4.6 Article

Procedure for calculating the chloride diffusion coefficient and surface concentration from a profile having a maximum beyond the concrete surface

Journal

MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
Volume 48, Issue 4, Pages 863-869

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1617/s11527-015-0543-4

Keywords

Concrete; Chlorides; Profile; Maximum; Surface concentration; Corrosion

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Chlorides induce local corrosion in the steel reinforcements when reaching the bar surface. The measurement of the rate of ingress of these ions, is made by mathematically fitting the so called error function equation into the chloride concentration profile, obtaining so the diffusion coefficient and the chloride concentration at the concrete surface. However, the chloride profiles do not always follow Fick's law by having the maximum concentration at the concrete surface, but often the profile shows a maximum concentration more in the interior, which indicates a different composition and performance of the most external concrete layer with respect to the internal zones. The paper presents a procedure prepared during the time of the RILEM TC 178-TMC: Testing and modeling chloride penetration in concrete, which suggests neglecting the external layer where the chloride concentration increases and using the maximum as an apparent surface concentration, called C (max) and to fit the error function equation into the decreasing concentration profile towards the interior. The prediction of evolution should be made also from the maximum.

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