“Bio-concrete” set to revolutionise the building industry: Dutch inventor of self-healing concrete named finalist for European Inventor Award
- Hendrik Jonkers' bio-concrete takes inspiration from nature
- Concrete automatically seals cracks caused by tension
- Ground-breaking approach: healing bacteria survive up to 200 years in concrete and self-activate when damage occurs
- EPO President Benoît Battistelli: "Forward-looking innovation that opens up completely new perspectives for concrete production"
Munich/Delft,
21 April 2015 - Buildings
and structures made of concrete that can "magically" seal and fully repair
cracks caused by tension? What may have seemed a utopian scenario just a few
years ago will soon become reality, thanks to the invention of microbiologist Hendrik "Henk" Marius Jonkers (50).
His vision: to develop a bionic approach that improves the tensile strength and
eco-friendly properties of concrete. The Dutch researcher set out to develop the
bio-concrete of the future - with limestone-producing bacteria that can
survive in a concrete structure for up to 200 years, and which "awaken" when
damage occurs, enabling them to heal the cracks. In Europe, where concrete
makes up 70 per cent of infrastructure, Jonkers' ground-breaking innovation
promises to reduce the costs of concrete production and maintenance, as well as
curb resultant carbon dioxide emissions. For his outstanding invention, Jonkers
has been named a finalist for the renowned European Inventor Award of 2015 in the
Research category. The 10th edition of the annual award will be
presented by the European Patent Office (EPO) at a ceremony on
11 June in Paris.
"Hendrik Jonkers' bacterial concrete extends the life of bridges, streets and tunnels and opens up completely new perspectives for concrete production," said EPO President Benoît Battistelli, announcing the European Inventor Award finalists. "This forward-looking innovation is a successful combination of microbiology and civil engineering - two sciences that are unlikely collaborators at first glance."
Jonkers exploits regenerative properties of nature
Henk Jonkers' passion for diving and camping was the spark that ignited his career: it began with studies in marine biology at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. After completing his PhD in September 1999, he began to focus his developmental work on the observation of bacterial behaviour. He first experimented with limestone-producing bacteria as a research assistant at the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Bremen. Self-healing octopus tentacles or plants that create new organisms with offshoots served as inspiration for Jonkers' invention. An expert in bacterial behaviour, he continued his career in 2006 at the Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences at Delft University of Technology. Jonkers' research agenda in Delft focused on finding a solution to transfer the self-healing properties of natural organisms to a man-made building material, concrete.
Self-healing agents encapsulated for over 200 years
To heal cracks in the concrete, Jonkers chose bacteria (Bacillus pseudofirmus and B. cohnii), that are able to produce limestone on a biological basis. The positive side-effect of this property: the bacteria consume oxygen, which in turn prevents the internal corrosion of reinforced concrete. However, the bacteria do not pose a risk to human health, since they can only survive under the alkaline conditions inside the concrete. Based on these findings, Jonkers and his team of researchers developed three different bacterial concrete mixtures: self-healing concrete, repair mortar, and a liquid repair system. In self-healing concrete, bacterial content is integrated during construction, while the repair mortar and liquid system only come into play when acute damage has occurred on concrete elements. Self-healing concrete is the most complex of the three variants. Bacterial spores are encapsulated within two-to four-millimetre wide clay pellets and added to the cement mix with separate nitrogen, phosphorous and a nutrient agent. This innovative approach ensures that bacteria can remain dormant in the concrete for up to 200 years. Contact with nutrients occurs only if water penetrates into a crack - and not while mixing cement. This variant is well-suited for structures that are exposed to weathering, as well as points that are difficult to access for repair workers. Thus, the need for expensive and complex manual repairs is eliminated.
Sustainable prevention method could revolutionise concrete production
In recent years, bacterial concrete was subject to endurance tests under various external conditions on a dedicated testing building in Breda, the Netherlands. Plans are in place to launch the self-healing material on the market this year. Jonkers' invention has the potential to significantly reduce maintenance expenses for bridges, tunnels and retaining walls, which currently cost EUR 4 to 6 billion each year in the EU alone. Jonkers is now working on an alternative bacterial encapsulation technique. Compared to the present particle coating methodology, this technique would make it possible to cut production costs of bacterial concrete by an additional 50 per cent. Whereas production costs for conventional concrete amount to EUR 80 per cubic metre, a cubic metre of self-healing concrete would cost between EUR 85 and EUR 100 with the new encapsulated healing agent. With significantly lower repair and replacement costs over the lifetime of a building, this minimally higher investment would quickly pay itself off for all concrete structures.
Additional resources
- Read more about the inventor
- View the patent: EP2247551
Future bio-concrete as a sustainable construction technology
Super-bacteria are the answer: Jonkers' ground-breaking solution is one of many green innovations in the building sector currently under development. Bio-concrete of the future has the potential to lower carbon dioxide emissions released in Europe during construction and modernisation projects, both affordably and sustainably.
- Read more about green construction
- Ten years of the European Inventor Award: a retrospective look at the inventors and ideas that have changed our lives
- About the European Patent Office (EPO)
- Study on the economic impact of patents and other IP rights
Contacts:
Rainer Osterwalder
Director Media Relations
European Patent Office
Tel. +49 (0)89 2399 1820
rosterwalder@epo.org
Jeremy Philpott
Project Manager
European Patent Office
Tel. +49 (0)89 2399 1805
jphilpott@epo.org
Janneke van
Amsterdam
Shepard Fox Communications Netherlands
Tel. +31 641 29 10 56
janneke.vanamsterdam@shepard-fox.com
Ellen Wonder
Shepard Fox Communications Netherlands
Tel. +31 654 33 88 60
ellen.wonder@shepard-fox.com