In published US application US2016/0153096 published Jun. 2 2016 by David Whitmore and in PCT Published Application WO94/29496 of Aston Material Services Limited is disclosed a method for cathodically protecting reinforcing members in concrete using a sacrificial anode such as zinc or zinc alloy. In this published application and in the commercially available product arising from the application there is provided a puck-shaped anode body which has a coupling wire attached thereto. In the commercially available products manufactured in accordance with this disclosure there are in fact two such wires arranged diametrically opposed on the puck and extending outwardly therefrom as a flexible connection wire for attachment to an exposed steel reinforcement member. This arrangement is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,193,857 (Davison) issued Feb. 27 2001 and assigned to Foseco International. A similar arrangement is shown schematically also in U.S. Pat. No. 6,165,346 (Whitmore) issued Dec. 26 2000. The disclosures of the above cited documents are incorporated herein by reference. In the above published US application is disclosed a method for installing the anodes by connecting the conductive wire from the cast zinc anode to one or more reinforcing bars within the concrete to be protected.
According to the invention there is provided a method for forming sacrificial anodes for installation in an ionically conductive medium at an installation site which medium contains metal requiring cathodic protection comprising:
locating in a receptacle a plurality of anode bodies each comprising a sacrificial material at least one component for use in making an electrical connection between the body and the metal;
providing in the receptacle dividing members defining a plurality of chambers with each chamber containing a respective one of the anode bodies;
and casting into the receptacle a covering material such that the covering material is in contact with at least a portion of each anode body.
According to a second aspect of the invention there is provided a method for installing sacrificial anodes in an ionically conductive medium at an installation site which medium contains metal requiring cathodic protection comprising:
providing a receptacle having dividing members defining a plurality of chambers;
each chamber containing a respective one of a plurality of anodes;
each anode comprising a body of a sacrificial material;
each anode comprising an at least one component for use in making an electrical connection between the body and the metal;
each anode comprising a covering material cast in contact with at least a portion of the body;
wherein the anodes are transported in the receptacle to the installation site;
and at the installation site inserting the anodes individually into the medium.
According to a third aspect of the invention there is provided an anode assembly comprising:
a plurality of sacrificial anodes for installing in an ionically conductive medium at an installation site which medium contains metal requiring cathodic protection:
a transportation receptacle having dividing members defining a plurality of chambers;
each chamber containing a respective one of a plurality of anodes;
each anode having a body of a sacrificial material and at least one component for use in making an electrical connection between the body and the metal;
each anode having a covering material cast in contact with at least a portion of the anode body;
wherein the anodes are arranged to be inserted individually into the medium.
The at least one component for use in making an electrical connection between the body and the metal can comprise the whole of the necessary structure for attachment to the metal within the medium. Thus for example when the medium is concrete and the metal is a reinforcing bar, the structure can comprise a wire or plurality of wires which extend from the anode body to the rebar to be wrapped around and optionally twisted together. Alternatively, however, the electrically conductive component for making electrical connection to the metal can simply comprise one part of that structure such as a threaded rod or threaded recess to which other components are attached to make connection to the metal. The component may also act to mechanically fasten the body to the metal although this is not essential and other components can be provided for this task.
The electrically conductive component for making electrical connection to the metal provides a metal connecting element which can be engaged with the metal within the medium. This can in some cases be formed by a deformable wire or wires which extend from the anode core and can be deformed by the installer to wrap around a portion of the metal. In other cases, the metal connecting element can be arranged so that it is clamped into place for example as a part of a screw coupling. Thus, the metal connecting element can be deformable or rigid and may or may not include other connecting components.
In some cases, it may be preferable that the electrical connector is a threaded stud, a pin or a plate. The stud, pin or plate may extend through a hole in a wall of the chamber or may bear on the upper edge of the chamber to support the anode core.
During the casting process, the anode cores are preferably engaged with the receptacle to hold them in place and also to restrict the cast covering material from engaging certain portions of the core as required. However other methods for locating the anode core in the receptacle can be used such as spacer members.
During the casting process, the cast material can become bonded to the walls of the receptacle and the preferred use of a flexible material to allow it to flex away from the cast material when the anode is removed can be used to enable demolding without special shaping of the receptacle.
Preferably the anodes are cast together as a group and are connected in the receptacle each to the next by a frangible bridge portion of the cast covering material. That is a portion of the cast material bridges over from one chamber to the next to hold the two side by side anodes connected with the bridge being broken at the installation site. This holds the anodes together as a structural body for transportation and assists in the manufacturing process as the cast material holds the structure together during the handling and packaging. However, the bridge is sufficiently thin to allow it to be broken without damaging the layer surrounding the core. The individual anodes can however be cast separately side by wide without any bridging component. Also in some cases the anodes can be cast separately and then laid side by side in the receptacle for the transportation. It will be appreciated that the covering material typically used is a mortar which is susceptible to damage if engaged with other hard components or other anodes so that the holding of the anodes in a specific position relative to one another can prevent this damage.
Thus, the frangible bridge portions are preferably broken and the anodes separated at the installation site. However, they may also be separated before shipping and shipped in the separated condition but side by side in the receptacle.
Preferably the anode cores are supported and located in the chambers by engagement of a wall portion of the receptacle with the wire. Thus, the wire exiting from the core body forms a suitable component to sit in a wall portion of the receptacle and hold the core spaced away from other walls of the receptacle for the cast material to properly surround at least some surface of the core as it is cast. In this arrangement, preferably the anode core has a wire extending outwardly from each end and the receptacle provides end wall portions engaging each wire of the anode core to support the anode core within its respective chamber suspended across the two end wall portions. This can be conveniently achieved by simply forming a slot in each end wall portion for receiving the respective wire. In this way, the core can be dropped into its chamber with the wires locating the core along the chamber. However other supports can be provided separate from the walls and the core can be supported by components at locations different from the wires.
Preferably the end wall portions of each chamber engage a respective end of the anode core and prevent the covering material engaging the wire as the covering material is cast. That is the length of the core is equal to the length of the chamber in which it is received so that the ends of the core are a sliding fit against the ends of the chamber. This seals off the penetration of the cast material into the area at the end of the core and keeps the material away from the wires which can cause problems during manufacture of the anode. Conveniently therefore the chambers are elongated and arranged side by side in a row. To form finger shaped anodes with a center core and a surrounding ring of the cast covering material. However other shapes and other arrangements of the array of chambers can be provided.
As the receptacle may be disposable, it can in one arrangement be formed of a flexible disposable plastic material molded to form the chambers and bendable to release the flexible material from the cast covering material. The cast covering material can therefore have tapered sides to allow the fingers to be pulled out, but because the material can be sufficiently flimsy the degree of taper may be reduced as the flexible material can be pulled away from the cast covering material during the one by one release of the anodes.
The arrangement herein is particularly advantageous where preferably the anodes are also transported in the same receptacle in which they are cast to the installation site where the installer can simply remove the anodes from the receptacle, while separating each from the next and can install them separately into the medium, typically concrete.
To provide even more effective packaging of a large supply of the anodes, preferably the receptacle forms a tray and the trays are stacked one on top of the next in at least one column. The tray thus has a base and upstanding molded walls into which the casting material is placed. However other shapes and configurations of the receptacle can be used. The column or columns can then be contained in an external container such as a cardboard box. A bottom wall of each tray onto which the material is cast acts for separating the anodes in the box from the anodes of the next tray to avoid frictional contact between the mortar layers which can damage the layers in transport. The amount of packaging material used is therefore reduced while providing a stable and effective transport system.
To obtain the best advantage, the method herein preferably uses the tray as both the receptacle for casting of a series of anodes side by side and the packaging in which the cast anodes are transported. However, it is also possible that the anodes can be cast separately and packaged at the casting site in trays side by side for the transport. Thus the anode can remain in the tray as it is transported, even if cracked or broken. It is also possible that the anodes are removed from the receptacle before transportation and transported as a group to the installation site in another packaging arrangement.
It is also possible that the common casting receptacle is used at the casting site and then the anodes removed at that location for transportation in a conventional packaging system different from the tray.
In a yet further optional arrangement, the receptacle can comprise a material which is separated into individual pieces each engaging a respective anode at the installation site. Thus if the material can be torn, the anodes can be broken away from the whole structure while the receptacle is torn into the separate pieces. The use of a material which can be inserted at the installation site into the medium with the anode also is advantageous. That is a suitable material can be a porous paper material which can be easily torn into the separate pieces as the anodes are separated and also the paper can be inserted into the medium such as concrete with the anode without interfering with the communication of ions after the installation is complete. The material concerned can be provided as a liner material between a separate receptacle and the anodes where the liner material is removed from the receptacle with the anodes. The liner can thus provide the part of the receptacle which is transported with the anodes to maintain protection for them during transport while an outer receptacle portion which acts as a mold can remain at the manufacturing location. Alternatively the whole of the receptacle both for casting and for transportation may be provided in the form of the porous material and separated into the individual portions at the installation. The advantage of using the porous material as the receptacle at the site is that the material can be inserted into the medium with the anodes rather than discarded as waste material on site. In this way the transportation receptacle is conveniently introduced into the medium without requiring the installer to carry out the separation of these components and to manage the disposal of the receptacle.
One embodiment of the invention will now be described in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
In the drawings like characters of reference indicate corresponding parts in the different figures.
In
Thus, the cathodic protection device is arranged for use in a concrete structure generally indicated at 10 having reinforcing bars 11, 11A embedded within the concrete 13 and spaced from an upper surface 14 of the concrete.
Embedded within the concrete at a position adjacent to the reinforcing bar 11 is a cathodic protection device generally indicated at 15 which includes an anode body 16.
At opposed end positions on the peripheral surface 17 is attached a pair of connecting wires 19 and 20 which are flexible but sufficiently stiff to be self-supporting. Any suitable electrically conductive material such as copper, titanium or steel can be used.
Around the anode body is provided a layer of a mortar material 21. In practice, the mortar material is moulded around the anode core to provide a thickness of a mortar material around the full periphery apart from the ends with the thickness being of the order of 1 cm. The wires 19 and 20 pass through the anode core and then the mortar is cast in place. The mortar forms an electrolyte which is in intimate communication with the concrete layer so that a current can flow from the anode to the steel reinforcement 11.
The mortar material is preferably a solid so that it can contain and hold the anode without danger of being displaced during the process. However, gels and pastes can also be used. The mortar material preferably is relatively porous so that it can accommodate expansion of the zinc oxide during consumption of the anode. However, voids which might fill with water should be avoided.
The use of the protection device is substantially as described in the above application WO94/29496 in that it is buried in the concrete layer either at formation of the concrete in the original casting process or more preferably in a restoration process subsequent to the original casting. Thus sufficient of the original concrete is excavated to allow the reinforcing bar 11 to be exposed. The wires 19 and 20 are then wrapped around the reinforcing bar and the protective device placed into position in the exposed opening. The device is then covered by a recast portion of concrete and remains in place buried within the concrete.
This system is therefore only applicable to a sacrificial anode system where the anode is buried within the concrete.
The cathodic protection device therefore operates in the conventional manner in that electrolytic potential difference between the anode and the steel reinforcing member causes a current to flow therebetween sufficient to prevent or at least reduce corrosion of the steel reinforcing bar.
The anode and preferably the covering 21 preferably includes at least one activator such as a high pH and/or a humectant material at the sacrificial anode for ensuring continued corrosion of the anode. Suitable materials are disclosed in the above cited documents.
The level of the pH and the presence of the humectant enhances the maintenance of the current so that the current can be maintained for an extended period of time in a range 5 to 20 years.
The method thus includes locating the sacrificial anode 16 which is of a material which is less noble than the steel members 11 in contact with the ionically conductive concrete or mortar material and providing an electrically conductive connection 19, 20 between the sacrificial anode and the steel section to form a circuit with communication of ions between the sacrificial anode and the steel section through the ionically conductive concrete or mortar material so that the sacrificial anode acts to provide cathodic protection of the steel section.
The first and second wires 19, 20 each extend from the sacrificial anode core 15 to a free end 19A, 20A remote from the anode. As shown in
Typically, the first and second wires form portions of a common wire 19C extending through the anode material 16 which has a core cast onto the common wire. This method of manufacture is very simple and provides an excellent connection both structurally and electrically between the wire and the sacrificial anode material.
Turning now to
In
Thus, the method forms a plurality of sacrificial anodes for installing in the ionically conductive medium or concrete 13 at an installation site 10.
The receptacle or tray 30 forms both a casting tray and a transportation receptacle. The ribs 34 and end walls 31, 32 act as dividing members defining a plurality of chambers 36 in an array in the tray. These are elongated and side by side to form elongate rod-shaped anodes, but of course alternative shapes and spacings are possible. Each chamber 26 is arranged to act as a mold for and to contain a respective one of a plurality of the anodes side by side.
Each anode as set out above comprises the anode core 16 forming a body of a sacrificial material and a connecting wire 19 which passes through the core and forms two exposed end portions 19 and 20.
As shown in
At the manufacturing location, therefore the material 21 in a supply 21A is poured onto the tray to enter the chambers 36 and surround the core 16. While the casting action occurs, the tray is set on a pad 38 with a raised peripheral rib 39 containing the tray to support the tray sufficiently to receive the casting material. When the cast material is set, the tray is transported containing the series of anodes in a row or other array to the installation site where the anodes are removed from the receptacle at the installation site and inserted individually into the concrete 13. The shape of the anodes with the coating thereon can vary so as to include elongate anodes or puck shaped anodes. When the anodes are elongate, they can extend horizontally as shown in
As shown in
As the structure while remaining intact is transported in the tray from the manufacturing site to the installation site, the bridge portion 42 is broken at the installation site as the installer separates each anode in turn from the series of anodes supplied. This bridge portion 42 holds the anodes together as a structural body for transportation and assists in the casting process as the cast material holds the structure together during handling, packaging and transporting. However, the bridge portion 42 is sufficiently thin to allow it to be broken without damaging the layer 21 surrounding the core 16.
As shown best in
As shown in
As the receptacle is supported during the casting process on the support pad 38, it is formed of a flexible disposable plastics material which can be molded to form the chambers and is simply bendable to pull away from the cast material to release the flexible material from the cast covering material. The walls of the ribs 34 of the main body 33 as shown at 45 and 46 have tapered sides to allow the anodes to be pulled out. However, since the flexible material can be sufficiently flimsy the degree of taper may be reduced relative to those used in conventional rigid molds as the flexible material can be pulled away from the casting during the extraction of the anodes.
As shown in
In
In
In this way, the molded anode structure as a body including the anodes and the bridge portions can be pulled out of the mold structure with the liner material attached for transportation to the installation site in stacks in an exterior box as described above.
The liner thus provides sufficient structural integrity and cushioning for transportation of the anode assembly in the stack while reducing damage in transportation and storage. At the installation site the anode assembly is separated into individual pieces with each individual anode including a separate torn portion of the liner with each portion engaging a respective anode at the installation site. Thus if the material can be torn, the anodes can be broken away from the whole structure while the receptacle is torn into the separate pieces. The porous paper material can be easily torn into the separate pieces as the anodes are separated and also the paper pieces partly surrounding or engaging the anode can be inserted into the concrete with the anode without interfering with the communication of ions after the installation is complete. That is the selected material, typically porous paper is penetrated by the liquid of the concrete mixture during pouring so that the paper in effect becomes a part of the concrete structure.
Alternatively the whole of the receptacle both for casting and for transportation may be provided in the form of the porous material and separated into the individual portions at the installation. The advantage of using the porous material as the receptacle at the site is that the material can be inserted into the medium with the anodes rather than discarded as waste material on site. In this way the transportation receptacle is conveniently introduced into the medium without requiring the installer to carry out the separation of these components and to manage the disposal of the receptacle.
In
The structure including the receptacle and the anodes carried therein is transported to the installation site where the anodes are pulled out for individual use. In this embodiment there is no frangible portion connecting he anodes so that the structural shapes is maintained by the receptacle and by any supporting material such as a cardboard divider between each receptacle and the next when formed into a stack for transportation.
The receptacle can be formed of a plastics material which is flexible to help release of the anodes when required. Such receptacle s might be re-used or recycled. As an alternative, the receptacle can be formed of paper or other fiber board which is sufficiently resistant to contain the covering material when cast in a wet form and can be sufficiently porous to be used in the concrete which the anode when installed without interfering with the passage of ions. When a fibrous material is used and is not intended to be installed with the anode, before casting each pocket is coated with a release coat for example of silicone to allow the anode to be pulled out of its pocket. As there is no frangible connection in this embodiment as shown, the anodes can be readily separated and where required the receptacle can be torn into cylinders each surrounding the respective anode.
However channels can be formed in the top wall 59 to allow casting of connecting portions which will break when required. This of course assists in maintaining the structure as a stiff integral body for transportation to the installation site.
This application is a continuation in part application of application Ser. No. 15/686,858 filed Aug. 25 2017 and currently pending. This invention relates to a method for manufacture of sacrificial anodes for use in an ionically conductive medium which contains metal requiring cathodic protection.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15686858 | Aug 2017 | US |
Child | 16045251 | US |