A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Sedimentary structures and physical properties of travertine and carbonate tufa building stone
Highlights ► This research is approached from Sedimentary Petrology and Petrophysics fields. ► This work analyse texture and structure of a wide range of travertines and tufas. ► A rock classification is elaborated according to textural/structural aspects. ► An exhaustive petrophysical characterisation of all rock varieties is presented. ► Petrologic differences are related to different mechanical and water transport responses.
Abstract This paper establishes relationships between the structures of travertine and calcium carbonate tufa used as building stones and their physical properties. The most characteristic features of these kinds of rocks are the macropores in both stone types and the bedding planes and laminations in travertines. Large vuggy macropores have little influence on capillary water absorption, strength, elastic modulus or ultrasonic wave propagation, whereas microporosity is a much more determining factor. With travertines, the bedding planes and laminations give petrophysical anisotropy to rocks, where the highest capillary transport is reached parallel to the structure. However, rock strength and elasticity depend on both structure orientation and the predominant rock facies. The strongest and stiffest behaviour is found perpendicular to structure in low-porous banded samples, but in a parallel direction when the rock is highly porous.
Sedimentary structures and physical properties of travertine and carbonate tufa building stone
Highlights ► This research is approached from Sedimentary Petrology and Petrophysics fields. ► This work analyse texture and structure of a wide range of travertines and tufas. ► A rock classification is elaborated according to textural/structural aspects. ► An exhaustive petrophysical characterisation of all rock varieties is presented. ► Petrologic differences are related to different mechanical and water transport responses.
Abstract This paper establishes relationships between the structures of travertine and calcium carbonate tufa used as building stones and their physical properties. The most characteristic features of these kinds of rocks are the macropores in both stone types and the bedding planes and laminations in travertines. Large vuggy macropores have little influence on capillary water absorption, strength, elastic modulus or ultrasonic wave propagation, whereas microporosity is a much more determining factor. With travertines, the bedding planes and laminations give petrophysical anisotropy to rocks, where the highest capillary transport is reached parallel to the structure. However, rock strength and elasticity depend on both structure orientation and the predominant rock facies. The strongest and stiffest behaviour is found perpendicular to structure in low-porous banded samples, but in a parallel direction when the rock is highly porous.
Sedimentary structures and physical properties of travertine and carbonate tufa building stone
García-del-Cura, M. Ángeles (author) / Benavente, David (author) / Martínez-Martínez, Javier (author) / Cueto, Nora (author)
Construction and Building Materials ; 28 ; 456-467
2011-08-16
12 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Sedimentary structures and physical properties of travertine and carbonate tufa building stone
Online Contents | 2012
|Sedimentary structures and physical properties of travertine and carbonate tufa building stone
British Library Online Contents | 2012
|Colorado now producing travertine -- An aristocratic building stone
Engineering Index Backfile | 1930
|Rough and polished travertine building stone decay evaluated by a marine aerosol ageing test
British Library Online Contents | 2010
|