The Role of Calcite Dissolution and Halite Thermal Expansion as Secondary Salt Weathering Mechanisms of Calcite-Bearing Rocks in Marine Environments
Metadatos
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MDPI
Materia
Halite Marble Limestone Linear thermal expansion coefficient Climatic cabinet
Date
2021-08-23Referencia bibliográfica
Martínez-Martínez, J.; Arizzi, A.; Benavente, D. The Role of Calcite Dissolution and Halite Thermal Expansion as Secondary Salt Weathering Mechanisms of Calcite-Bearing Rocks in Marine Environments. Minerals 2021, 11, 911. [https://doi.org/10.3390/min11080911]
Patrocinador
European Commission European Commission Joint Research Centre; Spanish Government PID2020-116896RB-C21 PID2020-116896RB-C22Résumé
This research focuses on the analysis of the influence of two secondary salt weathering
processes on the durability of rocks exposed to marine environments: chemical dissolution of rock
forming minerals and differential thermal expansion between halite and the hosting rock. These
processes are scarcely treated in research compared to salt crystallisation. The methodology followed
in this paper includes both in situ rock weathering monitoring and laboratory simulations. Four
different calcite-bearing rocks (a marble, a microcrystalline limestone and two different calcarenites)
were exposed during a year to a marine semiarid environment. Exposed samples show grain
detachment, crystal edge corrosion, halite efflorescences and microfissuring. Crystal edge corrosion
was also observed after the laboratory simulation during a brine immersion test. Calcite chemical
dissolution causes a negligible porosity increase in all the studied rocks, but a significant modification
of their pore size distribution. Laboratory simulations also demonstrate the deterioration of saltsaturated
rocks during thermal cycles in climatic cabinet. Sharp differences between the linear
thermal expansion of both a pure halite crystal and the different studied rocks justify the registered
weight loss during the thermal cycles. The feedback between the chemical dissolution and differential
thermal expansion, and the salt crystallisation of halite, contribute actively to the rock decay in marine
environments.