Litcius/Paper detail

Impact of bacterial admixtures on the compressive and tensile strengths, permeability, and pore structure of ternary mortars: Comparative study of ureolytic and phototrophic bacteria

David Aceituno‐Caicedo, Asia Shvarzman, Semion Zhutovsky, Maria Dittrich

2023Biotechnology Journal10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The addition of bacterial biomass to cementitious materials can improve strength and permeability properties by altering the pore structure. Photoautotrophic bacteria are understudied mortar bio-additives that do not produce unwanted by-products compared to commonly studied ureolytic species. This study directly compares the impact of the addition of heterotrophic Bacillus subtilis to photoautotrophic Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 on mortar properties and microstructure. Cellulose fibers were used as a bacteria carrier. A commercial concrete healing agent composed of dormant bacterial spores was also tested. Strength, water absorption tests, mercury intrusion porosimetry, differential scanning calorimetry, thermogravimetric analysis, and scanning electron microscopy were applied to experimental mortar properties. The photoautotrophic modifications had a stronger positive impact on mortar strength and permeability properties than sporulated heterotrophic modifications due to differences in surface properties and production of exopolysaccharides. The findings provide support for photoautotrophic species as additives for mortars to move away from ammonia-generating species.

Topics & Concepts

CementitiousMortarCompressive strengthUltimate tensile strengthMaterials scienceChemical engineeringBacterial celluloseMicrostructureChemistryComposite materialCelluloseCementOrganic chemistryEngineeringMicrobial Applications in Construction MaterialsConcrete and Cement Materials ResearchBuilding materials and conservation