Electrochemistry and capillary condensation theory reveal the mechanism of corrosion in dense porous media


Date

2018

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

Corrosion in carbonated concrete is an example of corrosion in dense porous media of tremendous socio-economic and scientific relevance. The widespread research endeavors to develop novel, environmentally friendly cements raise questions regarding their ability to protect the embedded steel from corrosion. Here, we propose a fundamentally new approach to explain the scientific mechanism of corrosion kinetics in dense porous media. The main strength of our model lies in its simplicity and in combining the capillary condensation theory with electrochemistry. This reveals that capillary condensation in the pore structure defines the electrochemically active steel surface, whose variability upon changes in exposure relative humidity is accountable for the wide variability in measured corrosion rates. We performed experiments that quantify this effect and find good agreement with the theory. Our findings are essential to devise predictive models for the corrosion performance, needed to guarantee the safety and sustainability of traditional and future cements.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

8

Pages / Article No.

7407

Publisher

Nature

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Organisational unit

09593 - Angst, Ueli / Angst, Ueli check_circle

Notes

Funding

154062 - Formulation, use and durability of concrete with low clinker cements (SNF)

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