@article{gledocs_11858_6945, author = {López-Doncel, Rubén and Wedekind, Wanja and Dohrmann, Reiner and Siegesmund, Siegfried}, title = {Moisture expansion associated to secondary porosity: an example of the Loseros Tuff of Guanajuato, Mexico}, year = {2012}, volume = {69}, number = {4}, pages = {1189-1201}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, publisher = {Berlin/Heidelberg}, abstract = {The old mining city of Guanajuato in middle Mexico preserves one of the most important historical legacies in colonial buildings, the UNESCO declared the city World Heritage Site in 1988. Practically all the colonial constructions were built with natural stones from the neighbourhood, of which stands a greenish to reddish vulcanite, called Loseros Tuff. Although the Loseros Tuff is widely used in historical buildings in the city. It shows significant deterioration and weathering effects, principally in the parts where the tuff shows a coarse grain size. The petrographic, petrophysical, mineralogical and geochemical properties of the Loseros Tuff were analysed in order to determine the causes, effects, behaviour and response to deterioration of this volcanic rock. The results of the investigations suggest that in addition to the parameters like the grain size and the porosity properties, the pore radii distribution is decisive for the effectiveness of porosity and the water transport into the rock. It is recognized that once the liquid water invades the rock the dissolution of the matrix occurs, which is accompanied by a sudden moisture expansion favoured by the newly formed secondary porosity and the high content of expandable clay minerals.}, note = { \url {http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/6945}}, }