Title:
Chloride Penetration Profiles in Marine Environments
Author(s):
P. Castro, O. T. De Rincon, and E. Pazini
Publication:
Symposium Paper
Volume:
186
Issue:
Appears on pages(s):
371-390
Keywords:
chloride; climate; concretes; corrosion; marine environment; modeling
DOI:
10.14359/5567
Date:
5/1/1999
Abstract:
The chlorides from the sea and the marine breeze are the main source of corrosion in marine environments. Their penetration into concrete occurs through capillary absorption, diffusion or a mix of both. A chloride threshold for producing reinforcement corrosion can be predicted through mathematical models but no reliable results may be obtained if the action of environmental agents as the RH, temperature, winds, rains, and drying periods are not well known. Although these limitations are recognized in several works, there are few field data in the literature to support, according to different exposure conditions, the form of the chloride penetration profiles. This work presents the form of chloride profiles from different exposure conditions. It discusses their behavior and justifies the results according to the presence of the environmental conditions. Some of the results indicate that the environments with chloride saturation produce profiles with a well defined concentration gradient, while those with strong periods of rains, drying, winds, as well as strong variations of RH and temperature show a two-zone profile. In the last case, one zone is close to the concrete nucleus where the supposed reinforcement is positioned and that stays dampened due to the high chloride concentration, and the other one is close to the concrete surface, in which continuous wetting and drying cycles take place. It was also found that, under this research trial, the chloride penetration mechanism did not change with the micro-climate but nucleus concentration changed with the distance from the sea and concrete quality.