The self-healing secret to roman concrete

How the Roman's made concrete that lasts forever

TLDR: Lime particles fill in cracks in Roman concrete, letting it heal itself after it's damaged

Big Takeaways

  1. Roman concrete takes damage just like modern concrete

  2. Part of the Roman recipe is lime particles

  3. These particles react with rainwater, causing calcium to leak out into the crack

  4. This stops the cracks from spreading, effectively healing the concrete

The Romans built some incredible concrete structures including the Colosseum, aqueducts, and the Pantheon among other random objects still standing throughout Italy today. If the Romans could do it thousands of years ago, why do all our roads have potholes immediately after they’re repaved?

We’ve been trying to answer this question for a long time. It’s a great example of how technologies are lost if they’re not actively preserved.

It turns out, Roman concrete wasn’t any tougher than ours is now, it just healed itself whenever it got damaged. The Romans might not have known why their concrete lasted so long, but they knew it worked, so they stuck to detailed recipes.

They used specific mixes for different building types and climates, but they all included lime particles (calcium oxide or CaO). Here’s a detailed video on how they made it.

Image of a Roman concrete sample. Colors represent different elements present in the sample (key in the bottom left). The red areas represent where lime particles are. Credit: L. Seymour et al. Sci. Adv. 2023

We’ve known this for a while, but the importance of these particles wasn’t well understood; that’s where this week’s paper comes in. In it, the authors do some in-depth analysis of these lime particles to figure out why they’re always in Roman concrete samples.

They found that the particles allow the concrete to heal itself when damaged by leaking out reactive calcium that fills in the cracks around them.

Close-up of Roman concrete sample. The large red areas with *s are lime particles. Credit: L. Seymour et al. Sci. Adv. 2023

Structural materials like concrete often end up breaking due to small cracks that get larger and larger until the whole structure fails.

Cracks concentrate the stress placed on a material, which leads to the crack growing. This self-fulfilling prophecy continues until the crack is so large that the whole thing breaks.

Whenever there’s an imperfection in a material, such as a large glob of lime, cracks tend to go through it. So the presence of these lime particles in the concrete caused any cracks that formed to go through them.

Once rainwater enters the concrete, calcium leaks out from the particles and reacts with the surrounding material to fill the crack. This process stops the crack from spreading before it really gets going and makes Roman concrete last much better than its modern counterpart.

How lime particles cause Roman concrete to heal. Water gets into the cracks (left) and causes the lime particle to release calcium (middle), filling the cracks (right). Credit: L. Seymour et al. Sci. Adv. 2023

The authors even went as far as mixing some lime particles into modern concrete mixes and seeing if it helped with durability.

Short answer - it did.

They cracked a piece of modern concrete with and without lime particles and compared how water flowed through the samples to see if they healed. If the water flow stopped, it indicated that the sample healed from the crack. If not, then the crack didn’t heal.

The graph on the left shows with and without lime particles. You can see that the no particles group (“-Clasts") didn’t stop the water flow. In contrast, the with particles concrete did (“+Clasts”).

How modern concrete self-heals when lime particles are added in. Without particles (“-Clasts”) the concrete doesn’t heal and water can get through. With particles (“+Clasts”) the modern concrete heals and stops water flow. Credit: L. Seymour et al. Sci. Adv. 2023

So, the same technique the Romans used to toughen their concrete works today with our modern version.

See you next week for more science,

Neil

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