Measuring the Burning Temperatures of Anhydrite Micrograins in a High‐Fired Medieval Gypsum Mortar
Version
Published
Date Issued
2017
Author(s)
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
Abstract
Typical feature of high‐fired medieval gypsum mortars is a compact microstructure of squat gypsum crystals containing firing products as remains of the calcination process. So far, the burning history of the binder is estimated based on morphological characteristics of the latter. A novel Raman microspectroscopy approach provides access to the calcination temperatures of individual anhydrite grains based on quantifiable spectroscopic changes appearing due to gradual variations of crystallinity, as independently confirmed by X‐ray diffraction analysis of anhydrites synthesised at temperatures between 500 °C and 900 °C. The approach was successfully applied to the high‐fired gypsum mortar of a South Tyrolean stucco sculpture of a pieta dated around 1420. Microparticles of burned anhydrite II with firing temperatures scattered around 650 °C and clusters of thermally damaged natural anhydrite II crystals from the raw material were identified and imaged.
Typical feature of high‐fired medieval gypsum mortars is a compact microstructure of squat gypsum crystals containing firing products as remains of the calcination process. So far, the burning history of the binder is estimated based on morphological characteristics of the latter. A novel Raman microspectroscopy approach provides access to the calcination temperatures of individual anhydrite grains based on quantifiable spectroscopic changes appearing due to gradual variations of crystallinity, as independently confirmed by X‐ray diffraction analysis of anhydrites synthesised at temperatures between 500 °C and 900 °C. The approach was successfully applied to the high‐fired gypsum mortar of a South Tyrolean stucco sculpture of a pieta dated around 1420. Microparticles of burned anhydrite II with firing temperatures scattered around 650 °C and clusters of thermally damaged natural anhydrite II crystals from the raw material were identified and imaged.
Publisher DOI
Journal or Serie
Chemistry SELECT
Volume
2
Issue
28
Submitter
ServiceAccount
Citation apa
Schmid, T., Dariz, P., Jakob, C., Ectors, D., & Neubauer, J. (2017). Measuring the Burning Temperatures of Anhydrite Micrograins in a High‐Fired Medieval Gypsum Mortar. In Chemistry SELECT (Vol. 2, Issue 28, pp. 9153–9156). https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/38487
