Experimental investigations on the effect of concrete quality, exposure conditions and duration of initial moist curing on carbonation rate in concretes exposed to urban, inland environment
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2020-02-12
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
This paper reports an investigation on the influence of inland exposure conditions, concrete quality and
cover depth on carbonation-induced corrosion initiation of steel in concretes exposed to urban, inland
environment. 100 mm concrete cube specimens of were prepared using five types of binder namely plain
Portland cement (CEM I 52.5 N, PC), 70/30 PC/FA (fly ash), 50/50 PC/BS (blast furnace slag), 90/10 PC/SF
(silica fume) and 60/30/10 PC/BS/SF at three w/b ratios of 0.40, 0.60 and 0.95. For all the concretes, two
companion sets of specimens were cast and cured for 7 and 28 days before being exposed to natural
indoor, outdoor-sheltered and outdoor-unsheltered environments. Concrete quality was characterized
using water sorptivity and oxygen permeability. Carbonation depths were measured at 6-month intervals
up to 2 years. The results show that as the quality of the concrete increases the rate of carbonation rate
decreases. The results also show that carbonation rate is more sensitive to concrete quality (binder type
and w/b ratio) than duration of curing. The indoor-exposed specimens exhibited higher carbonation rates
than the corresponding outdoor-exposed concretes. Blended cement concretes showed higher carbonation
rate than to the plain PC concretes. An empirical carbonation rate prediction model incorporating
both gas permeability and water sorptivity as input parameters is proposed.
Description
Keywords
Carbonation rate, Corrosion, Inland environment, Curing
Citation
Otieno, M., Ikotun, J., Ballim, Y. 2020. Experimental investigations on the effect of concrete quality, exposure conditions and duration of initial moist curing on carbonation rate in concretes exposed to urban, inland environment. Construction and Building Materials. 246: 1-9. doi:10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2020.118443
DOI
10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2020.118443