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Meeting Materials Science & Technology 2020
Symposium Art and Cultural Heritage: Discoveries and Education
Presentation Title Cementitious Systems in Roman Reactive Glass Marine Concretes
Author(s) Marie D. Jackson, Cory L. Trivelpiece, Nanfei Cheng, Barbara Nash, Nobumichi Tamura
On-Site Speaker (Planned) Marie D. Jackson
Abstract Scope The beneficial corrosion of reactive volcanic glass in the pumiceous pozzolan of ancient Roman marine concretes produces cementitious systems that have maintained cohesion and resilience for two millennia. Long after hydrated lime (Ca(OH)2) was fully consumed through pozzolanic reaction, fluids percolating through the concrete structures dissolved residual alkali-rich volcanic glass and crystals in the pumice. Post-pozzolanic mineral cements, mainly phillipsite and Al-tobermorite, crystallized from these fluids -- refining pore space, repairing fracture surfaces, and preserving chemical resilience by incorporating cations and anions in their crystal lattices. Micrometer-scale maps of pumice clasts from the Portus Cosanus (1st C BCE), Baianus Sinus (ca. 55 BCE), Caesarea (30 BCE), and Portus Neronis (60 CE) concretes with synchrotron X-ray microdiffraction and microfluorescence experiments describe these post-pozzolanic cementitious fabrics. Results of parallel dissolution experiments with Campi Flegrei pumice in diverse solutions provide a geochemical framework for understanding hydrological processes in the ancient maritime concrete structures.

OTHER PAPERS PLANNED FOR THIS SYMPOSIUM

ACerS-AACS Shepard Award: Small Steps, Occasional Leaps, Significant Backslides: Ceramic Compositional Analysis in an Americanist Archaeological Perspective
Adsorption on Kaolinite Surfaces: A Density Functional Theory (DFT) Approach to Quantifying Interactions Between a Clay Mineral and Small Molecules
An Unusual Green Pigment in a Korean Temple Banner
Cementitious Systems in Roman Reactive Glass Marine Concretes
Compositional and Structural Analysis of Early Chinese Currencies
Introductory Comments: Art and Cultural Heritage
Naturally Altered Glass: Methods and Challenges of Modeling Long-term Glass Alteration Environments

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