Ultrasonic drilling for the characterisation of building stones and salt induced decay
Ultrasonic drilling for the characterisation of building stones and salt induced decay
Historic stone buildings can experience severe decay through salt induced weathering. Decay can be easily seen with the eye but can also occur below the surface. Characterising the changes in the material’s structural properties induced by weathering is essential for the evaluation of durability of the stone and for the decision on the best conservation strategy to maintain built heritage. Minimally invasive, in situ tools are needed to establish the location and state of decay at the site. Here an ultrasonic drilling tool is introduced with a specially manufactured tip to monitor subsurface properties of sandstones. Different types of sandstones with varying compressive strength are tested and an artificially weathered sample is investigated. The tool tip wear and exerted force on the drilled samples are evaluated and compared to conventional drilling. Ultrasonic drilling shows promising results for the use in conservation science to assess stone properties and decay.
Dassow, J.
bd34ff5f-5f72-441a-a1b1-68997607cd38
Li, X.
ed01c0d5-68e0-4abe-8642-5b9ebf153314
Lee, M.R.
206ee286-756f-47ef-a10b-ddc0eb481f77
Young, M.
741f71db-1f40-4b66-8d0e-7af9fb5a8075
Harkness, P.
23259947-7f3a-4599-8a62-2e8d31649563
23 September 2019
Dassow, J.
bd34ff5f-5f72-441a-a1b1-68997607cd38
Li, X.
ed01c0d5-68e0-4abe-8642-5b9ebf153314
Lee, M.R.
206ee286-756f-47ef-a10b-ddc0eb481f77
Young, M.
741f71db-1f40-4b66-8d0e-7af9fb5a8075
Harkness, P.
23259947-7f3a-4599-8a62-2e8d31649563
Dassow, J., Li, X., Lee, M.R., Young, M. and Harkness, P.
(2019)
Ultrasonic drilling for the characterisation of building stones and salt induced decay.
Ultrasonics, 101, [106018].
(doi:10.1016/j.ultras.2019.106018).
Abstract
Historic stone buildings can experience severe decay through salt induced weathering. Decay can be easily seen with the eye but can also occur below the surface. Characterising the changes in the material’s structural properties induced by weathering is essential for the evaluation of durability of the stone and for the decision on the best conservation strategy to maintain built heritage. Minimally invasive, in situ tools are needed to establish the location and state of decay at the site. Here an ultrasonic drilling tool is introduced with a specially manufactured tip to monitor subsurface properties of sandstones. Different types of sandstones with varying compressive strength are tested and an artificially weathered sample is investigated. The tool tip wear and exerted force on the drilled samples are evaluated and compared to conventional drilling. Ultrasonic drilling shows promising results for the use in conservation science to assess stone properties and decay.
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Accepted/In Press date: 9 September 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 September 2019
Published date: 23 September 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 497284
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497284
ISSN: 0041-624X
PURE UUID: 0351df3c-01d2-46bc-8b73-c1339731bbb1
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Date deposited: 17 Jan 2025 17:42
Last modified: 18 Jan 2025 03:23
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Author:
J. Dassow
Author:
X. Li
Author:
M.R. Lee
Author:
M. Young
Author:
P. Harkness
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