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How Has Roman Concrete Lasted for Millennia? 1,900-Year-Old Latrine Offers Clues

75 pointsby divbzerotoday at 3:48 AM46 commentsview on HN

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bombelatoday at 5:22 AM

> It turns out that another chemical reaction, known as carbonation, might also contribute to Roman concrete’s longevity.

Roman concrete was made lime cement (calcium dioxide); which cures via carbonation (hardens with carbon oxide). And adding pozzolan to lime makes it hydrolic (hardens with water). Is it surprising that it can still carbonate some? Modern concrete has steel which rust and crack concrete. You can use fiberglass rebar for longevity, or build without rebar even, but that is more costly and and less efficient.

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skybriantoday at 4:43 AM

Modern concrete has steel rebar, which is very useful, but eventually corrodes. Stainless steel rebar could be used if longevity mattered, but usually it doesn’t because the building will likely become functionally obsolete and need replacing before then.

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gaoqian2580today at 6:46 AM

This is truly a great miracle

demosthanostoday at 5:07 AM

Related, Grady Hillhouse on the myth of Roman concrete.

> The miracle of modern chemistry has given us a wide variety of admixtures like superplasticizers to improve the characteristics of concrete beyond a Roman engineer’s wildest dreams. So why does it seem that our concrete doesn’t last nearly as long as it should? It’s a complicated question, but one answer is economics. There’s a famous quote that says “Anyone can design a bridge that stands. It takes an engineer to build one that barely stands.” Just like the sculptors job is to chip away all the parts of the marble that don’t look like the subject, a structural engineer’s job is to take away all the extraneous parts of a structure that aren’t necessary to meet the design requirements. And lifespan is just one of the many criteria engineers must consider when designing concrete structures. Most infrastructure is paid for by taxes, and the cost of building to Roman standards is rarely impossible, but often beyond what the public would consider reasonable.

https://practical.engineering/blog/2019/3/9/was-roman-concre...

A large part of why Roman concrete lasted longer than ours tends to is that we suffer from a shortage of narcissistic emperors with the means to wield entire economies towards their own immortality.

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joshellingtontoday at 6:34 AM

There must be a better format and distribution method than this. Ideologically a strong brand name and domain, yet ads every two sentences. Even with ad blocking, there is constant aggressive attempts at attention.

I propose the communal brain rot is less to do with short form video, and more to do with the everyday experience of trying to read something enlightening, tickle your curiosity - and be just absolutely fucking hammered with autoplay interstitials and 720x90 and 300x250 bullshit.

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aiauthoritydevtoday at 5:39 AM

The whole promise of engineering is not to build a bridge that stands but to build a bridge that barely stands. It is not a good idea to build a bridge that last 500 years. You likely destroyed valuable resources to build one. Build a bridge that lasts 100 years and save those resources. In 100 years the technology to build bridges improves so much that it is lot easier to build a new one. At least in most countries like India.

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simonebrunozzitoday at 4:58 AM

A picture of one of these toilets would have been useful.

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aizktoday at 5:11 AM

Thinking of the ww2 plane with holes meme right now.

Mistletoetoday at 5:08 AM

I’ve often wondered why every good sidewalk I see has a WPA stamp on it from the 1930s and the modern ones are all crumbled and uneven.

https://share.gemini.google/5g0gxGyOmAPD

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