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科学60秒:大米跟建房?关系不一般

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发表于 2016-8-2 10:58:45 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式

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Ming Dynasty
Accounts of Chemical Research
amylopectin

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Mmm, sticky rice. It's a glutinous side dish that's perfect for practicing your chopstick skills, for sopping up curry sauce and, amazingly, for building really strong pagodas.
The Chinese have been building with mortar made from sticky rice and limestone since the time of the Ming Dynasty. Now scientists have figured out this ancient secret, in a study in the journal Accounts of Chemical Research.
Mud is probably the oldest mortar used to hold together bricks or stones. About 5,000 years ago, China started producing lime for construction. At least 1,500 years ago Chinese masons discovered that mixing in sticky rice soup makes lime even stronger.
Some tombs and city walls that were reinforced with the stuff are still standing. They've survived earthquakes, even modern bulldozers. The key, say chemists, is amylopectin, a component of starch that interacts with the calcium carbonate in limestone to form a mortar that's more water-resistant and less prone to shrinkage than lime mortar alone.
And that's true even today. In 2006 traditional sticky rice mortar was used to restore the Shouchang bridge, built some eight centuries ago. Because even for an ancient stone bridge, sometimes sticky rice hits the spot.
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