Crashed or dimensional rocks have been used as natural construction material, decoration stone or as material for artistic
sculptures. Especially old historical towns not only in Slovakia have had experiences with use of stones for construction purposes for
centuries. The whole buildings were made from dimensional stone, like sandstone, limestone or rhyolite. Pavements were made especially
from basalt, andesite, rhyolite or granite. Also the most common modern construction material – concrete includes large
amounts of crashed rock, especially limestone, dolostone and andesite.
However, rock as any other material if exposed to exogenous processes starts to deteriorate. Especially mechanical weathering
can be very intensive if rock with unsuitable rock properties is used. For long it had been believed that repeated freezing and thawing
in relation to high absorption is the main reason of the rock deterioration. In Slovakia for many years the high water absorption was
set as exclusion criterion for use of rocks and stones in building industry. Only after 1989 the absorption was accepted as merely informational
rock property and not exclusion. The reason of the change was not the understanding of the relationship between the porosity
and rock deterioration, but more or less good experiences with some high porous rocks used in constructions exposed to severe
weather conditions and proving a lack of relationship between rock freeze-thaw resistivity and water absorption.
Results of the recent worldwide research suggest that understanding a resistivity of rocks against deterioration is hidden not in
the absorption but in the structure of rock pores in relation to thermodynamic properties of pore water and tensile strength of rocks
and rock minerals.
Also this article presents some results of research on rock deterioration and pore structure performed on 88 rock samples. The
results divide the rocks tested into two groups – group N in which the pore water does not freeze even when the temperature decreases
to –20 ºC, and the second group F in which the pore water freezes. It has been found that the rocks from group N contain
critical portion of adsorbed water in pores which prevents freezing of the pore water. The presence of adsorbed water enables thermodynamic
processes related to osmosis which are dominantly responsible for deterioration of rocks from group N. A high correlation
(R = 0.81) between content of adsorbed water and freeze-thaw loss was proved and can be used as durability estimator of rocks
from group N. The rock deterioration of group F is caused not only by osmosis, but also by some other processes and influences,
such as hydraulic pressure, permeability, grain size, rock and mineral tensile strength, degree of saturation, etc., and the deterioration
cannot be predicted yet without the freeze-thaw test. Since the contents of absorbed water and ratio between adsorbed and bulk water
(of which the absorbed water consists) is controlled by the porosity and pore structure, it can be concluded that the deterioration of
some rocks is strongly related to rock pore structure.
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