Issue |
MATEC Web Conf.
Volume 409, 2025
Concrete Solutions 2025 – 9th International Conference on Concrete Repair, Durability & Technology
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Article Number | 00005 | |
Number of page(s) | 15 | |
Section | Keynote Presentations | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/202540900005 | |
Published online | 13 June 2025 |
Rehabilitation, repair, and maintenance of carbonated concrete members affected by corrosion of reinforcing steel by applying CP via a composite quantum anode
1 CAS Composite Anode Systems GmbH, Vienna, Austria
2 Vogel b.v. Zwijndrecht, Netherlands
3 Cathodic Protection Supplies (CPS), Capelle aan den IJssel Netherlands
4 Catodica, Mönchengladbach, Germany
5 GermanyBlue Spine, France
* Corresponding author: schwarz@cas-composite.com
Damage to concrete due to corrosion of the steel reinforcement in carbonated concrete is a frequent issue if the affected structures are to be maintained. Conventional repair by applying fresh mortar for realkalisation implies changes in the weight and dimensions of the structure and is costly. Soft realkalisation of the steel/concrete interface by applying cathodic protection (CP) via a conductive coating – Composite Anode System - was used for the corrosion protection of carbonated concrete structures in a parking deck of the central TV administration in Vienna/Austria in several installations from 2003–2008. Five examples of the application of an improved system – the Composite Quantum Anode System, consisting of the QAP60 primer and the CASTQ paint– are presented: (1) the Slaughterhouse, an iconic building in the Antwerp (B) neighbourhood, transformed into a higher-education campus on a total of 1000 m2 in 2021 to 2022, (2) in 2017, on the portal of the concrete structure on the roof of Pakhuys Afrika, Harbour of Amsterdam (NL) and the (3) on concrete panels of the Sint-Theodardus Church in Limburg (B), (4) 2023 on 3400 m2 of carbonated concrete in a parking deck in Nürnberg (D), (5) in 2024, on 500 m2 of the Bosc kiosk in Montpellier (F), built in 1927, the kiosk’s architecture is based on four octagonal posts.
© The Authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2025
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