Structural Engineering and Mechanics
Volume 53, Number 6, 2015, pages 1183-1200
DOI: 10.12989/sem.2015.53.6.1183
Symptom-based reliability analyses and performance assessment of corroded reinforced concrete structures
Hua-Peng Chen and Nan Xiao
Abstract
Reinforcement corrosion can cause serious safety deterioration to aging concrete structures exposed in aggressive environments. This paper presents an approach for reliability analyses of deteriorating reinforced concrete structures affected by reinforcement corrosion on the basis of the representative symptoms identified during the deterioration process. The concrete cracking growth and rebar bond strength evolution due to reinforcement corrosion are chosen as key symptoms for the performance deterioration of concrete structures. The crack width at concrete cover surface largely depends on the corrosion penetration of rebar due to the expansive rust layer at the bond interface generated by reinforcement corrosion. The bond strength of rebar in the concrete correlates well with concrete crack width and decays steadily with crack width growth. The estimates of cracking development and bond strength deterioration are examined by experimental data available from various sources, and then matched with symptom-based lifetime Weibull model. The symptom reliability and remaining useful life are predicted from the predictive lifetime Weibull model for deteriorating concrete structures. Finally, a numerical example is provided to demonstrate the applicability of the proposed approach for forecasting the performance of concrete structures subject to reinforcement corrosion. The results show that the corrosion rate has significant impact on the reliability
associated with serviceability and load bearing capacity of reinforced concrete structures during their service
life.
Key Words
reliability analysis; reinforcement corrosion; concrete cracking; bond strength; residual life
Address
Hua-Peng Chen: School of Engineering, University of Greenwich, Chatham Maritime, Kent, ME4 4TB, UK
Nan Xiao: College of Civil Engineering & Architecture, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China