The role of mortars in ancient brick masonries’ decay: a study in the Pio Palace at Carpi (Italy)


Abstract eng:
The use of cement-based mortars for the repair of ancient masonry joints was quite common in the past and can account for a significant role in masonry decay, especially when highly porous building materials are present (bricks, sandstone, etc.). Mortar-induced degradation mechanisms in ancient masonry walls are quite complex and worthy of investigation, in order to properly assess the decay causes and to select suitable conservation strategies (removal, cleaning, substitution with compatible repair mortars, etc.). In the present paper, the case of the 17th century main portal of the Pio Palace in Carpi (Modena, Italy), where an outstanding differential decay between mortars and bricks is present, is discussed. Both bricks and mortars were characterized and the actual decay causes were detected, also in connection with the analysis of the environment surrounding the building and the historical evolution of the palace. The different microstructure of the original and repair materials was found to be responsible not only for different mechanical behaviour, but also for a different response to salt crystallisation, particularly intense in the palace due to the capillary rise of underground polluted water.

Publisher:
RILEM Publications s.a.r.l., 157 rue des Blains F-92220 Bagneux - France
Conference Title:
Conference Title:
2nd Conference and of the Final Workshop of RILEM TC 203-RHM
Conference Venue:
Prague (CZ)
Conference Dates:
2010-09-22 / 2010-09-24
Rights:
Text je chráněný podle autorského zákona č. 121/2000 Sb.



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 Record created 2014-11-06, last modified 2014-11-18


Original version of the author's contribution as presented on CD, , page 483. :
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