Investigation on 19th century fired bricks and lime plaster for the conservation of historical building materials: A case study of the church of Saint Rafael (Barcelona, Spain)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ponce Antón, Graciela; Cultrone, Giuseppe V.; Zuluaga, María Cruz; Ortega, Luis Ángel; Gómez Val, RicardoEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Building materials Raw materials Production technology Firing temperature Marmorino High temperature mineral phases
Fecha
2024-12Referencia bibliográfica
G. Ponce-Antón et al. Case Studies in Construction Materials, 21, e03870. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cscm.2024.e03870
Patrocinador
Basque Government IT1442-22; Junta de Andalucía RNM179; European Union-NextGenerationEU MARSA21/57; Spanish Ministry of UniversitiesResumen
This paper studies the fired bricks and plaster from the Church of Sant Rafael (Barcelona) in a multi-analytical approach based on mineralogical, chemical and physical characterization. The different analyses provide valuable data on the raw materials and production technologies involved in the manufacture of the studied 19th-century materials. The results suggest that a multi-layer preparation technique was used to apply the plaster, with a marmorino as the final outer layer. The identification of diopside and åkermanite neoformed magnesium phases suggests that Mg-carbonate rich clays were used for the production of bricks. The presence of hematite and the new high temperature phases, diopside, åkermanite and anorthite, suggest that the raw clays
were fired under oxidising conditions at temperatures of ca. 900–1000ºC. The high volume of micropores smaller than 2 μm and the high and fast water absorption capacity of the brick placed under a tiled floor are the main factors contributing to rising damp, favouring a progressive deterioration process. Moreover, gypsum was identified as the weathering product affecting the
conservation of the church.