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The Crystallization Effect of Sodium Sulfate on Some Italian Marbles, Calcarenites and Sandstones

Marco Lezzerini, Alessio Tomei, Gianni Gallello, Andrea Aquino, Stefano Pagnotta

2022Heritage10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Soluble salts are compounds found inside ornamental rocks and building stones exposed to atmospheric agents in environments rich in alkaline metal ions, such as sodium and potassium. The damage induced by their crystallization in those materials, used to build monuments and architectural structures of great importance, is an unsolved problem. Sodium sulfate is one of the most common and harmful salt found in these constructions. In this work, we studied the resistance through time to the wet-drying cycles of some natural stones (calcarenites, marbles, and sandstones) that have been utilized in the historical architecture in Italy. Samples were freshly cut and thermally aged to simulate increasing decay. Induced porosity in the thermally degraded samples was high in calcarenites, medium in marbles, and low in sandstones. Specimens subjected to artificial thermal aging lost a major percentage of mass compared to the non-weathered ones, when affected by the crystallization of soluble salts. With this study, we have observed that samples subjected to different wetting and drying cycles degrade faster due to the action of soluble salts, compared to samples that are not subjected to these cycles.

Topics & Concepts

CrystallizationSodiumWettingSulfatePorositySalt (chemistry)PotassiumSodium sulfateChemical engineeringMineralogyGeologyChemistryGeochemistryMaterials scienceComposite materialMetallurgyGeotechnical engineeringOrganic chemistryEngineeringBuilding materials and conservationConservation Techniques and StudiesCultural Heritage Materials Analysis
The Crystallization Effect of Sodium Sulfate on Some Italian Marbles, Calcarenites and Sandstones | Litcius