This technology elegantly bridges the gap between biology and civil engineering to solve a multi-billion dollar infrastructure problem. It is a rare example of a high-tech innovation that is both economically viable and truly sustainable.
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Deep Dive
This Structure Is Alive #concrete #shortsAdded:
This structure is alive. Inside the concrete, something is sleeping.
Bacteria, millions of them, sealed into the mix before it was even poured.
They've been dormant for years. Some can survive for over 200 years, waiting in total darkness, without food, without water. It's name is bacillus, and it was put here on purpose. Concrete always cracks.
It's not a question of if, it's when. [music] And when it does, water gets in.
Water reaches the steel inside. The steel rusts. The structure weakens.
[music] Cement production alone accounts for 8% of all CO2 emissions on Earth. And every year, the EU spends up [music] to 6 billion euros just repairing cracked concrete. But in this concrete, when a crack forms and water seeps in, the bacteria wake up.
They need food.
Sugar would have worked, but sugar makes concrete soft. So instead, they were given calcium lactate. The bacteria consume it and produce limestone.
>> [music] >> Real limestone.
The same stone that makes up cave walls and coral reefs.
The limestone fills the crack, layer by layer, crystal by crystal.
Cracks up to half a millimeter wide, sealed shut. And as they work, they consume oxygen. Without oxygen, the steel inside can't rust. The crack heals. The building survives. One cubic meter of this concrete costs just 5 [music] to 20 euros more than normal.
The man who invented this was not an engineer.
He was a marine biologist who studied bacteria [music] in the ocean. The bacteria are harmless.
They can only survive inside concrete.
>> [music] >> Outside concrete, they can't survive. In 2006, someone asked him a question.
Could bacteria fix concrete? He didn't know anything about concrete, but he knew what nature could do. Right now, you're probably inside a concrete structure.
The walls around you, the floor beneath you.
Concrete is everywhere, and it all cracks. But somewhere right now, inside a bridge in the Netherlands, a crack is forming.
Water is seeping in, and something that's been sleeping [music] for years is waking up.
Nature speaks. We translate.
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