Damage of porous building stone by sodium carbonate crystallization and the effect of crystallization modifiers
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Ruiz Agudo, Encarnación; Ibáñez Velasco, Aurelia María; Ruiz Agudo, Cristina; Bonilla-Correa, Sarah; Elert, Kerstin; Rodríguez Navarro, Carlos ManuelEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Sodium carbonate Salt crystallization Salt damage
Date
2023-12-27Referencia bibliográfica
Ruiz-Agudo, Encarnación, et al. Damage of porous building stone by sodium carbonate crystallization and the effect of crystallization modifiers. Construction and Building Materials 411 (2024) 134591 [10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2023.134591]
Patrocinador
Campus of International Excellence in Heritage, PatrimoniUN10 (project CEI14-PATRIM-1); Junta de Andalucía (Research Group RNM-179 and project P20_00675); University of Granada, UGR (Research Excellence Unit UCEPP2016-05 "Carbonates"); Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the research project PID2021-125305NB-I00Résumé
Salt crystallization is an aggressive weathering mechanism affecting porous building materials. The extensive use
of Portland cement, a source of alkalis, in modern buildings and restoration interventions makes sodium carbonate
salts important weathering agents. Herein, we study salt damage to a porous stone commonly used in the
Andalusian built heritage (Santa Pudia limestone) due to stress generation associated with the precipitation of
natron (Na2CO3⋅10 H2O). We performed cyclic crystallization tests combined with thermodynamic and poromechanical
calculations to determine salt crystallization pressure and effective tensile stress suffered by the
material. The outcome reveals that in-pore natron crystallization during cooling/evaporation generates stresses
exceeding the tensile strength of the wet substrate, leading to extensive damage by fracturing and material loss.
Damage is reduced using aminotris(methylenephosphonic) acid (ATMP), a common phosphonate-based crystallization
modifier that induces non-damaging efflorescence growth as opposed to damaging subflorescence
growth, which takes place in its absence.