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Visual
Inspection
Delamination Surveys
Concrete Cover Measurements
Carbonation Depth
Chloride Content
Concrete Resistivity Measurements
Electrochemical Potential
Measurements
Visual
Inspection
The visual
inspection is the first step in any investigation. A
properly executed survey consists of a rigorous logging
of every defect seen on the concrete surface. The aim
of the visual survey is to give a first indication of
what is wrong and how extensive the damage is. If concrete
is spalling off, then that can be used as a measure
of extent of damage. In some cases, weighing the amount
of spalled concrete with time can be a direct measure.
The main
equipment is obviously the human eye and brain, aided
with a notebook, proforma or hand held computer and
a camera to record and locate defects. Binoculars may
be necessary, but close inspection is preferred if access
can be arranged. A systematic visual survey will be
planned in advance. Many companies that carry out condition
surveys have standardised systems for indicating the
nature and extent of defects. These are used in conjunction
with customised proformas for each element or face of
the structure. It is normal to record date, time and
weather conditions when doing the survey and to note
visual observations, such as water or salt run down,
damp areas etc.
Interpretation
is usually based on the knowledge and experience of
the engineer or technician conducting the survey. The
main limitation of visual inspection is the skill of
the inspector. Some defects can be mistaken for others.
When corrosion is suspected, it must be understood that
rust staining can come from iron bearing aggregates
rather than from corroding reinforcing steel. Different
types of cracking can be attributed to different causes
Visual surveys must always be followed up by testing
to confirm the source and cause of deterioration
There is far more detail on these and other techniques in
the latest edition of my book. Details for ordering are on
the home page of the website.
Delamination
Surveys
As corrosion
proceeds the corrosion product formed takes up a larger
volume than the steel consumed, building up tensile
stresses around the rebars. A layer of corroding rebars
will often cause a planar fracture at rebar depth prior
to spalling of the concrete. The aim of a delamination
survey is to measure the amount of cracking between
the rebars before it becomes apparent at the surface.
It should be noted that this can be a very dynamic situation.
The delamination
survey with a hammer is often conducted alongside the
visual survey with hollow sounding areas marked directly
onto the surface of the structure with a suitable permanent
or temporary marker and then recorded on the visual
survey pro forma. The hammer or chain drag survey is
usually quicker, cheaper and more accurate than alternatives
such as radar, ultrasonics or infrared thermography.
The other techniques do have their uses, e.g. in large
scale surveys of bridge decks (ultrasonics and infrared),
or waterproofing membranes or other concrete defects
(ultrasonics and radar). The reader is recommended to
review the literature for further information.
For interpretation,
the experience of the inspector is vital. A skilled,
experienced technician will often produce better results
than the more qualified but less experienced engineer.
Trapped water within cracks, deep cracks (where bars
are deep within the structure) and heavy traffic noise
can complicate the accurate measurement of delamination.
It is
common during concrete repairs for the amount of delamination
to be far more extensive than delamination surveys indicate,
because of the inaccuracy of the techniques available
and also because of the time between survey and repair.
Once corrosion has started, delaminations can initiate
and grow rapidly. An underestimate of 40% or more is
not unusual and should be borne in mind when budgeting
for repairs.
Carbonation
Depth
There
are two principal causes of corrosion. They are chloride
contamination and carbonation of the concrete. Any survey
must distinguish between the two. The distinction is
important because the type of repair may be determined
by the cause of corrosion. The neutralisation of the
pore solution by the carbonation process leads to a
"carbonation front", where there is a transition from
around pH 12 to pH 8.
Carbonation
is easily measured by exposing fresh concrete and spraying
with phenolphthalein indicator solution. The measurement
can be done either by breaking away a fresh surface
(e.g. between the cluster of drill holes used for chloride
drilling), or by coring and splitting, or cutting the
core in the laboratory. The phenolphthalein solution
remains clear where concrete is carbonated and turns
pink where concrete is still alkaline. The best indicator
solution for maximum contrast of the pink coloration
is a solution of phenolphthalein in alcohol and water.
If the concrete is very dry then a light misting with
water prior to applying the phenolphthalein will also
help show the color. Petrographic analysis will also
reveal carbonated and partially carbonated zones under
an optical microscope.
Sampling
can allow the average and standard deviation of the
carbonation depth to be calculated. If the carbonation
depth is compared with the average reinforcement cover,
then the amount of depassivated steel can be estimated.
If the carbonation rate can be determined from historical
data and laboratory testing then the progression of
depassivation with time can be calculated.
In some
aggregates accurate phenolphthalein readings are difficult
to obtain. Some concrete mixes are dark in colour and
colour change may not be visible. Care must be taken
that no contamination of the surface occurs from dust
and the phenolphthalein sprayed surface must be freshly
exposed or it may be carbonated before testing. High
alumina cement (HAC) concrete does not show the colour
change well although HAC concretes may be highly susceptible
to carbonation because of low alkali content.
It is
also possible for the phenolphthalein to bleach at very
high pH, e.g. after electrochemical chloride extraction
or realkalization. If the sample is left for a few hours,
it will turn pink. There can also be problems on buried
structures where carbonation by ground water does not
always produce the clear carbonation front induced by
atmospheric carbon dioxide ingress. Also phenolphthalein
changes color at pH 9.5 while concrete starts to corrode
below pH 11. This could be important in realkalized
concrete, where the pH may not reach 11, but may reach
9.5.
Chloride
Content
Chlorides
can be cast into concrete or can be transported in from
the environment. The chloride ion attacks the passive
layer even though there is no significant drop in pH.
Chlorides act as catalysts to corrosion. They are not
consumed in the process, but help to break down the
passive layer of oxide on the steel and allow the corrosion
process to proceed quickly. Chloride contents are measured
by sampling the concrete and analysing a liquid extracted
from the sample. This is usually done by mixing acid
with concrete dust from drillings or crushed core samples.
An alternative is pore water extraction by squeezing
samples of concrete or, more usually, mortar. This technique
is frequently used in laboratory experimental work as
it is often difficult to extract useful pore water samples
from field concrete. A third technique is to crush concrete
and boil it in water to extract water soluble chlorides
only.
To measure
the chloride profile in the concrete, chloride samples
should be collected incrementally from the surface either
by taking drillings or sections from cores. The first
5mm is usually discarded as being directly influenced
by the immediate environment and then measurements of
chloride content made at suitable increments. For improved
statistical accuracy, multiple adjacent drillings are
made and the depth increments from each drilling are
mixed. There are several ways of measuring the chlorides
once samples are taken. Field measurements of acid soluble
chloride can be made using a chloride specific ion electrode.
Conventional titration e.g. by BS 1881 part 124 and
potentiometric titration methods are also available.
As well
as acid soluble chloride, there are the water soluble
chloride tests (ASTM C 1218, American Association of
State Highway Officers (AASHTO) Test T 260 and Federal
Highway Administration Report FHWA RD-77-85). These
techniques use different levels of pulverisation of
large samples that are refluxed with water to extract
the supposedly unbound chlorides. These chlorides are
or can become free in the pore water to cause corrosion
as opposed to the chlorides bound by the aluminates
in the concrete, or bound up in some aggregates of marine
origin. The water soluble chloride test is rather less
accurate than the acid soluble test because some of
the "bound" chlorides can be released, and the finer
the grinding the more will be extracted. However, this
test can be useful in showing the corrosion condition
where chlorides have been cast into concrete, and particularly
where aggregates are known to contain chlorides that
do not leach into the pore water.
The corrosion
threshold is usually given as approximately 0.4% chloride
by weight of cement, 0.05% chloride by weight of concrete
or 1.2 lb/cu. yd. of concrete. This is only an approximation
because:
- concrete
pH (14 - log10 of the OH- concentration), varies with
the cement powder and the concrete mix. A small pH
change is a massive change in OH- concentration, and
therefore the threshold moves radically with pH;
- chlorides
can be bound chemically (by aluminates) and physically
(by absorption on the pore walls). This removes them
(temporarily or permanently) from the corrosion reaction;
- some
aggregates contain chlorides that cannot be leached
into the pore water. They do not play any part in
the corrosion threshold but will show up on acid soluble
chloride tests.
- in
very dry concrete, corrosion may not occur even at
very high Cl- concentration as the water is missing;
- in
saturated concrete corrosion may not occur even at
a very high Cl- concentration as the oxygen is missing.
Corrosion
can be observed at 0.1% chloride in some cases and none
seen above 1.0% chloride by weight of cement or more
in others. If d) or e) are the reasons that no corrosion
is observed, then a change in conditions may lead to
corrosion.
The important
questions from chloride measurement are how much of
the rebar is depassivated and how will this progress.
Points a) to c) above review how the corrosivity of
the chloride can change. If chlorides have been transported
in from outside, then the chloride profile can be used
along with measurements (or estimates) of the diffusion
constant to estimate future penetration rates and the
build-up of chloride at rebar depth.
In Europe
it is normal to quote the chloride content as a percentage
by weight of cement. In many cases assumptions must
be made about the cement content because the measurement
is by weight of sample (concrete), and the true cement
content is not known.
Concrete
Resistivity Measurements
The four
probe resistivity meter is now used for measurement
of concrete resistivity on site. The measurement can
be used to indicate the possible corrosion activity
if steel is depassivated. The electrical resistivity
is an indication of the amount of moisture in the pores,
and the size and tortuosity of the pore system. Resistivity
is strongly affected by concrete quality, i.e. cement
content, water/cement ratio, curing and additives used.
The four
probe resistivity meter used for soil resistivity measurements
has been modified for concrete application and is used
by pushing pins directly onto the concrete surface with
moisture or gels to enhance the electrical contact.
There at least two versions of the equipment. Other
variations use drilled in probes or a simpler, less
accurate two probe system.
An alternative
approach measures the resistivity of the cover concrete
by a two electrode method using the reinforcing network
as one electrode and a surface probe as the other.
Concrete
resistivity of the area around the sensor is obtained
by the formula:
Resistivity
= 2 . R . D (ohm.cm)
where:
R
is the resistance by the "iR drop" from a pulse between
the sensor electrode and the rebar network;
D is the electrode diameter of the sensor
The
interpretation of resistivity measurements with regard
to corrosion is empirical. The following interpretation
of resistivity measurements has been cited when referring
to depassivated steel.
| >
20 kohm.cm |
Low
Corrosion rate |
| 10-20
kohm.cm |
Low
to moderate corrosion rate |
| 5-10
kohm.cm |
High
corrosion rate |
| <5
kohm.cm |
Very
High Corrosion rate |
Researchers
working with a field linear polarisation device for
corrosion rate measurement have conducted laboratory
and field research and found the following correlation
between resistivity and corrosion rates using the surface
to rebar two electrode approach:
| >100kohm.cm |
Cannot
distinguish between active and passive steel |
| 50-100kohm.cm |
Low
corrosion rate |
| 10-50kohm.cm |
Moderate
to high corrosion where steel is active |
| <10kohm.cm
|
Resistivity
is not the controlling parameter |
In
this method and interpretation resistivity is used along
side linear polarisation measurements (see below).
The
resistivity measurement is a useful additional measurement
to aid in identifying problem areas or confirming concerns
about poor quality concrete. Measurements can only be
considered along side other measurements. Reinforcing
bars will interfere with resistivity measurements.
Electrochemical
Potential Measurements
Measurement
of the electrochemical potential of the steel with respect
to a standard reference electrode gives an indication
of the corrosion risk of the steel.
The
silver/silver chloride (Ag/AgCl) electrode, mercury/mercury
oxide (Hg/HgO) and sometimes the standard calomel electrode
(SCE) are commonly used as reference electrodes for
steel in concrete. Copper/copper sulphate (CSE) cells
are also used but are not recommended because of the
maintenance needs, the risk of contamination of the
cell, the difficulty of use in all orientations and
the leakage of copper sulphate. A high impedance digital
voltmeter is used to collect the data in the simplest
configuration. Other options are to use a logging voltmeter
(or logger attached to a voltmeter), an array of cells
with automatic logging or a reference electrode linked
to a wheel for rapid data collection.
Interpretation
is most reliable for cast in situ, reinforced concrete
with chloride induced corrosion due to diffusion of
sea or deicing salts. ASTM C-876 states that there is
a high risk of corrosion if the potential is more negative
than -350mV CSE there is a high risk of corrosion. If
the potential is less negative than -200mV there is
a low risk of corrosion. In between those values the
risk is indeterminate. This interpretation does not
necessarily apply to carbonated structures, precast
concrete elements or elements with chlorides cast into
the concrete. The readings can also be affected by moisture
content, with the base of columns or walls showing more
negative potentials regardless of corrosion activity.
Stray currents can also influence the readings, this
can be used as a diagnostic tool where stray current
corrosion is suspected in the presence of DC fields.
Very
negative potentials have been measured below the water
line in marine environments, however, the lack of oxygen
will often slow the corrosion rate to negligible levels.
"Junction
potentials" can be created by the change in chemical
concentrations within the concrete. This effect was
severe in a concrete slab subjected to chloride removal,
but that may be due to the treatment, rather than being
a real problem under normal conditions. Junction potentials
may explain the erratic changes in potential seen in
carbonated structures. The potential changes across
the carbonation front because of the pH change, and
because the concentration of dissolved ions changes
as carbonated concrete wets and dries quickly because
the pores are narrowed by a lining of calcium carbonate.

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