Corrosion in Concrete: Rebar Passivity, Chloride Threshold, and Cathodic Protection
Corrosion of reinforcing steel in concrete is the leading cause of premature deterioration of reinforced concrete infrastructure worldwide. Bridges, marine structures, parking garages, and building facades face service life reductions from decades to years when chloride-contaminated groundwater, seawater spray, or deicing salt solutions penetrate the concrete cover and destroy the protective passive film that normally keeps embedded steel corrosion-free for its intended design life. The annual global cost of rebar corrosion damage exceeds US$300 billion, making it one of the most economically significant materials degradation problems in civil engineering. Understanding the electrochemical mechanisms — passive film formation, chloride-induced depassivation, carbonation, and cathodic protection — is essential for materials engineers, structural engineers, and asset managers working on infrastructure durability.
- Steel is passive in fresh concrete at pH 12.5–13.5: a thin (<10 nm) iron oxide passive film spontaneously forms and suppresses corrosion current density to below 0.1 µA/cm².
- Chloride ions destroy the passive film when the [Cl⊃−]/[OH⊃−] ratio exceeds ~0.6, or approximately 0.4 wt% Cl by cement mass (ACI 318); pitting corrosion then initiates at localised defects in the film.
- Carbonation lowers the concrete pore solution pH below 11.5 by the reaction Ca(OH)² + CO² → CaCO³ + H²O, destroying the passive film and causing uniform corrosion across the entire rebar surface.
- Chloride ingress follows Fickian diffusion: C(x,t) = Cₛ × [1 − erf(x / 2√(D⊂c; × t))]; increasing cover depth and reducing D⊂c; by using SCMs (fly ash, slag, silica fume) are the primary design levers.
- Half-cell potential mapping per ASTM C876 quantifies the probability of active corrosion non-destructively; potentials more negative than −350 mV vs. Cu/CuSO⊂4; indicate >90% probability of corrosion.
- Impressed current cathodic protection (ICCP) per EN ISO 12696 is the only technique that stops active corrosion in chloride-contaminated concrete without removing contaminated cover; it works by polarising the rebar cathodic and is verified by the 100 mV depolarisation criterion.
The Passive Film: Protection Mechanism in Alkaline Concrete
The passive film on steel in concrete is the foundation of the entire corrosion protection system. When steel is embedded in fresh concrete, the highly alkaline pore solution (pH 12.5–13.5) drives the spontaneous formation of a thin but dense iron oxide/hydroxide film, approximately 5–10 nm thick, predominantly consisting of γ-FeOOH (lepidocrocite), Fe₃O₄ (magnetite), and amorphous Fe(OH)₃. This passive film is thermodynamically stable under the alkaline conditions described by the Fe–H₂O Pourbaix diagram.
Passive film stability: Pourbaix diagram (Fe-H₂O system)
At pH > 9, potential range −0.6 to +0.4 V vs. SHE:
Fe → Fe₂O₃ / Fe₃O₄ / FeOOH (passive region)
Corrosion current density in passive state:
i_corr < 0.1 µA/cm² → negligible metal loss rate
(~0.001 mm/year equivalent)
Active corrosion (post-depassivation):
i_corr = 1–100 µA/cm² → 0.01–1 mm/year metal loss
Mixed potential of steel in concrete pore solution:
E_corr ≈ −200 to −300 mV vs. Ag/AgCl (passive steel)
E_corr ≈ −400 to −600 mV vs. Ag/AgCl (actively corroding)
The passive film thickness and composition depend on the pore solution chemistry. Portland cement hydration produces Ca(OH)₂ (portlandite) as the primary pH-buffering phase, supplemented by NaOH and KOH from alkali sulfate dissolution. The steady-state pore solution in OPC concrete typically has: pH 12.5–13.8, [Na⁺] + [K⁺] = 100–900 mmol/L, [Ca²⁺] = 1–20 mmol/L, and [SO₄²⁻] = 5–50 mmol/L. The high pH is the sole reason for the passive film’s stability; reducing pH below ~11.5 destabilises the film and initiates active corrosion.
Effect of Supplementary Cementitious Materials on Pore Solution Chemistry
Partial replacement of Portland cement with supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) such as fly ash (15–30%), ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBS, 30–70%), or silica fume (5–10%) significantly reduces the alkali content of the pore solution. The pozzolanic reaction between SCM and Ca(OH)₂ consumes portlandite and reduces the pH buffer capacity. In high-GGBS concretes (70% replacement), the pore solution pH may drop to 11.5–12.0, reducing the margin above the passive film stability threshold. However, SCMs dramatically reduce the chloride diffusion coefficient (Dₙ) — often by a factor of 5–10 compared to plain OPC — more than compensating for the reduced alkalinity for most structural applications. The net effect is substantially improved durability in chloride environments.
Chloride-Induced Corrosion: Depassivation Mechanism and Threshold
Chloride-induced corrosion is the dominant failure mode for reinforced concrete in marine environments, coastal structures, bridge decks subjected to deicing salts, and parking structures. The mechanism involves competitive adsorption of Cl⁻ ions at passive film defect sites, displacing OH⁻ and O²⁻ ions that normally heal film damage, and eventually penetrating the film to create local anodic dissolution sites (pits).
The Chloride Threshold: Physical Chemistry
The critical condition for passive film breakdown is most accurately expressed as a ratio of free chloride to hydroxide ions in the pore solution:
Chloride threshold (Hausmann criterion, 1967):
[Cl⁻] / [OH⁻] > 0.6 → depassivation probable
At pH 12.5: [OH⁻] = 0.032 mol/L
Critical [Cl⁻] = 0.6 × 0.032 = 0.019 mol/L ≈ 0.07 wt% Cl by concrete mass
Expressed as fraction of cement mass (practical):
Chloride threshold: 0.2–0.4 wt% Cl / cement mass (typical range)
ACI 318-19: 0.30 wt% (prestressed concrete — lower threshold)
0.40 wt% (reinforced concrete in dry conditions)
EN 206: 0.20 wt% (XD/XS exposure classes — more conservative)
BS 8500: 0.20 wt% (chloride class CL 0.20, reinforced concrete)
Note: The threshold is not a fixed value — it varies with:
• pH of pore solution (higher pH → higher absolute [Cl⁻] threshold)
• Steel surface condition (mill scale vs. cleaned → different threshold)
• Presence of pits or crevices at rebar-concrete interface
• Carbonation (lowers pH, reduces threshold absolutely)
• Temperature (higher T → lower threshold)
Pitting Corrosion Mechanism on Rebar
Once the chloride threshold is exceeded locally, pitting corrosion initiates at passive film defects, inclusions in the steel surface (particularly MnS inclusions in carbon steel), or at the interface between mill scale and bare steel. The pit chemistry becomes strongly autocatalytic: inside the pit, Fe²⁺ hydrolyses to form FeOOH, consuming OH⁻ and generating H⁺, further reducing the local pH to 3–5. The low pH inside the pit sustains active dissolution even as the surrounding surface remains passive. Outside the pit, the cathodic reaction — oxygen reduction at the still-passive surface — consumes OH⁻ and generates hydroxide:
Electrochemical reactions in the rebar corrosion cell:
Anodic reaction (pit / active site):
Fe → Fe²⁺ + 2e⁻ (iron dissolution)
Fe²⁺ + 2OH⁻ → Fe(OH)₂ (ferrous hydroxide)
4Fe(OH)₂ + O₂ + 2H₂O → 4Fe(OH)₃ → FeOOH + H₂O (rust: goethite/lepidocrocite)
Cathodic reaction (passive surface / remote areas):
O₂ + 2H₂O + 4e⁻ → 4OH⁻ (oxygen reduction — dominant)
2H⁺ + 2e⁻ → H₂ (hydrogen evolution — acidic pits, minor)
Net volume expansion:
FeOOH: 2.1× volume of Fe
Fe(OH)₂: 3.7×
Fe₂O₃ (haematite): 2.2×
→ Internal pressure ~4–17 MPa → tensile cracking of concrete cover
Carbonation-Induced Corrosion
Carbonation is the reaction of atmospheric CO₂ (typically 0.03–0.04% by volume, rising to 0.1–1% in industrial or road-tunnel environments) with cement hydration products. The primary reaction is:
Carbonation reactions:
Ca(OH)₂ + CO₂ → CaCO₃ + H₂O (primary reaction; ΔpH: 12.5 → 8.5)
C-S-H gel + CO₂ → CaCO₃ + SiO₂·gel (secondary; slower)
NaOH/KOH + CO₂ → Na₂CO₃/K₂CO₃ (minor contribution)
Carbonation depth (simplified Papadakis model):
x_c = k_c × √t
k_c = (2[CO₂]_0 × D_CO₂) / (0.33 × [Ca(OH)₂]_0)
Where:
x_c = carbonation depth (mm)
t = time (years)
[CO₂]_0 = atmospheric CO₂ concentration (kg/m³)
D_CO₂ = effective CO₂ diffusion coefficient in concrete (m²/s)
[Ca(OH)₂]_0 = portlandite content of concrete (mol/m³)
Typical k_c values:
Dense, low w/c (0.40), sheltered: 1–2 mm/yr^0.5
Medium w/c (0.50), outdoor: 3–5 mm/yr^0.5
High w/c (0.60+), sheltered/dry: 6–10 mm/yr^0.5
Carbonation progresses as a relatively sharp front through the concrete. Once the front reaches the rebar, the pH at the steel surface falls from >12.5 to below 9, outside the Pourbaix passive region for iron at any practical potential. Unlike chloride-induced corrosion which initiates at discrete pits, carbonation-induced corrosion is generalised: corrosion initiates uniformly over the entire rebar surface within the carbonated zone, producing a relatively uniform layer of corrosion products and significant section loss over time.
Corrosion Stages: From Initiation to Structural Deterioration
Service life model — initiation period (Tuutti, 1982):
t_i = service life governed by time for Cl⁻ to reach threshold at rebar depth
C(c, t_i) = C_th → t_i = (c / (2 × erf⁻¹(1 − C_th/C_s)))² / D_c
Where:
c = cover depth (m)
C_th = chloride threshold (wt% of cement)
C_s = surface chloride concentration (wt% of cement)
D_c = effective chloride diffusion coefficient (m²/s)
Example: c = 40 mm, C_th = 0.4%, C_s = 3%, D_c = 5×10⁻¹² m²/s
→ t_i ≈ 40 years (design service life met for 50-year structure)
Same structure with c = 25 mm:
→ t_i ≈ 16 years (inadequate: fails long before 50-year design life)
Propagation period (Bazant model):
t_p ≈ δ_allow / (M_Fe × i_corr) / (2F × ρ_Fe × r₀)
Typically t_p = 2–15 years (much shorter than initiation period)
Measuring Corrosion: Half-Cell Potential and Electrochemical Techniques
Non-destructive electrochemical measurements are the primary tool for corrosion condition assessment of existing reinforced concrete structures without the need for core removal or destructive investigation.
Half-Cell Potential Mapping (ASTM C876)
The half-cell potential (HCP) test measures the open-circuit potential of the rebar surface relative to a portable reference electrode placed on the concrete surface, connected to the rebar via a lead wire. The potential distribution map identifies zones of actively corroding steel. The reference electrode is standardised per ASTM C876 as the Cu/CuSO₄ electrode (CSE), though saturated calomel (SCE) and Ag/AgCl are also used in practice:
ASTM C876 — Half-Cell Potential Interpretation (Cu/CuSO₄ reference):
E > −200 mV vs. CSE: < 10% probability of corrosion (passive)
−200 to −350 mV: Uncertain; further investigation warranted
E < −350 mV vs. CSE: > 90% probability of active corrosion
Conversion between reference electrodes:
E(vs. CSE) = E(vs. SCE) + 68 mV
E(vs. CSE) = E(vs. Ag/AgCl, sat.) + 74 mV
E(vs. SHE) = E(vs. CSE) + 316 mV
Note: HCP measures corrosion probability, not corrosion rate.
High negative potential only indicates active dissolution; it does not
quantify the rate of section loss. Linear polarisation resistance (LPR)
or galvanostatic pulse techniques are used to measure actual i_corr.
Linear Polarisation Resistance (LPR)
Linear polarisation resistance (LPR) measures the polarisation resistance Rᵀ, which is inversely proportional to the corrosion current density. A small potential perturbation (±10–20 mV) is applied and the resulting current response is measured. The Stern-Geary equation gives iₐ₀ₐₐ:
Stern-Geary equation:
i_corr = B / R_p
Where:
B = Stern-Geary constant (typically 26 mV for active steel, 52 mV for passive)
R_p = polarisation resistance (Ω·cm²)
i_corr = corrosion current density (µA/cm²)
Corrosion rate conversion:
CR (mm/year) = i_corr × M_Fe / (n × F × ρ_Fe)
= i_corr (µA/cm²) × 11.6 × 10⁻³ (mm/year, for iron)
Classification (Andrade & Alonso):
i_corr < 0.1 µA/cm²: Passive — negligible corrosion
0.1–0.5 µA/cm²: Low — no structural concern
0.5–1 µA/cm²: Moderate — monitoring required
1–10 µA/cm²: High — corrective action required
> 10 µA/cm²: Very high — immediate intervention
Cathodic Protection of Reinforced Concrete
Cathodic protection (CP) is the only electrochemical technique that can arrest active corrosion of rebar in chloride-contaminated or carbonated concrete without removing the contaminated cover. It works by shifting the electrochemical potential of the steel sufficiently negative to suppress anodic dissolution at all active sites simultaneously, converting the entire rebar surface to a cathode.
Impressed Current Cathodic Protection (ICCP)
ICCP for reinforced concrete applies a controlled DC current from an external power supply to an anode installed on or in the concrete surface. The anode distributes current over the concrete surface; it passes through the concrete (acting as the electrolyte) to reach the rebar cathode. Anode types used in ICCP for concrete include:
- Conductive coating anodes: Thermally sprayed zinc (EN ISO 2063), conductive polymer paints, or activated titanium mesh overlaid with cementitious cover. Low cost; suitable for vertical surfaces and bridge soffits.
- Slotted titanium mesh anodes: Titanium mesh coated with mixed metal oxides (MMO, typically Ir₂O₃/TaO₂) embedded in grouted slots. High current capacity; suitable for heavily contaminated structures.
- Discrete anode systems: Individual cylindrical MMO-coated titanium anodes installed in drilled holes around corroding zones; effective for patch repairs where full-surface application is impractical.
ICCP design parameters (EN ISO 12696):
Current density: 2–20 mA/m² of steel surface area
(lower for lightly contaminated; higher for severe Cl⁻)
Anode current density: <10 A/m² for MMO titanium (to avoid anode dissolution)
<5 A/m² for conductive coating anodes
Protection criterion — 100 mV depolarisation (EN ISO 12696, criterion A):
After switching off current, the potential must decay by ≥100 mV
within a 24-hour measurement window.
This criterion verifies that the applied current is sufficient to suppress
cathodic oxygen reduction and anodic iron dissolution at all active sites.
Alternative criterion (instant-off potential shift ≥ −100 mV from E_corr):
Suitable when 24-h depolarisation measurement is impractical.
Current distribution in concrete:
ρ_concrete = 20–1000 Ω·m (varies with moisture, chloride, temperature)
Higher conductivity (wet, high Cl⁻) → better current distribution
Lower conductivity (dry, low Cl⁻) → risk of non-uniform distribution
Sacrificial Anode Cathodic Protection (SACP) for Concrete
Sacrificial anodes for concrete are most commonly zinc or aluminium-alloy anodes either embedded directly in fresh concrete during construction, installed at patch repair interfaces, or installed in drilled pockets in existing structures. The electrochemical driving force (potential difference between the Zn anode at ~−1050 mV vs. CSE and passive steel at ~−200 mV) is approximately 850 mV — sufficient to provide protective polarisation. SACP requires no external power supply and minimal maintenance, but cannot provide the high current densities needed for structures with heavy chloride contamination. Hybrid SACP systems (high-zinc galvanic anodes with a resistor-controlled current output) are increasingly used for patch repair situations where modest protection is needed over localised areas without the infrastructure of a full ICCP system.
Corrosion-Resistant Rebar Alternatives
Design for Durability: Cover Depth, w/c Ratio, and SCMs
The durability of reinforced concrete against rebar corrosion is primarily a design and materials specification problem, not a materials limitations problem. Given adequate concrete quality and cover depth, carbon steel rebar can provide 100+ year service life even in aggressive marine environments. The key design variables are:
| Exposure Class (EN 206) | Environment Description | Min. Cover (cₙₑₙ) | Min. Concrete Grade | Max. w/c Ratio | SCM Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| XC1 | Dry or permanently wet (interior) | 15 mm | C20/25 | 0.65 | Optional |
| XC4 | Cyclic wet-dry (exterior facades) | 30 mm | C30/37 | 0.50 | Fly ash 20% |
| XD3 | Cyclic wet-dry, deicing salts (bridge decks, car parks) | 45 mm | C35/45 | 0.45 | GGBS 40–50% |
| XS2 | Permanently submerged seawater | 40 mm | C35/45 | 0.45 | Silica fume 7% |
| XS3 | Tidal/splash zone, marine | 50 mm | C40/50 | 0.40 | GGBS 50–70% |
Effect of w/c ratio on chloride diffusion coefficient D_c (approximate, OPC):
w/c = 0.70: D_c ≈ 20–40 × 10⁻¹² m²/s
w/c = 0.55: D_c ≈ 8–15 × 10⁻¹² m²/s
w/c = 0.45: D_c ≈ 3–6 × 10⁻¹² m²/s
w/c = 0.35: D_c ≈ 1–2 × 10⁻¹² m²/s
70% GGBS: D_c ≈ 0.5–2 × 10⁻¹² m²/s (vs. OPC at same w/c)
10% silica fume: D_c ≈ 0.5–1 × 10⁻¹² m²/s
Effect of doubling cover depth (c → 2c) on initiation time:
t_i ∝ c² (Fick's law) → 4× increase in initiation period
Related topics covered elsewhere on MetallurgyZone include Corrosion Mechanisms for the electrochemical principles underlying all corrosion processes, Pitting Corrosion for the detailed mechanics of pit initiation and growth on iron, Duplex Stainless Steels for the metallurgy of 2205 and other duplex grades used as corrosion-resistant rebar, and Sour Service and H₂S for related corrosion in aggressive industrial environments. For testing context, see Charpy Impact Testing and Hardness Testing Methods.
Economic Significance and Whole-Life Cost
Rebar corrosion damage is estimated to cost the United States alone $8–10 billion annually in direct bridge repair and replacement costs (FHWA, 2001 report, inflation-adjusted), with global costs an order of magnitude higher when all infrastructure sectors are included. The whole-life cost argument for corrosion-resistant design is compelling: an incremental cost of $50–100 per tonne for specifying 70% GGBS concrete instead of plain OPC, or $10–20/m² of additional cover concrete, can extend service life from 20 years to 80+ years — a 30:1 to 50:1 return on investment over the asset life when compared to reactive repair costs. The UK’s National Audit Office has consistently found that whole-life design specifications for corrosion durability are the most cost-effective infrastructure investment available, yet are routinely under-specified in initial design due to first-cost minimisation procurement practices.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does steel not corrode in fresh concrete?
What is the chloride threshold for rebar corrosion?
How does carbonation cause rebar corrosion?
What is half-cell potential mapping and what does it tell you?
How does impressed current cathodic protection work for reinforced concrete?
What is the Fick diffusion model for chloride ingress and how is it used in design?
What are the corrosion-resistant rebar alternatives to plain carbon steel?
How does cover depth affect rebar service life and how is it specified?
Recommended References
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