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Outdoor Weather Resistant Ceramics

If climatic conditions demand it, outdoor ceramic installations must be able to survive the stresses of freeze-thaw. Porous ceramics absorb water and freezing temperatures that cause this absorbed water to expand tend to break down the matrix, eventually crumbling it.

Some technicians assume that if absorption is below a certain amount that a fired clay is durable for outdoor use. However, any fired clay with more than zero percent absorption demonstrates water penetration and is theoretically susceptible to freeze-thaw damage. For practical purposes however, the brick industry considers any clay under 5% porosity resistant to freeze/thaw failure.

More porous ceramic actually has both absorbency and porosity. A fired piece will naturally absorb a certain amount of water to fill the pores (open porosity). However more porous clay matrixes also have capilliary-like networks which normal soaking does not fill (closed porosity). This auxilliary network allows fired ceramics to survive freeze-thaw because the expansion of the water has somewhere to go.

It is possible to perform a simple test based on the principle that a sample of fired ceramic boiled in water will absorb more moisture than one that is simply soaked. This is because for the former, the entire network is filled, for the latter only the pores. This test compares the cold soaking absorption or open porosity (C) of a clay with its boiled absorption or closed porosity (B). The structural ceramic industry requires a C/B result of less than 0.78 in order to pass CSA and ASTM specs for outdoor use.

The C/B test procedure is defined in detail in FORESIGHT's Test Information database. The procedure uses 10 mm thick by 25 mm wide by 120mm long fired test bars and defines a 24 hour soak and weigh, then a 5 hour boil and weigh.

Variables

Dry Weight - v1
The weight of a dry test specimen of the fired clay.
 
24hr Wet Weight - v2
The weight of a specimen that has been soaked for 24 hours in room temperature water and wiped clean of all surface water.
 
5hr Boiled Weight - v3
The weight of a specimen that has been soaked for 24 hours and boiled for 5 hours and wiped clean of all surface water.

Calculations

24hr Absorption - C
This is a calculation of the C value for this test, that is, the absorption of a clay sample if soaked for 24 hours in cold water.

C = (v2 - v1) / v1

 
5hr Boil Absorption - B
This is a calculation of the B value, that is, the absorption of a clay bar if soaked for 24 hours and boiled for 5 hours.

B = (v3 - v1) / v1

 
Saturation Coefficient - S
This is a calculation of the C/B value, the cold water absorption divided by the boiling water absorption.

S = C / B

The saturation coefficient S should be less than 0.78 in order to pass CSA and ASTM specs for outdoor use.





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