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Electrokinetic Characterization of Natural Stones Coated with Nanocomposites for the Protection of Cultural Heritage

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Version 4 2024-03-12, 16:57
Version 3 2023-10-29, 13:51
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 16:57 authored by M Roveri, S Raneri, S Bianchi, Francesca Gherardi, V Castelvetro, L Toniolo
<p>Protective coatings, in recent years also from nanocomposite formulations, are commonly applied onto architectural stone and stone artefacts, mainly to prevent absorption of condensed water and dissolved atmospheric pollutants into the porous stone structure. While standard protocols to assess a coating’s performance are available, understanding the response of the coating-stone system is a complex task, due to the interplay of various factors determining the overall behaviour. Characterization techniques allowing one to correlate the extent and nature of surface modification upon treatment with the most relevant physical properties (i.e., water absorption and surface wettability) are thus of great interest. Electrokinetic analysis based on streaming current measurements, thanks to its sensitivity towards even minor changes in the surface chemical composition, may fulfil such requirement. Indeed, by involving the interaction with a testing aqueous electrolyte solution, this technique allows one to probe not only the outer surface, but also the outermost layer of the pore network, which plays a crucial role in the interaction of the stone with condensed atmospheric water. In this work, a correlation was found between the extent of surface modification, as determined by streaming current measurements, surface wettability and capillary water absorption, for three lithotypes with different mineralogical and microstructural properties treated with two nanocomposite formulations (one water based and one in alcoholic solvent) containing organosilica precursors and titania nanoparticles</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Chemistry (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Applied sciences

Volume

8

Issue

9

Publisher

MDPI

ISSN

2076-3417

Date Submitted

2018-10-09

Date Accepted

2018-09-17

Date of First Publication

2018-01-01

Date of Final Publication

2018-01-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2018-09-21

ePrints ID

33292

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