Without barrier protection in place, paper fiber corrugated cartons may cause corrosion on products stored within. In fact, even a product stored for just four weeks in a corrugated box that meets the archival standards established by the U.S. National Archives and is at the upper limits of the sulfur level specified, would see corrosive sulfur potential exposure equivalent of greater than 20 years of natural exposure. Four weeks is not a lot of time for shipping and storage, especially if that carton is shipped overseas and/or into humid, harsh environments where air pollution is prevalent.
Let us explain further. The US National Archives sulfur requirement for paper corrugate is less than .0008%, or 8 PPM, therefore the specification allows for a sulfur content of up to 7.9 PPM.
For reference, Intercept Technology packaging inventor Bell Lab’s Accelerated Atmospheric Corrosion Testing uses 4 PPM of sulfur to provide 10 years of equivalent exposure in three weeks. It has been proven that a concentration of 4 PPM of H2S has a linear acceleration factor in relationship to concentrations as low as 10 ppb. 4 PPM is an acceleration factor of 170 over natural levels of 35 ppb. If you were to calculate the sulfur level at the allowed limit of 7.9PPM, the acceleration factor would be 335 over a naturally occurring corrosive atmosphere. Given these facts, it is worth repeating: any item packaged for four weeks in a corrugated box that meets the National Archives upper limit, without barrier packaging, would be exposed to a potential corrosive sulfur equivalent of greater than 20 years.
Testing on paper corrugated boxes as a potential corrosion agent is supported by Birmingham Assay Office in its “Tarnishing” report. Founded in 1773, the Birmingham Assay Office has been a center of expert opinion and independent assessment of jewelry and precious metals for nearly 250 years. Excerpts from their report state:
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