Module: Building Bricks and Monumental Glue
Coordinating instructor: Linn Hobbs
Theme:
Monuments (from the Latin monere, to remind) reflect that which
a society intends to be culturally lasting. The fabric of such constructions--
the bricks and mortar-- provides information about the choices made in
manipulation of the materials of building in the service of aesthetic
and religious goals. This module explores the materials science and engineering
of mortars, the monumental "glue" used literally to hold together
civilizations.
Module program:
Five case studies will be examined: Egyptian gypsum mortar in the third
dynasty of the Old Kingdom (c. 2600 BCE), Greek lime mortar of the fifth
century BCE, Babylonian fired-clay brick of the eighth century BCE, Roman
pozzolanic concrete of the first century AD Roman empire, and Victorian
Portland cement. In lecture, the cultural and social contexts will first
be explored, followed by consideration of the physical and social circumstances
governing materials choices. Finally we will consider elaboration of the
materials science and engineering underlying successful employment of
the materials chosen. Coordinated hands-on laboratory sessions will introduce
participants to the "feel" of the materials, so necessary to
acquire a real appreciation of the materials choices made and their elaboration.
Material culture component:
Five corresponding monuments will be studied, in the cultural context
of the societies erecting them: the Great Pyramid of Khufu at Giza, the
ziggurat of Birs-Nimrod in Babylon (the "Tower of Babel"), the
Parthenon in Athens, the Pantheon in Rome, and Kresge Auditorium at MIT.
An important objective of this module is to explore comparatively the
reasons underlying the respective materials choices in the construction
of each monument. In some cases, availability of resources is seen to
govern the mortar choice made: Egyptians brought gypsum in large quantitites
from the Nile Delta, 100 miles distant, to the limestone-rich Giza plateau,
because the low-temperature pyrotechnology demands of gypsum mortars and
plasters were more compatible with the local absence of wood fuels than
would have been the high-temperature lime-burning technologies necessary
for the later development of Hellenistic lime mortars and plasters . In
some cases, the choice is dictated by materials property needs: the expanding
Roman maritime empire had great need of hydraulic mortars (which set underwater)
and, after the fire in Rome, for inexpensive fireproof construction on
a vast scale. In other cases, aesthetics play a role: a driving force
for popularization (and the name) of Portland cement was its fortuitous
resemblance to the quality building stone of the day. As just one example
of the societal implications of these technologies, the rise of an immense
building trade, based on brick-faced concrete, forged a new middle class
in Roman society, initially originating in cadres of freed slaves overseeing
brick and mortar production on the estates of the landed class.
Because all of the building materials studied are still in use today,
participants will be asked to consider the cultural implications of their
present-day employment in our own western society. To encourage the making
of such connections, field trips will be made to Eero Saarinan's Kresge
Auditorium (1953) on the MIT campus, the first monumental use of a concrete
dome since Roman times; and to the Stiles & Hart brickworks in Bridgewater,
MA, the principal source of traditional restoration brick (used in the
Faneuil Hall renovation, for paving the freedom trail in Boston, and at
many other historic sites throughout the East Coast), whose facilities
and methods (box-molding of bricks, batch beehive kilns, coal firing)
have changed little since its 19th-century establishment.
Materials science/engineering and laboratory component:
Study of building materials has traditionally not been a major part of
historically metals-dominated materials science and engineering educational
curricula, in part because the building industry is necessarily conservative
in its materials choices. Yet these seemingly prosaic media encompass
fascinating lessons in atomic structure, environmental and solid state
reactions, materials processing, and mechanical properties. In particular,
they serve as a far richer introduction to ceramic science and technology
than does the more traditional vehicle of fired pottery that is featured
in most archaeological curricula. In each unit, the materials science
behind the mortar preparation and setting reactions will be explained:
the crystal structures and microstructures of the antecedents, the chemistries
and morphologies of the reaction products, and the (physical, chemical,
mechanical) bases of the setting process. Likewise mechanical properties
will be investigated through this unique vehicle. The materials limitation
of Greek trabeated (post-and-lintel) construction, set by fracture toughness
of the lintel material, and the materials-strength advantage of compressive
loading in the Roman arch will both be derived and demonstrated.
The laboratory: The hands-on laboratory sessions, in which mortars
will be produced by participants from raw materials (gypsum and limestone
rock, volcanic ash, clay), provide an appreciation of the labor-intensity
of the production methods, the importance of developments in associated
pyrotechnologies, and the concepts of compressive and tensile mechanical
strength and fracture mechanics with which builders both ancient and modern
have had to develop an empirical appreciation. Participants will proceed
through the five units in sequence with the lecture material.
Unit 1: Egyptian gypsum mortar. Participants will crush
gypsum rock by hand, using stone and copper hammers, then dehydrate the
crushed material at 160 °C, grind by hand, and mix with sand and water.
Unit 2: Greek lime mortar. Limestone rock will similarly be crushed
by hand, calcined at 1050 °C to form lime, and mixed with sand and
hydrated to form slaked lime mortar.
Unit 3: Babylonian brick. Clay extracted from a pit deposit in
western Massachusetts will be hand-thrown into wet wooden box molds, dried
to the green state, and fired at 1050 °C. Drying and sintering shrinkages,
impact strength and permeability will be measured.
Unit 4: Roman concrete. Volcanic ash from Santorini (the ancient
Greek island of Thera, whose volcanic explosion likely contributed to
the demise of the Minoan civilization on nearby Crete) will be ground
and mixed with lime and sand to produce the pozzolanic mortar that forms
the basis of Roman concrete. Types F and C fly-ash, which constitute modern
pozzolanic equivalents, will also be formulated into analogous mortars
for comparison.
Unit 5: Portland cement. Dried aluminosilicate clay will be crushed
and co-calcined with limestone at 1100 °C to form cement clinker,
which will be ground by hand and mixed with sand and water.
Cylinders of each mortar will be respectively tested for mechanical strength
in an Instron machine and the failure modes noted. The microstructural
origins of the setting reactions will be investigated using environmental
scanning electron microscopy of the set mortar pastes. The relationship
between microstructure and strength is particularly evident in these comparisons,
especially the role of reaction product morphology.