Researchers from University of Utah in the US found that seawater filtering through the concrete in the the Roman structures leads to the growth of interlocking minerals that lend the concrete added cohesion.
Romans made concrete by mixing volcanic ash with lime and seawater to make a mortar, and then incorporating into that mortar chunks of volcanic rock, the "aggregate" in the concrete, researchers said.
The team found that the conglomerate-like concrete was used in many architectural structures, including the Pantheon and Trajan's Markets in Rome.
Massive marine structures protected harbours from the open sea and served as extensive anchorages for ships and warehouses.
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Modern Portland cement concrete also uses rock aggregate, but with an important difference: the sand and gravel particles are intended to be inert.
"This alkali-silica reaction occurs throughout the world and it's one of the main causes of destruction of Portland cement concrete structures," said Marie Jackson, geologist at University of Utah.
Researchers further studied the factors that made architectural concrete in Rome so resilient.
One factor is that the mineral inter growths between the aggregate and the mortar prevent cracks from lengthening, while the surfaces of nonreactive aggregates in Portland cement only help cracks propagate farther, they said.
Another factor was an exceptionally rare mineral, aluminous tobermorite (Al-tobermorite) in the marine mortar.
Researchers found that Al-tobermorite and a related zeolite mineral, phillipsite, formed in pumice particles and pores in the cementing matrix.
The pozzolanic curing process of Roman concrete was short-lived. Something else must have caused the minerals to grow at low temperature long after the concrete had hardened.
The team concluded that when seawater percolated through the concrete in breakwaters and in piers, it dissolved components of the volcanic ash and allowed new minerals to grow from the highly alkaline leached fluids, particularly Al-tobermorite and phillipsite.
The study was published in the journal American Mineralogist.
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