Publication | Open Access
The influence of temperature in a capillary imbibition salt weathering simulation test on Mokattam limestone
30
Citations
20
References
2015
Year
Rock TestingEngineeringHydrogeophysicsAir TemperatureWater-rock InteractionMineral ProcessingEarth ScienceMokattam LimestoneGeotechnical EngineeringMineral-fluid InteractionGeoenvironmental EngineeringWeatheringHigh Temperature GeochemistrySalt WeatheringCapillary Imbibition SaltHydraulic PropertySalt DomeCylindrical Limestone SamplesGeologyRock PropertiesSimulation TestCivil EngineeringGeomechanicsEconomic GeologyGeochemistryExperimental PetrologyPetrology
Limestone is one of the most frequent building stones used in monuments in Egypt from ancient Egyptian times and salt weathering is one of the main threats to these monuments. During this work, cylindrical limestone samples (2 cm diameter and approx. 4 cm length) from Mokattam group, one of the most frequent materials in historic Cairo, were subjected, in a purpose-made simulation chamber, to laboratory salt weathering tests with a 10% weight NaCl solution at different temperatures (20, 30, 40 °C). During each test, temperature was kept constant and salt solutions flowed continuously imbibing samples by capillary rise resembling the way they get into building stone in many real cases. Air temperature, relative humidity inside the simulation chamber and also samples weight were digitally monitored and recorded. Results show the influence of temperature and the ratio between imbibitions and evaporation on the dynamics of salt crystallization in the samples.
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