Durability of the hydrophobic treatment on brick and mortar

Vasilis Soulios*, Ernst Jan de Place Hansen, Ruut Hannele Peuhkuri, Eva B. Møller, Afshan Ghanbari-Siahkali

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)
113 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Hydrophobization lessens the water absorption by facade materials and is thus presumed to reduce moisture problems in internally insulated facades. However, to do this it should retain the water repellency performance throughout aging. The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of aging on the durability of the hydrophobic treatment on bricks and mortars. The resulting absorption coefficient, after 635 repeating artificial aging cycles of alternating UV radiation (102 min) and water exposure (18 min) reveals that the hydrophobic layer maintains its water repellency performance both in brick and mortar. The samples were treated with two different water repellent agents in different concentrations and tested for capillary water uptake. Additionally, the findings show that cycles of weathering could contribute positively to further reduction of the absorption coefficient of hydrophobized brick and mortar samples. Subsequently, Karsten tube tests on samples from artificial aging illustrate the same water repellency performance as mock-up walls exposed to ambient conditions, six years after being hydrophobized. Contact angle measurements before and after artificial aging reveal that the beading effect declines through aging. However, the beading effect seems to be just a surface effect affected by UV-light. Moreover, after aging, hydrophobized brick and mortar samples, tested by visual inspection, maintain their appearance while untreated samples show signs of efflorescence. In total, these findings indicate that the water uptake of hydrophobized brick or mortar remains very low after aging including water spraying and UV light.
Original languageEnglish
Article number107994
JournalBuilding and Environment
Volume201
Issue number15 August 2021
Number of pages11
ISSN0360-1323
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Aug 2021

Keywords

  • Durability
  • Artifical ageing
  • Water repellency
  • Service life
  • Brick
  • Mortar
  • UV radiation
  • Water exposure
  • Karsten tube tests
  • Contact angle measurements

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