Secrets of Longevity: Roman Concrete

Ruins of a concrete Roman bath in Caesarea Maritima in Israel.
James Cocks via Wikimedia Commons
(Inside Science) -- Whereas modern concrete structures weaken and crumble in seawater, often within decades, Roman concrete seems to grow stronger in seawater. Some piers and breakwaters built at the dawn of the Roman Empire have endured for thousands of years. Now scientists are unlocking the secrets of how these ancient concretes have grown stronger over time, research that suggests that creating modern concretes the same way could not only build more durable structures but also generate much less of the global warming gas carbon dioxide.
Geoscientist Marie Jackson
Romans created a mortar using lime, seawater and volcanic ashes known as pozzolans, named after the city of Pozzuoli
In 79 AD, Roman naturalist and statesman Pliny the Elder wrote that when concretes of the day were exposed to ocean waves, they became “a single stone mass, impregnable to the waves and every day stronger.” Now Jackson and her colleagues find this ancient observation was correct -- seawater helps Roman concrete heal and strengthen.
“It turns out a lot of the hunches that Roman authors had proposed for why these concretes set underwater actually have a basis in reality,” said classical archaeologist John Oleson at the University of Victoria in British Columbia, Canada, who did not take part in this research.
The scientists used electron beams
One of the minerals that form in Roman concrete, known as aluminous-tobermorite, grows in the form of interlocking plate-like crystals that reinforce the mortar holding the concrete together, healing flaws and boosting its resilience against fractures.
Aluminous-tobermorite is a rare mineral in nature that has proven very difficult to synthesize in the lab and also requires high temperatures above 176 degrees Fahrenheit to create, which makes it impractical for modern concrete to form that mineral once it has set. In contrast, Roman concrete naturally synthesizes the mineral when infiltrated with seawater at temperatures of just 57 to 64 degrees F.
“It turns out Roman engineers are the masters in the world so far in making aluminous-tobermorite,” Jackson said. “We’ve had drilling programs at 11 different Roman harbor sites, and each one abundantly grew aluminous-tobermorite.”
The researchers also noted that Roman concrete was created in a more environmentally friendly way than modern versions. The process for making Portland cement, a key ingredient of modern concrete, requires temperatures of roughly 2,640 degrees F, and the fuels burned to generate this heat are responsible for 7 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions
“Using pozzolans in concretes could really help deal with the problem of carbon emissions today and extend the service life of concrete structures and pavements,” said Thomas Adams, president and principal engineer at engineering firm KMR Collaborative in Reno, Nevada, who did not participate in this study. “Old technology developed in Roman times has a lot of applicability to today’s marketplace.”
Furthermore, as coal usage drops throughout the United States, concrete producers are scrambling to find replacements for the coal fly ash often used in modern concrete, Adams said. This new work “really shows how using naturally occurring pozzolans could help offset coal fly ash demand,” he said. “Pozzolans have already had a long history in U.S. concrete production -- it wasn’t until the 1960s when coal fly ash started taking over.”
One concern regarding future applications of volcanic ash in concrete is that “we cannot take apart the Bay of Naples to build sustainable concretes around the world,” Jackson said. Her research is now investigating whether common types of volcanic rock such as basalt or rhyolite can serve as modern substitutes for the pozzolans used in Roman concrete.
Jackson and her colleagues detailed their findings