Title: EPOXY-COATED REBARS IN CONRETE CONSTRUCTION
1 EPOXY-COATED REBARS IN CONRETE CONSTRUCTION
- Ahmad S. Al-Gahtani
- Department of Civil Engineering
- King Fahd University of Petroleum Minerals
2Epoxy coating procedure
3 Background
- Deterioration of bridge decks in the 1960s
- Research by U.S FHWA
- First bridge in 1973 in Philadelphia
- By 1977, 17 states adopted the use of FBECR
- Early studies showed FBECR is effective in
reducing corrosion by many folds (11-41 times)
compared to black steel(FHWA 1977-81)
4 Florida Experience
- Florida long key bridges constructed in 1979
- In 1986 substructures showed signs of corrosions
in major five bridges - Corrosion was in tidal/splash zone (0.6-2.4 m
above water mark)
5 Florida Investigation
- Disbondment of coating
- Water blisters under the coating
- Corrosion initiated at damages/imperfections
- Corrosion aggravated by
- - Fabrication bending
- - Exposure to salt air in construction yard
- - Coating defects/damages
- In 1992 Florida D.O.T. discontinued
- use of FBECR.
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7Performance of ECR in Pennsylvania (I)
- 11 bridges with ECR (ages 6 to 10 years) and 11
bridges (comparable ages) with plain rebar
subjected to deicing salt service. Initial
stages of corrosion observed in the plain bar
bridges but not in the ECR structures. Chloride
0.7 Kg/m3. 1987
8Performance of ECR in Pennsylvania (II)
- Investigation of epoxy coated rebar and other
protection systems of 21 bridge decks ( ages 10
years) in deicing salt , Chloride 7 kg/m3 Both
ECR rebar provided the most effective
protection performance, some rebars being in
excellent condition despite high chloride
contents .
9Performance of ECR in Canada (C-SHRP)
- 19 ECR structures (3 to 16 years old) The ECR
bars showed varying degrees of corrosion damage,
with concrete damage and/or significant corrosion
on bars at cracks and in low cover areas with
high chloride. Many uncorroded after up to 16
years service when no significant chloride had
reached the bars. About 50 of bars showed
reduced coating adhesion, (1992).
10Performance of ECR in Canada (Ontario)
- Ontario MOT, during 1989-1995, evaluated ECR in
numerous structures in deicing salt service.
Initially found little deterioration of ECR
except for damage in a barrier wall ? 10 years
old. By 1992 multiple instances of ECR corrosion
were observed. Coating disbondment was observed.
ECR was viewed as providing an improvement over
plain steel, but the suitability for 75-year
durability was questioned 16.
11Performance of ECR in New York Bridge Decks
(1992)
- DOT examined 14 of 7-12 year old "worst-case"
bridges with deck surface distress ed in deicing
salt service. Rebars from cores, 65 had
negligible corrosion, 30 had corrosion at ribs
only and 5 showed more pronounced corrosion. No
undercoating was observed surrounding corroded
areas. Chloride ?2 Kg/m3 the incidence of
corrosion was not observed to be correlated with
chloride level. Long-term corrosion performance
could not be quantified yet.
12Performance of epoxy coated in Virginia (1993)
- Transportation Research Council investigated the
condition of ECR in two test bridges built in
1977 and in deicing salt service for 13 years.
Chloride ?2 Kg/m3) . ECR bars were of early
types, with many flaws and holidays. However,
coating disbondment or signs of severe rusting
were not observed. It was concluded that the
combination of adequate depth of cover and ECR
provided excellent protection.
13 Performance of ECR in a Coastal Georgia Bridge
(1993)
- Georgia DOT examined ECR in the substructure of
a 9-year old marine bridge (seawater tidal and
splash service). Coating disbondment was
observed at several of the ECR samples extracted.
Severe corrosion of ECR was observed at an area
of poor concrete consolidation. It was concluded
that ECR provided questionable added corrosion
protection, and recommended that epoxy coating
not be used in continually wet marine
substructure.
14 Performance of ECR in West Virginia Bridges
(1994)
- DOT investigated 14 bridge decks (?13 years old)
in deicing salt service using ECR and plain bar.
ECR bridges exhibited little or no distress
while plain bar bridges showed 2-17 deck
delamination. Chloride ?1.5 to 3 Kg/m3. It was
concluded that use of ECR resulted in dramatic
reduction of delamination in bridge decks.
15Performance of ECR in Coastal North Carolina
Bridges (1993-1995)
- DOT examined the ECR in the substructure of
three marine bridges (splash-tidal seawater
service), ? 8 years old. Chloride 1-2 Kg/m.
No significant corrosion of ECR or coating
disbondment was observed. It was concluded that
epoxy coating in the selected bridges was
providing adequate corrosion protection at time
of the survey.
16Performance of ECR in California (1995)
- 4 bridges, 7 to 10 years old in deicing salt
service. Preliminary findings revealed ECR
corrosion in 8 of 32 cores examined chloride ?10
Kg/m3. Some bars were showing no corrosion with
6 Kg/m3 chloride. Coating disbondment was
observed at some of the bars. The concrete was
often dry for extended time periods. The bridges
examined were not showing severe distress.
17Performance of ECR in Indiana (1995)
- Investigations by Purdue University of 5 bridges
in deicing salt service. Preliminary findings
showed no corrosion or disbondment ,Chloride ?2.5
Kgm3 . Corrosion of ECR was seen at one bridge
at bends in the bar and chloride ?3 Kg/m3.
18Performance of ECR in Kansas (1995)
- DOT investigated Bridges in deicing salt
service made in 1995 24 . Preliminary findings
show chloride levels at rebar depth less than 0.5
Kg/3 and good ECR condition.
19Performance of ECR in Minnesota (1995)
- DOT in 1994 investigated 10 bridges in deicing
salt service. Cores taken from cracked
concrete showed only one core with ECR
corrosion. Satisfaction with ECR performance was
reported, indicating that bridge overlays and
good concreting were also factors in the observed
performance.
20 Code Amendments
- Upgrade in specification,
- -Min. thickness 130m 175 m
- - Number of holidays 6/m 3/m
- - Damages 2 1
- - Improvement of adhesion, handling
- and storage procedures
- - Plant certification program
21Sales in USA
22 Use of FBECR in the Gulf
- Early 1980s used in some projects in U.A.E.
- By mid 1980s set up of coating plants in U.A.E.
(now 5 plants) - Early 1990s 3 plants established in Eastern
Province of S.A. - 1996/97 New plant in State of Qatar.
- Total 9 plants
23Sales in Saudi Arabia
Tones
Time (Year)
24Research Experience
- CE-KFUPM
- Specimens prisms 120 X 120 X 305 mm four
bars with 25mm cover - Reinforcements Mild steel, galvanized steel,
FBECR and stainless steel - Contamination 2.4, 4.8 and 19.2 kg/m3 of
chloride - Exposure Natural exposure site, Dhahran
(above ground)
25Specimens at exposure site
26 Performance Criteria
- onset and propagation of cracks
- weight loss in rebar
- bar condition (rust and pitting)
27 Results (after 7 years exposure)
Black Steel
FBECR
Crack category 1 - No crack 4 - Wide 2 - Fine 5
- Heavy 3 - Medium 6 - Spalling
28Retrieved bars
29 RI-KFUPM Study
- Specimens prisms 62.5 X 100 X 305 mm
- 62.5 X 202 X 305 mm
- with 25 mm cover
- Reinforcements FBECR straight bars
- J-bend bars
- Exposure 5 sodium chloride solution,
- in room temp.
- (Accelerated lab. testing)
30 Results
- Coating disbondment
- Corrosion at coating cracks
- Corrosion started at deformation patterns
- Corrosion proceeded underneath coating
31Corrosion underneath coating
32 U.A.E. Study
- Dubai Municipality, 1991
- Specimens 150 X 150 X 360 mm with
10 mm and 30 mm cover - Reinforcements FBECR and black steel
- Exposure -Below ground
- -Tidal zone
- -Above ground
33 Results after 3 years
- FBECR generally in good conditions
- Some adhesion loss of coating for below and tidal
specimens - Specimens collected from construction sites were
far from satisfactory w.r.t. ASTM standards
34 Local Construction Practices
- Improper Cut and Bend at job sites
- Improper storage at sites
- No repair for damages
- Mix of coated and uncoated rebars
- Unskilled laborers (damages, scratches bending,
cutting, )
35Cut and Bend at job sites
36Storage at sites
37Coating damages
38Mix of rebars
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40Ineffective patching
41Sharp edge and seem in rebar
42Gulf Environment Conditions
- Favorable Corrosion Conditions
- - High temp. with salt laden humidity
- - High level of contamination of
- construction materials
Temp.
R.H.
Cl-
43 CONCLUDING REMARKS
- Good quality FBECR would provide satisfactory
protection if constructed with good quality
concrete. - Moisture and temperature of the exposure
conditions are key factors for the disbondment of
coating. - Epoxy-coating powders shall be handled without
exposure to high temperature (above 30C).
44 CONCLUDING REMARKS
- Long storage time for reinforcement and time
between cleaning and coating should be minimized. - Storage time at the construction site should be
limited. - Repair of damaged coating by touch-up should be
done immediately. - Plant fabrication is highly preferable.
45 CONCLUDING REMARKS
- Bending at site should be carried by proper
equipment and tools. - Mix of uncoated and coated reinforcement should
be avoided. - Construction interruption should be minimized.
- Manufacturers of rebars should produce more
suitable product for coating.
46THANKS
47 Initiation-Propagation Model