Abstract:
Atmospheric corrosion can affect age-related structural degradation, leading to changes in the
structural integrity of metals. European codes provide only general provisions to prevent the
effects of corrosion during the lifetime of steel structures. Currently, there is only a few studies
have been done considering realistic varying corrosion thickness loss models and almost all of
them focus only on extreme corrosion conditions like in industrial, coastal, and urban areas. In
this paper, the behaviour of axially loaded corroded steel sections under exposure to different
atmospheric corrosivity conditions are investigated. First, five different critical corrosion loss
models are proposed to represent actual corrosion decay scenarios including the control
specimen (CM0), one uniform thickness loss model (CM1) in which corrosion occurs in the
entire cross-section, and three varying thickness loss models (CM2, CM3 and CM4) in which
corrosion occurs only in some parts of the cross-section. The corrosion rate model is selected
based on the ISO 9224:2012 to estimate the amount of corrosion thickness loss of steel with
the time of exposure. ISO 9223:2012 is used to classify atmospheric corrosivity into six
different categories namely, Very Low Corrosivity (C1), Low Corrosivity (C2), Medium
Corrosivity (C3), High Corrosivity (C4), Very High Corrosivity (C5), and Extreme Corrosivity
(CX) considering both high and low corrosivity conditions. Next, with the help of Eurocode 3
guidelines, an analytical framework is established to calculate both the tensile and compression
capacities of corroded steel I-sections subjected to axial loads. Prediction of residual crosssection
capacities with the changing cross-section is achieved through a programme designed
to perform repetitive calculations using MATLAB environment. Results are validated using
numerical modelling results after performing both linear and non-linear analyses for different
cross-sections by ABAQUS Explicit Solver. The obtained results not only help in designing
steel members exposed to corrosion but also in explaining possible reasons for the variations
of cross-section capacity in different scenarios. Both tensile and compression capacities get
reduced with the corroded age and the residual capacity gets reduced when the severeness of
the corrosivity increases from C1 to CX. It is observed that sudden changes may take place in
compression capacity curves because of the changes in the cross-section class from class 3 to
class 4. This change can cause a member to fail by local buckling before overall buckling or
material crushing. The probability of being subjected to local buckling failures is higher in
higher corrosive environments like C5 and CX. Results show that the reduction factor in
compression capacity is less than 5% which is a very minimal value even after the exposure of
50 years for corrosivity categories from C1 to C4. It suggests that failures are unlikely to
happen when exposed to those four corrosive environments. For corrosivity categories C5 and
CX, the reduction factor is approximately 10% and 35%, respectively. Therefore, unexpected
structural failures can occur during the lifetime of structures, in those two environments. Since
the CM1 corrosion loss model has the highest area reduction due to corrosion, it has the highest
capacity reduction factor of 0.35 while the other three models (CM2, CM3, and CM4) have a
factor around 0.1-0.2. This work can be extended to investigate the behaviour of flexural
members subjected to corrosion losses in various corrosive environments.