UAE University Team Unveils Key Insights into Limestone Behavior Through AUA Collaboration
The United Arab Emirates University (UAEU) has marked another milestone in international research cooperation with the recent publication of a groundbreaking study on the mechanical properties of limestone under varying moisture conditions. Led by researchers from UAEU's Geosciences Department in the College of Science, the paper emerged from the UAEU-Asian Universities Alliance (AUA) Joint Research Program. Titled "Strength characterization of limestone lithofacies under different moisture states," it appeared in Scientific Reports, a Nature portfolio journal, on October 21, 2025.
This work highlights UAEU's commitment to advancing geotechnical engineering knowledge, particularly relevant to the UAE's carbonate-rich geology. Samples were sourced from the early Eocene Rus Formation at Hafit Mountain near Al Ain, a site emblematic of the region's geological diversity. The study addresses a critical gap in understanding how environmental factors like moisture influence rock durability, offering practical guidance for infrastructure development in arid yet occasionally saturated environments.
The Asian Universities Alliance: Fostering Pan-Asian Research Synergies
Established in 2017 at Tsinghua University, the Asian Universities Alliance (AUA) unites 16 leading institutions from across Asia, including UAEU, to promote academic mobility, joint research, and innovation. Members span China, Japan, Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia, and beyond, creating a network for tackling regional challenges through collaborative efforts.
The UAEU-AUA Joint Research Program, launched around 2020, provides funding for multi-year projects between UAEU and AUA partners. By 2022, it had supported 35 joint initiatives, yielding 229 peer-reviewed papers. This latest publication exemplifies the program's success, involving expertise from UAEU and potentially Nazarbayev University, where co-author Saffet Yagiz is affiliated—a fellow AUA member.
Such alliances enable resource sharing, diverse perspectives, and accelerated knowledge transfer, positioning UAE universities as key players in global science despite their relatively young history.
UAEU's Geosciences and Engineering Research Excellence
UAEU, founded in 1976 as the UAE's flagship national university, has evolved into a research powerhouse. Its College of Science, particularly the Geosciences Department, drives studies in rock mechanics, vital for the nation's oil and gas sector, construction boom, and sustainable development goals.
Recent UAEU outputs include over 600 Scopus-indexed papers quarterly, with engineering-focused work addressing local challenges like karst formations and seismic risks. The limestone study builds on prior UAEU research on Rus Formation rocks, enhancing predictive models for geohazards and material selection.
Funding from the UAEU-AUA program underscores institutional support for international ties, aligning with UAE Vision 2031's emphasis on knowledge economy and R&D investment, where UAEU contributes significantly to national scientific output.
Decoding Limestone Lithofacies: The Study's Core Focus
The research examined three limestone types from the Rus Formation: massive fractured limestone (MLS), fossiliferous limestone (FLS), and siliceous limestone (SLS). These represent common UAE lithologies, influencing everything from building foundations to hydrocarbon reservoirs.
Petrographic analysis revealed MLS's compact calcite with fractures, FLS's fossil-rich porosity, and SLS's silica-clay matrix. Mineralogy (XRD) and geochemistry (XRF) showed MLS and FLS dominated by calcite (high CaO >97%), while SLS had elevated SiO₂ (up to 14%) from chert.
Mechanical tests—uniaxial compressive strength (UCS), point load index (PLI), indirect tensile strength (ITS)—were conducted under natural (equilibrium), dry (oven-heated), and saturated (water-immersed) states per ASTM standards. This step-by-step approach quantified moisture's role in altering intergranular bonds and pore pressures.
Photo by Rishabh Balaiwar on Unsplash
Experimental Methods: Rigorous Testing Protocols
Thirty-seven NX-sized cores (54mm diameter) were prepared from field samples at Hafit Mountain. Petrography used polarized microscopy; mineralogy XRD on powdered samples; geochemistry XRF for major/trace oxides.
UCS involved loading until failure; PLI axial/diametral; ITS Brazilian splitting. Conditions simulated real-world: dry enhanced grain contacts, saturation mimicked groundwater exposure. Statistical tools like Pearson correlations and principal component analysis (PCA) linked geochemistry to mechanics, explaining 58-60% variance.
All work at UAEU's labs ensured precision, with PCA biplots clustering lithofacies by composition—SLS silica-rich, others CaO-dominant.

Main Findings: Moisture's Profound Impact on Rock Strength
Dry states boosted UCS up to 200% in MLS/SLS via tighter packing, but saturation slashed it 30-60%, worst in porous FLS. ITS dropped <55% saturated, PLI less affected. SLS proved durable (high SiO₂, Schmidt hardness 62), FLS weakest (fossil pores), MLS intermediate (fracture-sensitive).
Correlations: MgO positively tied to PLI/ITS; SiO₂ negatively to UCS natural; CaO inversely to dry UCS. PCA highlighted SiO₂/CaO trade-offs. Density peaked in FLS (2.6 g/cm³), underscoring microstructural controls. Explore the full study for detailed tables and figures, revealing predictive geochemical-mechanical links.
Engineering Applications in the UAE Context
UAE's geology—90% carbonates—demands such insights. SLS suits moisture-prone dams/bridges; FLS needs treatment for facades; MLS requires grouting in tunnels. Oil/gas: informs well stability in fractured carbonates like UAE's giants (ADNOC fields).
Construction boom (e.g., NEOM ties, Expo legacies) benefits from saturation-adjusted designs, reducing failures in flash floods. Mining aggregates prioritize SLS. Study aids slope stability models, cutting costs/risks in arid-wet cycles.
Real-world: Hafit Mountain quarries now predict durability; extends to heritage sites like Al Ain oases.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Regional Relevance
Lead authors from UAEU Geosciences praise AUA funding for enabling cross-border expertise. Saffet Yagiz (Nazarbayev U) notes moisture's understudied role in Central Asian analogs.
UAE stakeholders—MOE, ADNOC—view it as advancing national R&D (UAE ranks high QS subjects). AUA amplifies impact, fostering tech transfer Asia-Middle East.
- Enhances UAEU's QS geology ranking.
- Supports UAEU's 1,700+ annual papers.
- Aligns with UAE Centennial 2071 innovation goals.
Future Outlook: Expanding AUA-UAEU Partnerships
Program renews annually; next calls target sustainability. Potential: AI-modeling moisture effects, 3D printing SLS mimics.
UAEU eyes more AUA links (e.g., Tsinghua engineering). Broader: UAE's $10B+ R&D by 2030, positioning universities as hubs.

Actionable: Engineers use SiO₂/MgO proxies for site assessments; policymakers fund similar geomech studies.
UAE Higher Education's Rising Research Tide
UAEU exemplifies UAE unis' ascent: Khalifa U petroleum #6 QS, NYUAD global. Collaborations counter youth (avg age 30), build expertise.
Impacts: Jobs in geotech (demand up 15% UAE), PhD training, startups. AUA bridges UAE-Asia, vital post-oil diversification.

