Delamination of Ançã limestone due to sodium sulfate under different environmental conditions as studied by nuclear magnetic resonance

Sodium sulfate is one of the most damaging and complex salts typically involved in the deterioration of our architectural heritage. One of the main difficulties is to determine which of its crystalline phases, that is, thenardite, mirabilite, or the metastable heptahydrate, will precipitate under ce...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brito, V. (author)
Other Authors: Saidov , T. (author), Gonçalves, T. D. (author), Pel, L. (author)
Format: article
Language:eng
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repositorio.lnec.pt:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/1006320
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:localhost:123456789/1006320
Description
Summary:Sodium sulfate is one of the most damaging and complex salts typically involved in the deterioration of our architectural heritage. One of the main difficulties is to determine which of its crystalline phases, that is, thenardite, mirabilite, or the metastable heptahydrate, will precipitate under certain conditions. Indeed, there is a significant range of temperature and relative humidity in which these phases can crystallize. Furthermore, one precipitated crystalline phase may under certain conditions transform to another one. Here, we show that nuclear magnetic resonance can be successfully used to nondestructively define the phase being precipitated. We investigate delamination of Ançã limestone due to sodium sulfate crystallization, a type of decay which is representative of those occurring in real constructions. The decay was achieved during isothermal drying of stone specimens under different environmental conditions. The work allowed concluding that both mirabilite and heptahydrate can be responsible for this type of decay in different conditions. The heptahydrate tends to crystallize when there is no previous presence of mirabilite crystals in the porous material.