4.4 Article

Modeling Electrochemical Performance of Reinforced Concrete in Natural Marine Airborne-Exposure Environments: DURACON Project, 10-Year Evaluation

Journal

CORROSION
Volume 79, Issue 7, Pages 719-731

Publisher

NATL ASSOC CORROSION ENG
DOI: 10.5006/4235

Keywords

chloride; corrosion; concrete cracks; durability; empirical models

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This research evaluated the corrosion situation of reinforced concrete specimens in different environments. The results showed that corrosion was more severe in tropical environments.
This research evaluation consisted of a detailed statistical analysis of the recorded data in 72 reinforced concrete specimens, from 12 natural test sites (in nine countries) located in chloride-laden environments (marine airborne-exposure test sites located between 50 m and 250 m from seashore), during a natural exposure period of 10 y. The parameters evaluated included the concrete physical-mechanical characteristics; meteorochemical information; natural reinforcing steel's instantaneous corrosion current density (i(corr)) and cumulative i(corr); and concrete chloride concentration; surface crack width and rebar cross-section loss correlations. This statistical analysis resulted in empirical instantaneous i(corr) predictions as a function of the exposure microclimates, through linear multiple regressions. These models showed a high linear dependence of the cumulative i(corr) with the concrete capillary absorption as well as with the meteorochemical parameters. Results obtained in this investigation showed higher corrosion aggressiveness in tropical environments when compared to nontropical ones. The cumulative i(corr) proved to be an effective tool to indicate the corrosive likelihood and differentiate the stages of Tuutti's service life model.

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