Bowing and expansion of natural stone panels: marble and limestone testing and assessment

Natural stone has been used as a building material for centuries. In the past, load bearing members were made of entirely of stone, but in the last 50 years new processing techniques have made the production and use of thin facade cladding a profitable venture. Unfortunately however, marble facades...

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Main Authors: Katarina Malaga, Björn Shouernborg, Bent Grelk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas 2008-06-01
Series:Materiales de Construccion
Subjects:
Online Access:http://materconstrucc.revistas.csic.es/index.php/materconstrucc/article/view/84
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spelling doaj-83e5a8c2e6ae4ea2a5f743d58172095d2021-05-05T07:36:30ZengConsejo Superior de Investigaciones CientíficasMateriales de Construccion0465-27461988-32262008-06-0158289-2909711210.3989/mc.2008.v58.i289-290.8479Bowing and expansion of natural stone panels: marble and limestone testing and assessmentKatarina Malaga0Björn Shouernborg1Bent Grelk2Technical Research Institute of SwedenTechnical Research Institute of SwedenRambollNatural stone has been used as a building material for centuries. In the past, load bearing members were made of entirely of stone, but in the last 50 years new processing techniques have made the production and use of thin facade cladding a profitable venture. Unfortunately however, marble facades on buildings in Europe and elsewhere have undergone severe deterioration. The EC-financed TEAM project (2000-2005) studied the bowing observed on marble facades in both cold and warm climates. TEAM’s main objectives were to understand and explain the expansion, bowing, and strength loss mechanisms governing the decay of marble- and limestone-clad facades, and to draft new European standards to prevent the use of marble and limestone poorly suited to outdoor cladding. A survey of some 200 buildings afforded a clear picture of the geographical, geological and climatic scope of the problem. Detailed case studies of six buildings resulted in a facade assessment methodology that included a monitoring system and risk assessment. Both laboratory and field research was conducted on almost 100 different types of stone from different countries and in place in different climates. The outcome was the determination of the decay mechanisms and critical factors. Two test methods and respective precision statements, one for bowing and the other for irreversible thermal expansion in high humidity conditions, were prepared for submission to CEN TC 246.http://materconstrucc.revistas.csic.es/index.php/materconstrucc/article/view/84bowingexpansioncladdingmarbledurability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katarina Malaga
Björn Shouernborg
Bent Grelk
spellingShingle Katarina Malaga
Björn Shouernborg
Bent Grelk
Bowing and expansion of natural stone panels: marble and limestone testing and assessment
Materiales de Construccion
bowing
expansion
cladding
marble
durability
author_facet Katarina Malaga
Björn Shouernborg
Bent Grelk
author_sort Katarina Malaga
title Bowing and expansion of natural stone panels: marble and limestone testing and assessment
title_short Bowing and expansion of natural stone panels: marble and limestone testing and assessment
title_full Bowing and expansion of natural stone panels: marble and limestone testing and assessment
title_fullStr Bowing and expansion of natural stone panels: marble and limestone testing and assessment
title_full_unstemmed Bowing and expansion of natural stone panels: marble and limestone testing and assessment
title_sort bowing and expansion of natural stone panels: marble and limestone testing and assessment
publisher Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
series Materiales de Construccion
issn 0465-2746
1988-3226
publishDate 2008-06-01
description Natural stone has been used as a building material for centuries. In the past, load bearing members were made of entirely of stone, but in the last 50 years new processing techniques have made the production and use of thin facade cladding a profitable venture. Unfortunately however, marble facades on buildings in Europe and elsewhere have undergone severe deterioration. The EC-financed TEAM project (2000-2005) studied the bowing observed on marble facades in both cold and warm climates. TEAM’s main objectives were to understand and explain the expansion, bowing, and strength loss mechanisms governing the decay of marble- and limestone-clad facades, and to draft new European standards to prevent the use of marble and limestone poorly suited to outdoor cladding. A survey of some 200 buildings afforded a clear picture of the geographical, geological and climatic scope of the problem. Detailed case studies of six buildings resulted in a facade assessment methodology that included a monitoring system and risk assessment. Both laboratory and field research was conducted on almost 100 different types of stone from different countries and in place in different climates. The outcome was the determination of the decay mechanisms and critical factors. Two test methods and respective precision statements, one for bowing and the other for irreversible thermal expansion in high humidity conditions, were prepared for submission to CEN TC 246.
topic bowing
expansion
cladding
marble
durability
url http://materconstrucc.revistas.csic.es/index.php/materconstrucc/article/view/84
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AT bjornshouernborg bowingandexpansionofnaturalstonepanelsmarbleandlimestonetestingandassessment
AT bentgrelk bowingandexpansionofnaturalstonepanelsmarbleandlimestonetestingandassessment
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