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Can ancient stone avoid salt attacks? (Materials Science: From Boston, at a meeting of the Materials Research Society).


Ancient buildings, monuments, and sculptures can't escape harsh environmental conditions, including air pollution and salty ground and ocean water. Once salt water seeps into stone, salt crystals remain in the stone's small, internal pores after the water evaporates. In time, as the crystals grow, they can exert stone-crumbling pressure.

Researchers now have a new means for defending stone treasures against crystal growth, reports George W. Scherer of Princeton University Princeton University, at Princeton, N.J.; coeducational; chartered 1746, opened 1747, rechartered 1748, called the College of New Jersey until 1896. Schools and Research Facilities
, who's made a new protective coating.

In lab tests, Scherer and his coworkers dissolved a carboxylic-acid-containing polymer in the organic solvent tetrahydrofuran tetrahydrofuran: see furfural. . Then, they immersed im·merse  
tr.v. im·mersed, im·mers·ing, im·mers·es
1. To cover completely in a liquid; submerge.

2. To baptize by submerging in water.

3.
 small limestone cubes in the solution so that the polymer could penetrate the cubes' internal pore networks. Polymer-treated cubes held up well to subsequent submersions in salt water, but untreated ones lost their strength and disintegrated, says Scherer.

Salt crystals exert pressure as they grow in a stone's pores because there are repulsive forces Noun 1. repulsive force - the force by which bodies repel one another
repulsion

force - (physics) the influence that produces a change in a physical quantity; "force equals mass times acceleration"
 between the crystals and the pores' walls, says Scherer. With the new polymer coating, he suspects, the surfaces become more attractive to the salt crystals, which then grow to the surfaces rather than repel re·pel  
v. re·pelled, re·pel·ling, re·pels

v.tr.
1. To ward off or keep away; drive back: repel insects.

2.
 them.

Other researchers are planning tests of the polymer coating on ancient walls around the medieval Aegean city of Rhodes in Greece, says Scherer. He notes however, that before the technique can be implemented widely, he and his colleagues need to find a related polymer with a similar stone-saving action but that will dissolve in a more environmentally friendly Environmentally friendly, also referred to as nature friendly, is a term used to refer to goods and services considered to inflict minimal harm on the environment.[1]  solvent than tetrahydrofuran. --J.G.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Dec 22, 2001
Words:246
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