4.6 Article

Standardization of peeling tests for assessing the cohesion and consolidation characteristics of historic stone surfaces

Journal

MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
Volume 45, Issue 4, Pages 505-520

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1617/s11527-011-9778-x

Keywords

Peeling test; Historic stone; Surface consolidation; Cohesion; Non-destructive testing

Funding

  1. EC [AV0Z20710524]
  2. Czech Grant Agency [103/09/2067]

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A peeling test known as the Scotch Tape test has been used for more than 40 years in conservation practice for assessing the consolidation efficiency of degraded stone. However, the method has not been supported by any standard or reliably verified recommendations for its application. Its applicability is overestimated, and its unrestricted use without adequate knowledge and sufficient understanding can lead to non-comparable, non-reproducible and, in many cases, incorrect and severely biased results and assessments. This paper presents the results of a recent study focused on establishing limits for application, reliable procedures and a standard protocol for testing the cohesion characteristics of brittle and quasi-brittle materials, mainly mortars and stones. The main application strategy exploits repeated peeling in the same place on a surface in order to eliminate the effect of the natural decrease in the detached material from the subsurface layers, which might be incorrectly interpreted as a consolidation effect. There is a discussion of factors influencing the performance of the peeling test method, and examples of peeling measurements on various natural and artificial stones are presented.

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