Mechanical and Fracture Properties of Steel/GFRP Hybrid Panels for an Improved Moveable Weir after Exposure to Accelerated Natural Environmental Conditions

This study evaluated the performance of a hybrid panel in an improved moveable weir after exposure to accelerated environmental climate conditions. When exposed to a river environment, corrosion problems on improved moveable weir steel panels can occur. To address this, a hybrid panel with structure...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Seong-Yeoul Yoo, Jin-Hyung Lee, Hyung-Jin Shin, Chan-Gi Park
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-04-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/7/1423
id doaj-44b7cc92818c45eb841d08e6d6be2f5d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-44b7cc92818c45eb841d08e6d6be2f5d2020-11-24T22:28:49ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172019-04-0197142310.3390/app9071423app9071423Mechanical and Fracture Properties of Steel/GFRP Hybrid Panels for an Improved Moveable Weir after Exposure to Accelerated Natural Environmental ConditionsSeong-Yeoul Yoo0Jin-Hyung Lee1Hyung-Jin Shin2Chan-Gi Park3Department of Rural Construction Engineering, Kongju National University, Yesan 32439, KoreaDepartment of Rural Construction Engineering, Kongju National University, Yesan 32439, KoreaRural Research Institute, Korea Rural Community Corporation, Ansan 15634, KoreaDepartment of Rural Construction Engineering, Kongju National University, Yesan 32439, KoreaThis study evaluated the performance of a hybrid panel in an improved moveable weir after exposure to accelerated environmental climate conditions. When exposed to a river environment, corrosion problems on improved moveable weir steel panels can occur. To address this, a hybrid panel with structure layering glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) panels on both sides of the steel panel was used. The steel was, therefore, not exposed to the outside. However, this hybrid panel is a structure that uses a mixture of two materials with different properties and there is the possibility of performance degradation when the GFRP composite material, i.e., the structure that wraps around the bond interface, and the steel panel are exposed to a river environment. Thus, we evaluated the durability of the hybrid panels by repeated exposure to long-term high temperatures, dry–wet environmental cycling, long-term freezing, and freeze–thaw cycling in an accelerated climate deterioration environment. In the flexural tests, the surface processing of the steel panel was shown to be important, with sand-blasted test specimens showing higher flexural strength. For the control specimens, the flexural strength decreased as the thickness of the GFRP panels increased. However, for the sand-blasted specimens, the flexural strength increased as the thickness of the GFRP panels increased. After exposure to accelerated climate deterioration, the flexural strength tests showed that the residual strength increased with panel thickness and that the residual strengths were greater for specimens incorporating sand-blasted steel panels. The results of our testing show that hybrid panels incorporating sand-blasted steel were adequate for use in improved moveable weirs.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/7/1423accelerated environmental conditionsGFRP panelshybrid panelsimproved moveable weirresidual strength
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seong-Yeoul Yoo
Jin-Hyung Lee
Hyung-Jin Shin
Chan-Gi Park
spellingShingle Seong-Yeoul Yoo
Jin-Hyung Lee
Hyung-Jin Shin
Chan-Gi Park
Mechanical and Fracture Properties of Steel/GFRP Hybrid Panels for an Improved Moveable Weir after Exposure to Accelerated Natural Environmental Conditions
Applied Sciences
accelerated environmental conditions
GFRP panels
hybrid panels
improved moveable weir
residual strength
author_facet Seong-Yeoul Yoo
Jin-Hyung Lee
Hyung-Jin Shin
Chan-Gi Park
author_sort Seong-Yeoul Yoo
title Mechanical and Fracture Properties of Steel/GFRP Hybrid Panels for an Improved Moveable Weir after Exposure to Accelerated Natural Environmental Conditions
title_short Mechanical and Fracture Properties of Steel/GFRP Hybrid Panels for an Improved Moveable Weir after Exposure to Accelerated Natural Environmental Conditions
title_full Mechanical and Fracture Properties of Steel/GFRP Hybrid Panels for an Improved Moveable Weir after Exposure to Accelerated Natural Environmental Conditions
title_fullStr Mechanical and Fracture Properties of Steel/GFRP Hybrid Panels for an Improved Moveable Weir after Exposure to Accelerated Natural Environmental Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical and Fracture Properties of Steel/GFRP Hybrid Panels for an Improved Moveable Weir after Exposure to Accelerated Natural Environmental Conditions
title_sort mechanical and fracture properties of steel/gfrp hybrid panels for an improved moveable weir after exposure to accelerated natural environmental conditions
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2019-04-01
description This study evaluated the performance of a hybrid panel in an improved moveable weir after exposure to accelerated environmental climate conditions. When exposed to a river environment, corrosion problems on improved moveable weir steel panels can occur. To address this, a hybrid panel with structure layering glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) panels on both sides of the steel panel was used. The steel was, therefore, not exposed to the outside. However, this hybrid panel is a structure that uses a mixture of two materials with different properties and there is the possibility of performance degradation when the GFRP composite material, i.e., the structure that wraps around the bond interface, and the steel panel are exposed to a river environment. Thus, we evaluated the durability of the hybrid panels by repeated exposure to long-term high temperatures, dry–wet environmental cycling, long-term freezing, and freeze–thaw cycling in an accelerated climate deterioration environment. In the flexural tests, the surface processing of the steel panel was shown to be important, with sand-blasted test specimens showing higher flexural strength. For the control specimens, the flexural strength decreased as the thickness of the GFRP panels increased. However, for the sand-blasted specimens, the flexural strength increased as the thickness of the GFRP panels increased. After exposure to accelerated climate deterioration, the flexural strength tests showed that the residual strength increased with panel thickness and that the residual strengths were greater for specimens incorporating sand-blasted steel panels. The results of our testing show that hybrid panels incorporating sand-blasted steel were adequate for use in improved moveable weirs.
topic accelerated environmental conditions
GFRP panels
hybrid panels
improved moveable weir
residual strength
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/7/1423
work_keys_str_mv AT seongyeoulyoo mechanicalandfracturepropertiesofsteelgfrphybridpanelsforanimprovedmoveableweirafterexposuretoacceleratednaturalenvironmentalconditions
AT jinhyunglee mechanicalandfracturepropertiesofsteelgfrphybridpanelsforanimprovedmoveableweirafterexposuretoacceleratednaturalenvironmentalconditions
AT hyungjinshin mechanicalandfracturepropertiesofsteelgfrphybridpanelsforanimprovedmoveableweirafterexposuretoacceleratednaturalenvironmentalconditions
AT changipark mechanicalandfracturepropertiesofsteelgfrphybridpanelsforanimprovedmoveableweirafterexposuretoacceleratednaturalenvironmentalconditions
_version_ 1725746205681516544