An experimental study of cathodic protection for chloride contaminated reinforced concrete

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Abstract

Cathodic protection (CP) is being increasingly used on reinforced concrete structures to protect steel reinforcing bars from corrosion in aggressive conditions. Due to the complexity of environmental conditions, the design specifications in national and international standards are still open to discussion to achieve both sufficient and efficient protection for reinforced concrete structures in engineering practices. This paper reports an experimental research to investigate the influence of chloride content on concrete resistivity, rebar corrosion rate and the performance of CP operation using different current densities. It aims to understand the correlation between the chloride content and concrete resistivity together with the CP current requirement, and to investigate the precision of the CP design criteria in standards.

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APA

Oleiwi, H. M., Wang, Y., Curioni, M., Chen, X., Yao, G., Augusthus-Nelson, L., … Shabalin, I. (2018). An experimental study of cathodic protection for chloride contaminated reinforced concrete. Materials and Structures/Materiaux et Constructions, 51(6). https://doi.org/10.1617/s11527-018-1273-1

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