Abstract

Throughout the history of preparation of biological samples for microscopy the choice of the mounting medium was sometimes dictated merely by availability of the used media. Thus, a plethora of resins and other organic polymers as well as complex mixtures are found to serve as mounting agents in microscope slide collections of museums of natural history, impeding the work for both curators and conservators. Dramatically, in some cases the used mounting media can already be observed to have undergone crystallization and other decomposition processes within few years of mounting demanding immediate action in restoring as well as an imminent precaution in conservation. Therefore, an unambiguous chemical identification of the used agent as well as its current aging stage is of great interest for the biologist community. The technical demands on the analytical approach to obtain this information can be straightforwardly identified. Any used technique has to be non-destructive, yield in molecular information allowing for a chemical identification of the used mounting agents and allow for a spatially well-defined interrogation in a thin sample slice, typically through a transparent cover slip. In this contribution we present a thorough study of the applicability of Raman spectroscopy for the described task. The obtained results clearly demonstrate the successful feasibility of the chosen method for a) a clear distinction between different media, b) the elucidation of the chemical composition of a multicomponent medium and c) an unambiguous identification of real unknown samples by a distinct assignment to a previously recorded spectral library. This library database was built up by recording pure mounting agents and will be provided to the general public. In combination with a Raman spectrometer, it can be an invaluable tool for future curation and conservation endeavors devoted to microscope slide collections at natural history museums.

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