Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
258016 Construction and Building Materials 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Lime coatings can enhance drying with pure water but with salt solutions their effect is variable.•With salts, the drying kinetics is slower, more irregular and shows higher dispersion.•Also, with salts, the drying kinetics may diverge for specimens of a same material subjected to similar conditions.•The variations in drying kinetics are in agreement with shifts in the salt decay patterns.•Salts amplify the effects of material heterogeneity.

Lime coatings are frequent in the architectural heritage. Previous research has shown that they can accelerate the drying of porous materials, such as stone and mortars, which could help control the endemic problems of dampness of these constructions. Here, we investigate the effect lime coatings have when soluble salts are present. The work is based on evaporative drying tests performed on one lime coating applied on five substrate materials contaminated with solutions of NaCl or Na2SO4. Conclusions could be drawn about: (i) the behaviour of the coating; (ii) the salt decay process. It was observed that the coating can, in few cases, still enhance drying when salts are present. However, in comparison to pure water, the drying kinetics is slower, more irregular and shows higher dispersion. Also, it sometimes diverges among specimens of the same material subjected to similar experimental conditions. These chaotic variations are in agreement with the decay patterns and suggest that soluble salts amplify the effects of the natural heterogeneity of porous materials.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Civil and Structural Engineering
Authors
, , ,