Michel Barsoum, professor of materials engineering, shows in a peer-reviewed paper published Dec. 1 in the Journal of the American Ceramic Society
how the Egyptian builders of the nearly 5,000-year-old pyramids were
exceptional civil and architectural engineers as well as superb
chemists and material scientists. Barsoum wrote the paper with Adrish
Ganguly, a an alumnus who received a doctoral degree in materials
engineering from Drexel, and Gilles Hug of the National Center for
Scientific Research in France.
Their conclusions could lead to a
seismic shift in the kind of concrete used in construction and provide
developing nations a way to build structures utilizing inexpensive and
easily accessible materials.
The longstanding belief is that the
pyramids were constructed with limestone blocks that were cut to shape
in nearby quarries using copper tools, transported to the pyramid
sites, hauled up ramps and hoisted in place with the help of wedges and
levers. Barsoum argues that although indeed the majority of the stones
were carved and hoisted into place, crucial parts were not. The ancient
builders cast the blocks of the outer and inner casings and, most
likely, the upper parts of the pyramids using a limestone concrete,
called a geopolymer.
To arrive at his findings, Barsoum, an
Egypt native, and co-workers analyzed more than 1,000 micrographs,
chemical analyses and other materials over three years. Barsoum, whose
interest in the pyramids and geopolymers was piqued five years ago when
he heard theories about the construction of the pyramids, says that to
construct them with only cast stone builders would have needed an
unattainable amount of wood and fuel to heat lime to 900 degrees
Celsius.
Barsoum’s findings provide long-sought
answers to some of the questions about how the pyramids were
constructed and with such precision. It puts to rest the question of
how steep ramps could have extended to the summit of the pyramids;
builders could cast blocks on site, without having to transport stones
great distances. By using cast blocks, builders were able to level the
pyramids’ bases to within an inch. Finally, builders were able to
maintain precisely the angles of the pyramids so that the four planes
of each arrived at a peak.
Although these findings answer some of
the questions about the pyramids, Barsoum says the mystery of how they
were built is far from solved. For example, he has been unable to
determine how granite beams — spanning kings’ chambers and weighing as
much as 70 tons each — were cut with nothing harder than copper and
hauled in place.
The type of concrete pyramid builders
used could reduce pollution and outlast Portland cement, the most
common type of modern cement. Portland cement injects a large amount of
the world’s carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and has a lifespan of
about 150 years. If widely used, a geopolymer such as the one used in
the construction of the pyramids can reduce that amount of pollution by
90 percent and last much longer. The raw materials used to produce the
concrete used in the pyramids — lime, limestone and diatomaceous earth
— can be found worldwide and is affordable enough to be an important
construction material for developing countries, Barsoum said.
Source: Drexel University