Approach to consider self-corrosion in corrosion monitoring of reinforced concrete structures exposed to chlorides

Andreas Fraundorfer, Christoph Dauberschmidt, Christoph Gehlen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Corrosion processes of steel in concrete contaminated with chlorides take place as macrocell corrosion as well as self-corrosion (i.e., microcell corrosion). While macrocell corrosion can be detected by element current measurement, self-corrosion cannot be precisely determined electrochemically. This results in deviations in corrosion investigations between the mass losses calculated coulometrically from macrocell current measurements and the actual, corrosion-related gravimetric mass losses. This is relevant in practice as part of corrosion monitoring. In the following, a simple approach is presented by considering this self-corrosion current mathematically in the macrocell current measurement. The empirical regression functions determined for this purpose can be applied to a large number of different influencing parameters and allow the determination of the cumulative steel degradation at time-varying macrocell current densities under consideration of different safety levels. This allows a much more accurate estimation of the actual corrosion-induced mass losses during corrosion monitoring than previously possible.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)516-528
Number of pages13
JournalMaterials and Corrosion
Volume75
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2024

Keywords

  • chloride
  • degradation
  • macrocell
  • microcell
  • monitoring
  • reinforcement
  • self-corrosion

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