Riddle solved: Why was Roman concrete so durable?

Date: January 6, 2023  Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Summary:

An unexpected ancient manufacturing strategy may hold the key to designing 
concrete that lasts for millennia.

Share: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/01/230106144441.htm


FULL STORY

The ancient Romans were masters of engineering, constructing vast networks of 
roads, aqueducts, ports, and massive buildings, whose remains have survived for 
two millennia.

Many of these structures were built with concrete: Rome's famed Pantheon, which 
has the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome and was dedicated in A.D. 
128, is still intact, and some ancient Roman aqueducts still deliver water to 
Rome today.

Meanwhile,  many modern concrete structures have crumbled after a few decades.

Researchers have spent decades trying to figure out the secret of this 
ultradurable ancient construction material, particularly in structures that 
endured especially harsh conditions, such as docks, sewers, and seawalls, or 
those constructed in seismically active locations.

Now, a team of investigators from MIT, Harvard University, and laboratories in 
Italy and Switzerland, has made progress in this field, discovering ancient 
concrete-manufacturing strategies that incorporated several key self-healing 
functionalities.

The findings are published in the journal Science Advances, in a paper by MIT 
professor of civil and environmental engineering Admir Masic, former doctoral 
student Linda Seymour, and four others.

For many years, researchers have assumed that the key to the ancient concrete's 
durability was based on one ingredient: pozzolanic material such as volcanic 
ash from the area of Pozzuoli, on the Bay of Naples.

This specific kind of ash was even shipped all across the vast Roman empire to 
be used in construction, and was described as a key ingredient for concrete in 
accounts by architects and historians at the time.

Under closer examination, these ancient samples also contain small, 
distinctive, millimeter-scale bright white mineral features, which have been 
long recognized as a ubiquitous component of Roman concretes.

These white chunks, often referred to as "lime clasts," originate from lime, 
another key component of the ancient concrete mix.

"Ever since I first began working with ancient Roman concrete, I've always been 
fascinated by these features," says Masic.

"These are not found in modern concrete formulations, so why are they present 
in these ancient materials?"

Previously disregarded as merely evidence of sloppy mixing practices, or 
poor-quality raw materials, the new study suggests that these tiny lime clasts 
gave the concrete a previously unrecognized self-healing capability.

"The idea that the presence of these lime clasts was simply attributed to low 
quality control always bothered me," says Masic.

"If the Romans put so much effort into making an outstanding construction 
material, following all of the detailed recipes that had been optimized over 
the course of many centuries, why would they put so little effort into ensuring 
the production of a well-mixed final product?  There has to be more to this 
story."

Upon further characterization of these lime clasts, using high-resolution 
multiscale imaging and chemical mapping techniques pioneered in Masic's 
research lab, the researchers gained new insights into the potential 
functionality of these lime clasts.

Historically, it had been assumed that when lime was incorporated into Roman 
concrete, it was first combined with water to form a highly reactive paste-like 
material, in a process known as slaking. But this process alone could not 
account for the presence of the lime clasts. Masic wondered: "Was it possible 
that the Romans might have actually directly used lime in its more reactive 
form, known as quicklime?"

Studying samples of this ancient concrete, he and his team determined that the 
white inclusions were, indeed, made out of various forms of calcium carbonate.

And spectroscopic examination provided clues that these had been formed at 
extreme temperatures, as would be expected from the exothermic reaction 
produced by using quicklime instead of, or in addition to, the slaked lime in 
the mixture.

Hot mixing, the team has now concluded, was actually the key to the 
super-durable nature.

"The benefits of hot mixing are twofold," Masic says.

"First, when the overall concrete is heated to high temperatures, it allows 
chemistries that are not possible if you only used slaked lime, producing 
high-temperature-associated compounds that would not otherwise form.

Second, this increased temperature significantly reduces curing and setting 
times since all the reactions are accelerated, allowing for much faster 
construction."

During the hot mixing process, the lime clasts develop a characteristically 
brittle nanoparticulate architecture, creating an easily fractured and reactive 
calcium source, which, as the team proposed, could provide a critical 
self-healing functionality.

As soon as tiny cracks start to form within the concrete, they can 
preferentially travel through the high-surface-area lime clasts. This material 
can then react with water, creating a calcium-saturated solution, which can 
recrystallize as calcium carbonate and quickly fill the crack, or react with 
pozzolanic materials to further strengthen the composite material.

These reactions take place spontaneously and therefore automatically heal the 
cracks before they spread. Previous support for this hypothesis was found 
through the examination of other Roman concrete samples that exhibited 
calcite-filled cracks.

To prove that this was indeed the mechanism responsible for the durability of 
the Roman concrete, the team produced samples of hot-mixed concrete that 
incorporated both ancient and modern formulations, deliberately cracked them, 
and then ran water through the cracks.

Sure enough: Within two weeks the cracks had completely healed and the water 
could no longer flow.

An identical chunk of concrete made without quicklime never healed, and the 
water just kept flowing through the sample. As a result of these successful 
tests, the team is working to commercialize this modified cement material.


"It's exciting to think about how these more durable concrete formulations 
could expand not only the service life of these materials, but also how it 
could improve the durability of 3D-printed concrete formulations," says Masic.


Through the extended functional lifespan and the development of lighter-weight 
concrete forms, he hopes that these efforts could help reduce the environmental 
impact of cement production, which currently accounts for about 8 percent of 
global greenhouse gas emissions.

Along with other new formulations, such as concrete that can actually absorb 
carbon dioxide from the air, another current research focus of the Masic lab, 
these improvements could help to reduce concrete's global climate impact.



The research team included Janille Maragh at MIT, Paolo Sabatini at DMAT in 
Italy, Michel Di Tommaso at the Instituto Meccanica dei Materiali, in 
Switzerland, and James Weaver at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired 
Engineering at Harvard University. The work was carried out with the assistance 
of the archeological museum of Priverno, Italy.

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