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Comparative Analysis of Cold-Mercury Gilding and Traditional Mercury Gilding: Technical Characteristics, Divergence, and Interrelation
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Cold-mercury gilding uses mercury as an adhesive to bond gold foil onto the surface of copper and silver artifacts. This technique and mercury gilding (fire gilding) both belong to the Au-Hg system and are closely related in technology. Clarifying the technical differences between them is of great significance for revealing the developmental sequence of ancient gilding technologies. On the basis of reconstructing traditional fire gilding, simulated cold-mercury-gilded samples were successfully prepared using experimental archeological methods, and multi-scale characterization was performed using SEM-EDS, XRD, and XPS. The results show that the surface of cold-mercury-gilded samples displays a micromorphology of folded and overlapped gold foil accompanied by locally dense particle aggregation. The cross-section of the gold layer exhibits a multilayer stacked structure, in which mercury is enriched at the gold layer/substrate interface and forms an AuHgCu/Ag diffusion layer. Room-temperature-stable Au-Hg and Ag-Hg phases such as Au2Hg and AgHg are present in the gold layer, reflecting complex phase transformation behavior of the Au-Hg/Ag-Hg system at room temperature. During cold-mercury gilding, liquid mercury first adheres to the gold foil, and then interdiffusion and phase reactions occur between mercury, gold, and copper/silver atoms at room temperature. Intermetallic compounds and diffusion layers formed at the interface achieve firm bonding between the gold layer and the substrate. Both cold-mercury gilding and mercury gilding achieve metallurgical bonding through atomic interdiffusion. However, affected by differences in the initial state of mercury and operating temperature, the phase transformation and atomic diffusion behaviors of the system differ significantly, which are ultimately reflected in the cross-sectional structure of the gold layer, the composition of the interfacial diffusion layer, and the types of phases. Therefore, mercury-gilded artifacts show superior gold layer durability and bonding strength with the substrate compared with cold-mercury-gilded artifacts. Both techniques pioneered the application of mercury in metallic gilding and represent important innovations in ancient surface decoration technology.
Title: Comparative Analysis of Cold-Mercury Gilding and Traditional Mercury Gilding: Technical Characteristics, Divergence, and Interrelation
Description:
Cold-mercury gilding uses mercury as an adhesive to bond gold foil onto the surface of copper and silver artifacts.
This technique and mercury gilding (fire gilding) both belong to the Au-Hg system and are closely related in technology.
Clarifying the technical differences between them is of great significance for revealing the developmental sequence of ancient gilding technologies.
On the basis of reconstructing traditional fire gilding, simulated cold-mercury-gilded samples were successfully prepared using experimental archeological methods, and multi-scale characterization was performed using SEM-EDS, XRD, and XPS.
The results show that the surface of cold-mercury-gilded samples displays a micromorphology of folded and overlapped gold foil accompanied by locally dense particle aggregation.
The cross-section of the gold layer exhibits a multilayer stacked structure, in which mercury is enriched at the gold layer/substrate interface and forms an AuHgCu/Ag diffusion layer.
Room-temperature-stable Au-Hg and Ag-Hg phases such as Au2Hg and AgHg are present in the gold layer, reflecting complex phase transformation behavior of the Au-Hg/Ag-Hg system at room temperature.
During cold-mercury gilding, liquid mercury first adheres to the gold foil, and then interdiffusion and phase reactions occur between mercury, gold, and copper/silver atoms at room temperature.
Intermetallic compounds and diffusion layers formed at the interface achieve firm bonding between the gold layer and the substrate.
Both cold-mercury gilding and mercury gilding achieve metallurgical bonding through atomic interdiffusion.
However, affected by differences in the initial state of mercury and operating temperature, the phase transformation and atomic diffusion behaviors of the system differ significantly, which are ultimately reflected in the cross-sectional structure of the gold layer, the composition of the interfacial diffusion layer, and the types of phases.
Therefore, mercury-gilded artifacts show superior gold layer durability and bonding strength with the substrate compared with cold-mercury-gilded artifacts.
Both techniques pioneered the application of mercury in metallic gilding and represent important innovations in ancient surface decoration technology.
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