Litcius/Paper detail

Bacterial Communities in Concrete Reflect Its Composite Nature and Change with Weathering

E. Anders Kiledal, Jessica L. Keffer, Julia A. Maresca

2021mSystems54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Concrete is the most-used building material in the world and a biologically extreme environment, with a microbiome composed of bacteria that likely come from concrete precursor materials, aerosols, and environmental deposition. These microbes, though seeded from a variety of materials, are all subject to desiccation, heating, starvation, high salinity, and very high pH. Microbes that survive and even thrive under these conditions can potentially either degrade concrete or contribute to its repair. Thus, understanding which microbes survive in concrete, under what conditions, and for how long has potential implications for biorepair of concrete. Further, methodological pipelines for analyzing concrete microbial communities can be applied to concrete from a variety of structures or with different types of damage to identify bioindicator species that can be used for structural health monitoring and service life prediction.

Topics & Concepts

WeatheringDesiccationExtreme environmentEnvironmental scienceSalinityDeposition (geology)Earth scienceEcologyBacteriaGeologyBiologyGeochemistryPaleontologySedimentBuilding materials and conservationMicrobial Applications in Construction MaterialsIndoor Air Quality and Microbial Exposure