A couple of weeks ago we were called by the largest
structural engineering firm in Phoenix to help a homeowner who had previous
repairs on the stem wall of their house. Repairs were done less than two years
ago and were already failing. So why is this happening on a regular basis?
We often see repairs done by contractors to repair the
horizontal crack around the perimeter of the house known as the stem wall fail
on a regular basis. I have seen a number of ideas tried such as injecting the
cracks with epoxy or repairing the concrete using fiberglass reinforced repair
mortar or other polymers. All of these approaches will ultimately fail in a
short amount of time because they do not get at the root of the problem.
Most horizontal cracks in the stem wall of the house result
from the rebar rusting inside of the stem wall. This rusting is caused from
tiny electrochemical currents inside of the concrete called a chloride ion
migration. As long as this tiny electrochemical current is in place the rusting
of the rebar will continue. As rebar rusts (oxidizes) it grows in volume since
iron oxide is weaker yet takes more volume than iron. As the iron oxide grows
it continues to put pressure on the concrete causing it to crack. This problem
is exacerbated as concrete gets older and changes from an alkali base to an
acidic base.
There are many ways to deal with this chloride ion
migration. Some methods use tiny reversal electrical currents. The
International Concrete Repair Institute outlines industry accepted methods that
involve removal of concrete to fractured rock, sandblasting the rebar to white
metal, coating with ion blocking epoxy, and using an anodic based repair
mortar. There are other repair techniques that are effective as well.
When our inspectors come to your home and inspect issues
like these, know that they will be recommending methods to get at the root of
the problem.
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