SELF-HEALING COATING FOR REINFORCEMENT STEEL
20170044379 ยท 2017-02-16
Inventors
- Amy M. Peterson (Cambridge, MA, US)
- Aaron R. Sakulich (Worcester, MA, US)
- Yixi Chen (Liaoning, CN)
- Chris T. Xia (Malden, MA, US)
Cpc classification
E04C5/015
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
A self-healing coating for reinforcing steel embedded in concrete includes emulsion derived microcapsules having a healing agent and adapted for dispersion through a liquid coating medium for application on a structural steel surface to form a coating for corrosion prevention. The microcapsule particles are dispersed in the coating medium for being disposed on the surface and are configured to rupture and release the healing agent onto the surface in response to a compromise of the coating, such as being dropped or dragged on a construction site. The self-healing agent, such as Tung oil, complements the protective properties of the coating medium by flowing into regions where the coating medium has been scraped off, flaked off, or otherwise undergone compromise. Alternatively, post-installation corrosive influences, such as rust and oxidation, can also cause rupture of the particles to abate corrosion in the concrete-encased steel members.
Claims
1. A self-healing coating for reinforcing steel embedded in concrete, comprising: emulsion derived microcapsules having a healing agent disposed in particles adapted for dispersion through a liquid medium; a coating defined by the liquid medium adapted to be disposed on a surface to form a coating for corrosion prevention; the particles dispersed in the coating for being disposed on the surface and configured to rupture and release the healing agent onto the surface in response to a compromise of the coating.
2. The coating of claim 1 wherein the particle rupture results from physical compromise of the applied coating surface prior to or during concrete casting including the coated reinforcing members
3. The coating of claim 1 wherein the particle rupture results from oxidation of concrete-encased steel onto which the coating has been applied.
4. The coating of claim 1 wherein the ratio of particles dispersed in the liquid medium is 10-20% of the coating medium.
5. The coating of claim 4 wherein the healing agent is Tung oil.
6. The coating of claim 1 wherein the size of the particles is in a range from 0.20 mm-0.65 mm and an average particle size of substantially around 0.3 mm.
7. The coating of claim 1 wherein a thickness of the applied coating is in a range between 0.02 and 0.19 mm.
8. The coating of claim 1 wherein reinforced concrete having rebar with the applied self healing coating has an extended service live of 300% over reinforced concreate without coated rebar.
9. A method for disposing a self-healing coating on reinforcing steel rebar, comprising: preparing a microcapsule emulsion for generating particles containing a healing agent surrounded by a polymer shell; combining the particles with a liquid medium including a coating for preventing oxidation of steel members; applying the coating with the particles to a structural reinforcing member; and introducing the coated, structural reinforcing member into a compromising environment, the compromising environment causing the particle shell to rupture and release the healing agent, the healing agent complementing the corrosion prevention of the coating by flowing into and covering gaps in a compromised region of the coating upon release from a ruptured shell.
10. The method of claim 9 further comprising disposing the structural reinforcing member within a load bearing member having compressive strength, the structural reinforcing member providing tensile strength;
11. The method of claim 9 further comprising brushing the coating onto a steel structural member prior to embedding in concrete.
12. The method of claim 9 wherein the particle rupture results from physical compromise of the applied coating surface prior to or during concrete casting including the coated reinforcing members
13. The method of claim 9 wherein the particle rupture results from oxidation of concrete-encased steel onto which the coating has been applied.
14. The method of claim 9 wherein the ratio of particles dispersed in the liquid medium is in the range of 10-20%.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein the healing agent is Tung oil.
16. The method of claim 9 wherein a size of the particles is in a range from 0.20 mm-0.65 mm and an average particle size of substantially around 0.3 mm.
17. The method of claim 9 wherein a thickness of the applied coating is in a range between 0.02 and 0.19 mm.
18. The method of claim 9 wherein reinforced concrete having rebar with the applied self-healing coating has an extended service live of 300% over reinforced concreate without coated rebar.
19. A reinforcing steel member for concrete, comprising: a coating including emulsion derived microcapsules having a healing agent disposed in particles; the coating disposed on a surface of the structural steel member to form a barrier for corrosion prevention; the particles dispersed in the coating and configured to rupture and release the healing agent onto the surface in response to a compromise of the coating.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008] The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of particular embodiments of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference characters refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention.
[0009]
[0010]
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[0013]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0014] The figures and examples below depict an anticorrosion coating for structural steel members such as rebar that employs microcapsules containing a healing agent for releasing the healing agent in response to abrasion, damage or pH changes indicative of corrosive infiltration in reinforced concrete. The anti-corrosion coating, such as a polymer or resin based mixture, distributes poly(urea-formaldehyde) microcapsules of Tung oil or other healing agent along the surface of the rebar. The microcapsules of Tung oil define a secondary phase healing agent releasable in response to detected damage or corrosion for protecting the steel surface from corrosive infiltration from water, road salt and other foreign elements that permeate the concrete and cause degradation of the reinforcing steel.
[0015] The most common method of preventing steel corrosion in reinforced concrete is the use of epoxy-coated rebar (ECR). The epoxy thermoset acts as a physical barrier that can prevent, or significantly delay, the onset of corrosion. Other methods of corrosion prevention are either significantly more expensive (e.g. using stainless steel rebar) or significantly more difficult to use in the field (e.g. galvanic protection). However, ECR is only effective if the brittle epoxy coating is kept in excellent condition. Chips or cracks in the epoxy provide aggressive media access to the reinforcing steel and negate the protective properties of the system. Although improvements in the manufacture of ECR have reduced the number of imperfections, flaws are still routinely encountered. This project reports the first use of self-healing coatings for rebar in steel-reinforced concrete. When damage occurs in self-healing coatings, microcapsules rupture and healing agent passivates the surface and restores the physical barrier to corrosive species. Based on preliminary results, the self-healing coatings may extend infrastructure lifetimes threefold. Since the disclosed coatings are applied similarly to conventional epoxy coatings, usage is less expensive than stainless steel rebar, which is preferentially used over ECR for its improve corrosion resistance.
[0016] Conventional approaches suffer from the shortcoming of phase change, allowing only a one-time healing action, or a vascular approach, which includes a fluidic network. One-time healing approaches impose that once the healing agent has reacted and gone from a monomer (liquid) to a polymer (solid), there can be no more healing in that location. Vascular approaches are a strategy for compensating for the lack of a healing agent in secondary phase-based approaches, by including a network through which healing agent can flow. However, this is not feasible in a coating. Secondary phase approaches employ a coating material to which a second phase is added, such as fluid contained capsules, however sometimes there can be natural phase separation of the healing agent from the coating matrix, rendering a capsule unnecessary.
[0017] Depicted below is a particular configuration of the self-healing coating for reinforcing steel embedded in concrete, such as rebar.
[0018] Referring to
[0019] In sum, structural steel members such as rebar encounter many manipulations which can cause physical damage or discontinuities in the rebar coating. In conventional approaches, the discontinuities represent paths for corrosion and degradation. In contrast, in configurations described below, physical agitation of the coating ruptures the microcapsules and releases the healing agent.
[0020]
[0021]
[0022] Referring to
[0023]
[0024]
[0025] The healing agent encapsulated in the microcapsules may be any suitable substance that promotes passivity, longevity and/or mitigates corrosion or compromise of the structural steel member. In the example configuration, Tung oil has shown to be an effective healing agent, and the Tung oil microcapsules are generated as described below. The microcapsules are formed from an emulsion, generally regarded as a mixture of two or more liquids that are normally immiscible. The formed microcapsules are particles, nanoparticles or other particles dispersed throughout a liquid medium for application as a coating on reinforcing members embedded in concrete prior to curing.
[0026] The procedure used for encapsulating Tung oil was begins with an oil-in-water emulsion to which the following components were added: ethyl maleic anhydride (EMA) solution as a surfactant, resorcinol to stabilize the solution, ammonium chloride to provide a pH buffer, and urea reacting with formaldehyde to form the polymer shells. At room temperature, 200 mL of deionized water, 25 mL of 2.5 wt. % EMA solution, 0.5 g of resorcinol, 0.5 g of ammonium chloride, and 5 g of urea were mixed fully in a 500 mL beaker. Following this, the pH of the solution was adjusted from 2.7 to 3.5 using a dilute sodium hydroxide solution in order to control the morphology of the polymer shells. This solution was placed into a room temperature water bath and stirred at 400 rpm as 50 mL of Tung oil was slowly added into the solution. The resulting mixture was mechanically stirred at 400 rpm for 10 minutes to form a stabilized emulsion, after which 13 g of 37 wt. % formaldehyde solution was added. The temperature of the solution was raised to 60 C. for 4 hours at 400 rpm to facilitate the polymerization reaction between urea and formaldehyde. The solution was then removed from the oil bath and stirred as it cooled to room temperature over 6 hours.
[0027] To extract the microcapsules, the mixture was vacuum filtered with coarse filter paper, then washed with deionized water and acetone, respectively. Finally, the microcapsules were air-dried for 48 hours before they could be used. Both poly[(phenyl isocyanate)-co-formaldehyde] (isocyanate pre-polymer, number of reactive groups per molecule3.0, MW375) and poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA, MW-9,000-10,000, 80% hydrolyzed) were obtained. 2-methylbenzothiazole, ethylenediamine, and tetraethylenepentamine (TEPA) were procured from various sources. All chemicals were used without any purification.
[0028] Encapsulation of Tung oil is achievable using the same approach as that used for Encapsulation of 2-methylbenzothiazole, as follows. At room temperature, 40 mL of deionized water, 5 mL of 2.5 wt.% EMA solution, 0.1 g of resorcinol, 0.1 g of ammonium chloride, and 1 g of urea were mixed fully in a 500 mL beaker. Once the solids were completely dissolved, the solution was adjusted to a pH of 3.5 using dilute sodium hydroxide. This was placed into a room temperature water bath and stirred at 400 rpm as 5 mL of 2-methylbenzothiazole was slowly added to the solution. The resulting mixture was mechanically stirred at 400 rpm for 10 minutes to form a stabilized emulsion, after which 2.6 g of 37 wt. % formaldehyde solution was added. The temperature of the solution was raised to 60 C. for 4 hours at 400 rpm to facilitate a polymerization reaction. The resulting solution was filtered using vacuum filtration and rinsed with deionized water and acetone.
[0029] While the system and methods defined herein have been particularly shown and described with references to embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention encompassed by the appended claims.