I have a question that I need help finding the answer to so here goes.
When I did chemistry at school back in the early 80's, we were taught about using sacrificial anodes on pipelines etc and as an experiment, I volunteered to take a strip of zinc home and crudely soldered it to a 6" steel nail via a short length of wire and was asked to bury it in the ground for a period of time. When I dug it up some months later, the obvious had happened and I took it back to class to show everyone and much their amazement, the nail showed no sign of rust.
Now, I've just installed a steel universal beam as part of an extension to my kitchen and being over enthusiastic, didn't use a galvanised beam (which apparently is a requirement of building regs...oops!)
I was told by a structural engineer that if I primed it with zinc phosphate primer and gave it 2 coats of bitumen paint, the officer from the council should accept it (hopefully...) and now comes the question...
If I were to attach a length of copper wire to the steel and attach the other end of the wire to a zinc anode and then, bury the anode in almost permanently wet soil close by, would the anode do it's job and protect the steel as if it were galvanised?
Any help with the answer to this would be much appreciated, thank you.