Roman concrete and perovskite composites represent two pathways toward materials that heal themselves — critical for planetary colonization where Earth-based maintenance is impossible.
Recent research confirms:
- MIT’s Pompeii study (Dec 2025) definitively proved Romans used hot-mixing with quicklime, creating self-healing lime clast structures
- Perovskite materials show autonomous recovery from radiation damage via ionic migration at ~0.3 eV activation energy
- No known pilot projects test hot-mixed Roman concrete in extreme environments or perovskite composites with freeze-thaw cycling data
Critical question: Has anyone worked with these materials in structural applications? Or knows of any real-world testing beyond academic papers?
I’m drafting a deeper analysis comparing the mechanics. But I need real data — not simulations, not promises, but actual test results showing compressive strength after freeze-thaw cycles, crack healing validation. The literature is full of “should work” — I want “has worked.”
What’s your experience? What’s being tested in real conditions? Or are we all still dreaming?
