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Geyer wrote:

> Have you tried placing you books in your oven at 200F and left them

there for several hours/overnight.

I spoke with a " moldie " years ago who tried this with some mold

contaminated books, and was forced completely out of his house for two

days.

Might want to try it with someone elses oven (who isn't mold sensitive)

-

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No, I haven't tried this either. The books are typically soft-covered computer books, with black and white illustrations, mostly. They were never wet, theyhad just been stored in bookshelves (now gone) from my old apartment.

They have been cleaned aggressively several times.. the bookshelves were thrown away.. but the books still make me sick if I handle them. Stored in boxes (or on shelves) its less of an issue.. if they are not 'stirred up' but I would still like to get rid of the remaining reactivity.

Quack:

Have you tried placing you books in your oven at 200F and left them there for several hours/overnight. After heating them thoroughly, HEPA vacuum and/or fan them out doors in a still breeze while standing up-wind. Don't do this to books that have heat-sensitive color emulsions (plates). Try this and tell me the results.

I have heated a significant number of books and paper records from water-damaged storage vaults with pretty good success. People using the heat-treated books/records afterwards have not reported significant symptoms; unlike the books and texts we solely dried using desiccants, dehumidification, or freezing methods.

--

Geyer, PE, CIH, CSP

President

KERNTEC Industries, Inc.

Bakersfield, California

www.kerntecindustries.com

On 12/14/06 12:30 PM, " LiveSimply " <quackadilliangmail> wrote:

The biggest and most frustrating cleaning problem for me has been books. I have a lot of expensive computer books I can't just part with but those books still make me sick.. despite being HEPA vacumned and then wiped down with rags wetted in 50% household ammonia and water.. not each page, of course, just the covers and the edges of the books..(and wiped hard.)

.

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:

Wouldn't 200 deg for an extended period 'brown' the paper? Or is this

still not hot enough to do that?

Cassidy Kuchenbecker

>

> > Have you tried placing you books in your oven at 200F and left them

> there for several hours/overnight.

>

>

> I spoke with a " moldie " years ago who tried this with some mold

> contaminated books, and was forced completely out of his house for two

> days.

> Might want to try it with someone elses oven (who isn't mold sensitive)

> -

>

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200 degrees isn't even hot enough to boil water, so no, I don't think it would brown paper. But I don't think that it would necessarily inactivate mycotoxins either, as I've heard that at least trichothecenes are stable to much higher than that.

Some mycotoxins might vaporize at high temps, although 200 degrees might not be high enough..(and then probably re-condense on the next cold object they encountered.. like water does?)

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Cassidy:

Simple sugars will brown (caramelize) at 185 to 187F. Cellulose is a polysaccharide and will take a higher temp prior to browning; and the number escapes me at the moment but I believe it is above 245F. This said, I imagine that there are some papers (e.g., rice) that may brown nearer to 200F, but I am not sure. Most paper is a low-grade cellulose fiber, and often that fiber is from tree pulp (e.g., pine). Though different papers from different parts of the world use different pulp products. I shoot for 200F when I am drying and preserving books from a water-loss event, and it seems to work real well most of the time. The bigger issue is how wet and for how long. Some paper materials, depending upon the binders and additives (e.g., clay) will cause pages to stick together. After drying these texts, they are somewhat like paper bricks with cleavage-planes, and then they become a loss.

For what it is worth.....

--

Geyer, PE, CIH, CSP

President

KERNTEC Industries, Inc.

Bakersfield, California

www.kerntecindustries.com

:

Wouldn't 200 deg for an extended period 'brown' the paper? Or is this

still not hot enough to do that?

Cassidy Kuchenbecker

>

> > Have you tried placing you books in your oven at 200F and left them

> there for several hours/overnight.

>

>

> I spoke with a " moldie " years ago who tried this with some mold

> contaminated books, and was forced completely out of his house for two

> days.

> Might want to try it with someone elses oven (who isn't mold sensitive)

> -

>

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bbw wrote:

>

> I've heard that wrapping them in brown paper or

> put in box with paper bags and odor may be

> absorbed. I wonder if toxins have an attraction

> to some materials more than others and might move

> from one material to a more desireable one and

> that is the cause of the odor reduction. Of

> course the paper just may simply absorb the odor

> and have no affect on toxins what so ever.

> have you experimented with anything like this?

>

I hit the point where another moment of trying to deal with my stuff

was impossible. I couldn't touch any of it and left it to others to

finish packing up my stuff. Books, magazines, records and all suchlike

were loosely tossed in boxes and stacked, or rather tossed into storage.

I think that the carelessness with which they were packed was

fortuitous in allowing good air circulation, and after five years those

things which had been carelessly strewn had little effect on me.

Stuff that had been tightly sealed still retained potential nastiness.

When I carried a friend out of a place in 2000, she reached the same

point and couldn't finish packing, and would literally turn colors and

hit the floor. Some of it that she had started was tightly wrapped,

but I finished with loose packing, partly from the notion this might be

good, but mostly from haste.

She told me in 2005 that the stuff I had packed had become tolerable,

but that the tightly and carefully sealed possessions unleashed a

torrent of badness when opened.

Rather than spend a great deal of time, effort, and much unhappiness

on remediation, my philosophy would be to put things in dry storage

with good air circulation, and if there was anything I really needed to

get to - use appropriate personal protective gear while temporarily

using/handling the material, and then get it back into benign custody

until it denatures naturally or you finally give up on it altogether.

-

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Thursday, December 21, 2006

Hello Ed!

I did not know that you are 'lurking' on the IEQuality List... *LOL*

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/iequality/

I am not sure if I told you before but we collected a number of information

resources on book restoration and conservation on the Flood Relief Aid List.

Ms Sweeney from the University of Manitoba was instrumental in

pulling together a videoconference on flood (water) damaged book restoration

back in October 2003. For the archived 'video stream' please visit

http://video.indiana.edu:8080/ramgen/vic/czech_flooding_20031016.rm (using

Real Player).

Best holiday wishes,

Cutz

_________________________________________________

Cutz, CIH

Moderator, Flood Relief Aid List

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/flood_relief_aid_2002/

Search the Files and

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Re: brown paper wrap absorbing VOCs

...which is different than decontamination but

since it is the odor that many are mentioning

thought I would add that books do not need to be

wrapped tightly in brown paper but put in with

crumpled brown paper to absorb odor. I read it

in a conservation paper to stuff brown paper into

musty drawers and get rid of the musty odor. I

think usually that actually getting rid of odor,

rather than mask it must be getting rid of what

causing it so absorbing myco or endo toxins could

be occuring, or perhaps just odor left behind

after microbes are already gone. However I

thought I would put this out there.

Anyway, I have seen shredded brown paper used as

packing material which would allow alot of air

circulation around material and also allow the

absorbent nature of brown paper to act.

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