and their salts are
shown to be completely trimethylsilylated but incomplete derivatisation wa
s observed for azelaic acid. Glycerol, liberated upon transethylation was (
partially) trimethylsilylated. However, the recovery was not uniform and th
e results could not be used for quantitative determination of the amount gl
ycerol in the paint sample. Studies on the influence of the pigments indigo
, lead white, and prussian blue and glycerol showed there is no adverse inf
luence on the analytic result, except for lead white and indigo doped refer
ence material. The addition of these last compounds led to increased amount
s of hydrolysed products up to 37%. The repeatability of the determination
of the degree of hydrolysis within oil paint systems was tested on a number
of paints. Tt is shown for 5-year-old test paints with a relatively homoge
neous composition that the method is reproducible. For less defined paints
consisting of multi-layered systems it is shown that the position and way o
f sampling can have a significant influence on the spread in the analytical
result. This is caused by the large variations that are possible in the sa
mpled material in these inhomogeneous systems. The degree of hydrolysis of
an oil paint is taken as the average of the values obtained for azelaic-, p
almitic- and stearic acid, based on the results presented. Overall, it is o
bserved that the relative amount of hydrolysed fatty (di)acids increases in
time. Surprisingly, in contrast to the results obtained on reference mater
ial, for all lead white pigmented paints lower degrees of hydrolysis were f
ound relative to other paints from that particular set. (C) 2001 Elsevier S
cience B.V. All rights reserved.