This paper is concerned with the mechanisms governing reinforcement corrosion in concretes in marine environments and how they influence the manner of local failure of the concrete. Despite the high pH of the concrete, air voids from inadequate concrete compaction can, under chloride conditions, produce localized pitting corrosion of adjacent steel bars. This may continue, under the hydrogen evolution cathodic reaction with the build-up of rusts causing localized concrete failure, followed by exposure of the steel to the environment, removal of the elevated concrete pH, and a subsequent much higher rate of corrosion. A completely separate deterioration process is the gradual dissolution and loss of concrete alkalis with time. This can lower the concrete pH sufficiently to permit general corrosion of steel to be thermodynamically feasible, it increases concrete permeability and it facilitates access to the environment to permit corrosion by oxygen reduction. The two processes produce different types of concrete failure. Examples drawn from actual reinforced concrete structures are given and the mechanisms explained, including the often-observed build-up of FeOOH-type rusts on the outside of magnetite rust layers well inside concretes. The implications that follow and research needs are discussed.
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1 April 2023
Research Article|
October 16 2022
Mechanisms in Long-Term Marine Corrosion of Steel Reinforcement in Concretes
R.E. Melchers
R.E. Melchers
‡
‡Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]. Centre for Infrastructure Performance and Reliability, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales 2308, Australia.
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‡Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]. Centre for Infrastructure Performance and Reliability, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales 2308, Australia.
Online ISSN: 1938-159X
Print ISSN: 0010-9312
© 2023, AMPP
2023
CORROSION (2023) 79 (4): 380–387.
Citation
R.E. Melchers; Mechanisms in Long-Term Marine Corrosion of Steel Reinforcement in Concretes. CORROSION 1 April 2023; 79 (4): 380–387. https://doi.org/10.5006/4164
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