NTL Record

Title Materials and Methods for Corrosion Control of Reinforced and Prestressed Concrete Structures in New Construction
Record ID 8692
Personal Name
Creator
Smith, J. L.; Virmani, Yash Paul
Corporate Creator United States. Department of Transportation. Federal Highway Administration. Office of Infrastructure Research and Development; United States. Federal Highway Administration. Southern Resource Center
Corporate
Contributor
United States. Department of Transportation. Federal Highway Administration. Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center
Publisher United States. Federal Highway Administration
Publication Date 20000803
Language English
Abstract Salt-induced reinforcing steel corrosion in concrete bridges has undoubtedly become a considerable economic burden to many State and local transportation agencies. Since the iron in the steel has a natural tendency to revert eventually to its most stable oxide state, this problem will, unfortunately, still be with us, but to a much lesser degree due to the use of various corrosion protection strategies currently used in new construction. The adoption of corrosion protection measures in new construction, such as the use of good design and construction practices, adequate concrete cover depth, low-permeability concrete, corrosion inhibitors, and coated reinforcing steel is significantly reducing the occurrence of reinforcing steel corrosion in new bridges. Because concrete has a tendency to crack, the use of good design and construction practices, adequate concrete cover depth, corrosion-inhibiting admixtures, and low-permeability concrete alone will not abate the problem. Even corrosion-inhibiting admixtures for concrete would probably not be of use when the concrete is cracked. This situation essentially leaves the reinforcing steel itself as the last line of defense against corrosion, and the use of a barrier system on the reinforcing steel, such as epoxy coating, another organic coating, or metallic coatings, is even more critical. It is likely that there may never be any organic coating that can withstand the extreme combination of constant wetting and high temperature and high humidity that reinforcing steel is exposed to in some marine environments. Either steel bars coated with a sufficiently stable metallic coating or some type of corrosion-resistant solid metal bars would have to be used. There are some very convincing reports of good corrosion-resistance performance shown by epoxy-coated steel bars in concrete bridge decks where the concrete does not remain constantly wet and other exposure conditions are not as severe. Recent improvements to the epoxy coating specifications and the tightening of requirements on the proper storage and handling of epoxy-coated reinforcing steel at construction sites will ensure good corrosion protection. For construction of new prestressed concrete bridge members (where for structural or other considerations epoxy-coated strands cannot be used), the use of a corrosion-inhibitor admixture in the concrete or in the grout, in conjunction with good construction designs and practices, would provide adequate corrosion protection. However, the long-term effectiveness of all commercial inhibitor admixtures has not been fully verified.
Rosap ID dot:14035
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/14035
TRT Terms Corrosion protection; Corrosion resistant materials; Reinforced concrete bridges; Prestressed concrete bridges
Classification NTL - HIGHWAY/ROAD TRANSPORTATION - Bridges and Structures;
NTL - HIGHWAY/ROAD TRANSPORTATION - Construction and Maintenance;
NTL - HIGHWAY/ROAD TRANSPORTATION - Materials
Geographical
Coverage
North America
TRIS Online
Accession No
795259
Report Number FHWA-RD-00-081
Resource type Research Paper
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/8000/8600/8692/00-081.pdf
Alternative URL http://www.tfhrc.gov/structur/00-081.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository