Towards understanding corrosion initiation in concrete-influence of local concrete properties in the steel-concrete interfacial zone


Loading...

Date

2018-10-31

Publication Type

Conference Paper

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

Chloride-induced corrosion is the most common deterioration process for reinforced infrastructure objects. Improving the understanding of the conditions for initiation of localized corrosion is urgently needed. Research is focused on the influence of “defects” at the steel-concrete interface (SCI), as these weak points might be responsible for corrosion initiation. In contrast to numerous studies with “lab concrete”, this study reports results from reinforced concrete cores drilled from old infrastructure objects containing a non-corroding rebar. In contrast to laboratory studies, this guarantees real conditions at the SCI comprising also irregularities such as air voids, plastic settlement voids, cracks, etc. This allows to study chloride-induced corrosion in real conditions and to determine the so-called “critical chloride content” Ccrit. Visual inspection of the SCI enables to establish (or not) influences of the local conditions at the SCI and Ccrit. It was found that Ccrit strongly decreased with the carbonation depth, even if the carbonation front had not reached the steel. Moreover, coarse air voids and cracks were in this study not particularly susceptible sites for corrosion initiation.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

199

Pages / Article No.

4002

Publisher

EDP Sciences

Event

5th International Conference on Concrete Repair, Rehabilitation and Retrofitting (ICCRRR 2018)

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Organisational unit

09593 - Angst, Ueli / Angst, Ueli check_circle

Notes

Funding

Related publications and datasets