Title
Cathodic protection of reinforced concrete structures in the Netherlands - Experience and developments: Cathodic protection of concrete - 10 years experience
Author
TNO Bouw
Polder, R.B.
Publication year
1998
Abstract
Cathodic protection (CP) of reinforcing steel in concrete structures has been used successfully for over 20 years. CP is able to stop corrosion in a reliable and economical way where chloride contamination has caused reinforcement corrosion and subsequent concrete damage. To new structures where corrosion is anticipated, cathodic prevention can be applied. Recently the state-of-the-art was described and a draft European standard has been published. In The Netherlands, CP was introduced in 1987 and since then 20 full scale projects were executed. In all cases, alternatives such as replacement of the elements or conventional repair were considered, but CP was preferred for reasons of practicability, safety and durability. Most structures with CP in The Netherlands concern mixed in chloride and relatively small precast concrete elements. In 1996, CP was applied to parts of a post-tensioned bridge. Based on practical experience, a National Technical Recommendation was published. This paper describes the history, the principles and three examples.
Subject
Concrete
Corrosion
Cathodic protection
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:5d7c4099-c82d-4db6-83d8-4e9b834aa2b5
TNO identifier
280463
ISSN
0046-7316
Source
Heron, 43 (43), 3-14
Document type
article