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Laboratory simulation of salt weathering under moderate ageing conditions: implications for the deterioration of sandstone heritage in temperate climates
Wang, Y.; Viles, H.; Desarnaud, J.; Yang, S.; Guo, Q. (2021). Laboratory simulation of salt weathering under moderate ageing conditions: implications for the deterioration of sandstone heritage in temperate climates. Earth Surf. Process. Landforms 46(5): 1055-1066. https://hdl.handle.net/10.1002/esp.5086
In: Earth Surface Processes and Landforms: the Journal of the British Geomorphological Research Group. John Wiley/Wiley: Chichester, Sussex; New York. ISSN 0197-9337; e-ISSN 1096-9837, more
Peer reviewed article  

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  • Wang, Y.
  • Viles, H.
  • Desarnaud, J., more
  • Yang, S.
  • Guo, Q.

Abstract
    Salt weathering is a significant process affecting the deterioration and conservation of stone-built heritage in many locations and environments. While much research has focused on the impact of salt weathering under arid or coastal conditions with characteristic climatic conditions and salt types, many sites found to be experiencing salt-induced deterioration, such as sandstone rock-hewn cave temples in Gansu Province, China and sandstone buildings in the northern UK, experience high humidities, moderate temperature ranges, and different salt types. To evaluate the impact of salt weathering on sandstone-built heritage under such mild humid environmental conditions, a lab simulation experiment was designed. The experiment was carried out on three types of sandstone (used in the northern UK and Gansu Province, China) and utilized a realistic diurnal humidity and temperature cycle (85% RH/16°C + 60% RH/22°C), and three widespread damaging salts, that is, Na2SO4, MgSO4, and the mixture of Na2SO4–MgSO4. The nature and extent of deterioration was monitored by photography, weight loss, and the changes in petrophysical properties measured using hardness, ultrasonic pulse velocity (P-wave velocity), water absorption coefficient by capillarity, open porosity, and apparent density. All three sandstones were found to be susceptible to MgSO4 and the mixture of Na2SO4–MgSO4, but weakly affected by Na2SO4 under mild humid environmental conditions.

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