On the characterisation of steel corrosion and the resulting concrete damage using tomography
Doktorsavhandling, 2025
The overall aim was to characterise steel corrosion and the resulting damage in reinforced concrete at the material scale using X-ray and neutron computed tomography, within the context of accelerated corrosion experiments. The focus was on extracting quantitative information from the tomography data. A subset of the image-derived characteristics were then integrated into a finite element model to gain additional insight into the mechanical effects of corrosion. In addition, other complementary techniques were employed, including distributed optical fibre sensing, electrical resistance measurements and chemical analysis, for monitoring processes that tomography alone could not capture.
The work demonstrated that tomography could be used to quantify a broad range of corrosion and damage-related characteristics. These include the size and spatial distribution of interfacial voids, corrosion penetration depth, corrosion morphology, the volumetric expansion coefficient of corrosion products and the volumetric strain and normal stress in the corrosion layer. Moreover, 3D deformations in the cementitious matrix were measured through local digital volume correlation.
A key finding was the identification of a spatial correlation between larger interfacial voids and pitting corrosion, highlighting void size as a critical factor influencing localised attack. In addition, the volumetric expansion coefficient of corrosion products was found to be close to four, consistent with previous image-based studies. Furthermore, the mechanical response in the corrosion layer indicated a non-linear behaviour of corrosion products.
Together, the findings demonstrate how experimental imaging and numerical modelling can be combined to advance the understanding of corrosion-induced damage in reinforced concrete, providing insights that neither approach could provide on its own.
Tomography
Corrosion Characteristics
Steel Corrosion
Corrosion-Induced Cracking
Finite Element Modelling
Reinforced Concrete
Författare
Andreas Alhede
Chalmers, Arkitektur och samhällsbyggnadsteknik, Konstruktionsteknik
A two-stage study of steel corrosion and internal cracking revealed by multimodal tomography
Construction and Building Materials,;Vol. 394(2023)
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift
Monitoring corrosion-induced concrete cracking adjacent to the steel-concrete interface
Materials and Structures/Materiaux et Constructions,;Vol. 56(2023)
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift
Characterisation of steel corrosion and matrix damage in reinforced mortar combining analytical, electrical and image-based techniques
Cement and Concrete Research,;Vol. 190(2025)
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift
Alhede, A., Dijkstra, J., Lundgren, K. Linking image-based corrosion characterisation to the mechanical response in reinforced mortar
In this research, advanced 3D imaging techniques; X-ray and neutron computed tomography, were used to look inside concrete specimens and study how corrosion develops and affects the material from within. These techniques are primarily suited for small-scale samples and are typically performed in laboratory environments. Still, they made it possible to observe internal processes in great detail, without damaging the samples.
The goal was to better understand what happens inside the concrete when steel corrodes. By studying corrosion in detail under controlled conditions, this knowledge is intended to contribute to future efforts to assess corrosion in full-scale structures. Using the 3D image data, it was possible to measure the loss of steel cross-sectional area, track how this loss was distributed along the steel surface, and observe how the corrosion products expanded and exerted pressure on the surrounding concrete. Other tools, like distributed fibre-optics and chemical analysis, were also used to monitor processes that imaging alone could not capture.
One important finding was that large air voids at the steel–concrete interface significantly increase the risk of corrosion initiation and propagation in those areas. By combining experimental observations with computer modelling, the study also revealed how corrosion products behave under pressure: how they expand, compress and interact with the surrounding concrete. This made it possible to estimate mechanical effects that had not previously been measured directly. Together, these methods offer a new way to study corrosion -- one that in future could help engineers detect hidden corrosion damage earlier and design concrete structures that last longer.
Sprickor av korrosion: bildbaserade metoder kombinerade med modellering
Formas (2019-00497), 2020-01-01 -- 2022-12-31.
Spjälksprickor som funktionsindikator för befintliga konstruktioner
Trafikverket (TRV2021/27819), 2021-01-01 -- 2023-12-31.
Spjälksprickor som funktionsindikator för befintliga konstruktioner, del 2
Trafikverket (TRV2024/62846), 2024-08-01 -- 2026-12-15.
Utvärdering av korroderade betongkonstruktioners säkerhet från visuell inspektion
Formas (2022-01175), 2023-01-01 -- 2025-12-31.
Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)
Byggkonstruktion
ISBN
978-91-8103-247-5
Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5705
Utgivare
Chalmers
SB-H6, Sven hultins gata 6, Chalmers
Opponent: Associate Professor Els Verstrynge, Department of Civil Engineering, KU Leuven, Belgium