Why Roman Concrete Is So Strong 🏛️

3 min read

Morning Engineers!

Derd looking at con

Ancient Roman concrete was actually WAY better than modern concrete…

Huh?

I mean, look at all the things they built:

Derd engineer
Derd on top of colosseum
Derd pointing on bridge

Still standing after thousands of years!!

Whereas, with modern concrete, we’d be lucky if it lasted 50 years…

Derd stepping on concrete

So, what's the secret?

Well, we make concrete by mixing cement, sand, gravel, and water in a big tub…

Derd mixing san, water, gravel

Then we just pour…

Derd pouring

And wait for it to harden.

But Romans made concrete a little differently…

They would mix together volcanic ash, something called quicklime, and sea water in a big tub…

Derd mixing volcanic ash, quicklime, sea water

Pour it into place…

Derd pouring into place

And wait for it to harden.

Now, that doesn't sound like much of a difference… but it is!

See, when the salt water is mixed with the quicklime stuff, it produces a hot chemical reaction which leaves chunks of undissolved lime throughout the mixture.

This creates concrete that can literally REPAIR ITSELF!!

How?

Look, if you crack it, it exposes the little lime chunks inside the concrete.

Derd hammering roman concrete

So, when it rains, rainwater can leak in and react with the lime, reactivating the cement and filling in the crack!

However… if you try this with our concrete.

derd hammering current concrete
Derd looking at watch while concrete cracked

It would just break.

Yeah, the Romans win this one lol.

Stay Cute,
Reece, Henry & Dylan 🌈

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