%0 Journal Article %T Study the change of thermophysical properties of natural stone in the conditions of cyclic freezing %A Ivana £¿imkov¨¢ %A Vladim¨ªr Greif %A Zuzana Kompan¨ªkov¨¢ %A Martin Br£¿ek %J Acta Geologica Slovaca %D 2012 %I Comenius University in Bratislava %X Evaluation of the influence of freeze-thaw cycle of rock is closely related to understanding the physical processes of weathering, the rock disintegration and rock decay. In research were used thermophysical methods: termodilatometry (VLAP 04) and ¡°hot ball¡± method (RTM 1.03). Those methods can simulate the conditions of rock destruction behaviour due to cyclic freezing. Authors submit short-time research information about the continuous measurement of changes sample length of travertine from Spi ske Podhradie, thermal conductivity and temperature during period 8 days. The experiment was divided into 4 - freeze-thaw cycles (progressive five grams water) and time on which the sample was exposed only to a chamber temperature. The research showed linear progress of deformation and coefficient of thermal expansion (¦Á = 7.5¡¤10¡ãC-1) of travertine sample in conditions without previous saturation. After ice crystallization was travertine¡¯s coefficient of thermal expansion with water greater than coefficient of thermal expansion without water. The preliminary results showed that significant changes of sample length were caused ice crystallization. The same changes of deformation were visible even on thawing temperatures around 0¡ãC. In the analysis of moisture through the "hot ball" probe in laboratory conditions showed that value of the parameter q/Tm are representative for the detection of moisture during the reference material. More detailed knowledge of the distribution of temperature and humidity will help to better understand the principles and mechanisms of degradation during cyclic freezing. %K thermophysical methods %K travertine %K freeze-thaw cycle %K water saturation %U http://www.geopaleo.fns.uniba.sk/ageos/2012_01/simkova_et_al_2012.pdf