4.7 Article

Infrared thermography for the investigation of physical-chemical properties and thermal durability of Tunisian limestone rocks

Journal

CONSTRUCTION AND BUILDING MATERIALS
Volume 339, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2022.127470

Keywords

Limestone; Thermal shock cycles; Infrared thermography (IRT); Cooling rate index (CRI); Porosity; Physical-chemical properties

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This study characterized limestone lithotypes from Bizerte region in extreme North of Tunisia to investigate their weathering resistance and damage from thermal shock cycles. Infrared thermography (IRT) monitoring was conducted to assess the correlation between cooling rate index (CRI) and physical or chemical characteristics of the rocks. Statistical clustering identified four classes based on porosity values. The study highlighted the validity of CRI as an indirect parameter for estimating low porous stones properties undergoing thermal weathering.
Twenty-one limestone lithotypes from the extreme North of Tunisia (Bizerte region) were characterized in order to investigate their weathering resistance and the resulting damage from thermal shock cycles. An infrared thermography (IRT) monitoring was also conducted to assess the tendencies between the cooling rate index (CRI) and the physical (bulk density, porosity, capillarity and P wave velocity) or the chemical (calcium carbonate, silica and total organic carbon contents) characteristics of the carbonate rocks. Statistical clustering defined four classes in accordance with their different porosity values (1 % < n < 20 %). The obtained CRI within a 10-min of infrared thermography (IRT) survey allowed to forecast not only the total porosity of these rocks but also their major physical properties with a noticeable correlation trends before and even after thermal shock cycles.Similar findings proved the compatibility between the CRI10 and the chemical composition of the limestones due to the different thermal properties of the minerals. The lowest porous samples (n & LE; 5 %) with the highest calcium carbonate content (CaCO3 > 95%) seemed to be the most suitable ones for the infrared thermography (IRT) characterization by its best fitting trends with the CRI10. Thermal shock was very well remarked for all the clusters particularly based on the measures of CRI10 and capillarity, as they are mainly related to surface and subsurface features that are the most affected by the fast cooling process. This study highlighted the validity of the CRI10 as a reliable indirect parameter for the estimation, in laboratory, of low porous stones properties undergoing thermal weathering.

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