Evaluation of Accelerated Ageing Tests for Metallic and Non-Metallic Graffiti Paints Applied to Stone
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Abstract
Graffiti are increasingly observed on urban and peri-urban buildings and their removal
requires a huge financial outlay by local governments and agencies. Graffiti are not usually removed
immediately, but rather over the passage of time, viz. months or even years. In this study,
which forms part of a wider research project on graffiti removal, different methods (gravimetric
analysis, examination of digital images, colour and infrared measurements) were used to evaluate the
performance of accelerated ageing tests (involving exposure to humidity, freeze-thawing cycles and
NaCl and Na2SO4 salts) for graffiti painted on stone. Silver (metallic) and black (non-metallic) graffiti
spray paints were applied to two types of igneous rock (granite and rhyolitic ignimbrite) and one
sedimentary rock (fossiliferous limestone, i.e., biocalcarenite). The metallic and non-metallic graffiti
spray paints acted differently on the stone surfaces, both chemically and physically. Older graffiti
were found to be more vulnerable to weathering agents. The ageing test with NaCl and particularly
Na2SO4, both applied to granite, proved the most severe on the paints, yielding more detrimental
and faster artificial ageing of the type of material under study
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Bibliographic citation
Sanmartín Sánchez, P., Cappitelli, F. (2017). Evaluation of Accelerated Ageing Tests for Metallic and Non-Metallic Graffiti Paints Applied to Stone.
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https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings7110180Sponsors
The authors are grateful to Lucía Naveiro Seijo (University of Santiago de Compostela,
Spain), who carried out her degree research on this subject within the BioRemoGraf project. This work was partly
financed through grant GRC2014/028 (Xunta de Galicia). Patricia Sanmartín is currently financially supported
by a postdoctoral contract within the framework of the 2011–2015 Galician Plan for Research, Innovation and
Growth, Plan I2C, Modality B (2016 Call) with the project: “Light4Heritage: Lighting-based strategies to control
biological colonization in the built heritage (2016-PG011)”
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© 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)








