Concluding destructive investigation of a nine-year-old marine-exposed cracked concrete panel
Journal article, 2023

This study undertaken on a nine-year-old cracked concrete panel further investigates the impact of cracks on the corrosion performance of conventional steel reinforcement in marine-exposed concrete to explain observed monitoring data. The present data covers seven 1.80 m long (12.6 m) reinforcing bars embedded in good quality concrete (w/b = 0.40 and cover >75 mm). Each bar was crossed by two horizontal cracks (surface crack widths 0.20–0.30 mm). The investigation showed no corrosion on the surface of the reinforcing bars, in either cracked or uncracked areas. Two of the seven reinforcing bars were instrumented in the vicinity of the cracks. Extensive corrosion was found in the interior of all instrumented parts of these bars. This may explain the monitoring data despite the lack of corrosion on the exterior surface of the two instrumented rebars. However, with no other weaknesses, the remaining conventional rebars showed no impact from the cracks.

Characterization

Reinforcement corrosion

In-situ marine exposure

Cracks

Reinforced concrete

Author

Mette R. Geiker

Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)

Samanta Robuschi

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Structural Engineering

Karin Lundgren

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Structural Engineering

Charilaos Paraskevoulakos

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

Carsten Gundlach

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

Tobias Danner

Sintef Foundation for Scientific and Industrial Research At the Norwegian Institute of Technology

Ulla Hjorth Jakobsen

Danish Technological Institute

Alexander Michel

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

Cement and Concrete Research

0008-8846 (ISSN)

Vol. 165 107070

Subject Categories

Infrastructure Engineering

Other Materials Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.cemconres.2022.107070

More information

Latest update

2/7/2023 1