Electrical/Mechanical Monitoring of Shape Memory Alloy Reinforcing Fibers Obtained by Pullout Tests in SMA/Cement Composite Materials
Self-healing is an essential property of smart concrete structures. In contrast to other structural metals, shape memory alloys (SMAs) offer two unique effects: shape memory effects, and superelastic effects. Composites composed of SMA wires and conventional cements can overcome the mechanical weakn...
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doaj-6a8e9c3b2d9b405ebbe5337a27b322142020-11-25T00:01:23ZengMDPI AGMaterials1996-19442018-02-0111231510.3390/ma11020315ma11020315Electrical/Mechanical Monitoring of Shape Memory Alloy Reinforcing Fibers Obtained by Pullout Tests in SMA/Cement Composite MaterialsEui-Hyun Kim0Hyunbae Lee1Jae-Hwan Kim2Seung-Muk Bae3Heesu Hwang4Heesun Yang5Eunsoo Choi6Jin-Ha Hwang7Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, KoreaDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, KoreaDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, KoreaCenter for Research Facilities, Kunsan National University, Kunsan 54150, KoreaDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, KoreaDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, KoreaDepartment of Civil Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, KoreaDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, KoreaSelf-healing is an essential property of smart concrete structures. In contrast to other structural metals, shape memory alloys (SMAs) offer two unique effects: shape memory effects, and superelastic effects. Composites composed of SMA wires and conventional cements can overcome the mechanical weaknesses associated with tensile fractures in conventional concretes. Under specialized environments, the material interface between the cementitious component and the SMA materials plays an important role in achieving the enhanced mechanical performance and robustness of the SMA/cement interface. This material interface is traditionally evaluated in terms of mechanical aspects, i.e., strain–stress characteristics. However, the current work attempts to simultaneously characterize the mechanical load-displacement relationships synchronized with impedance spectroscopy as a function of displacement. Frequency-dependent impedance spectroscopy is tested as an in situ monitoring tool for structural variations in smart composites composed of non-conducting cementitious materials and conducting metals. The artificial geometry change in the SMA wires is associated with an improved anchoring action that is compatible with the smallest variation in resistance compared with prismatic SMA wires embedded into a cement matrix. The significant increase in resistance is interpreted to be associated with the slip of the SMA fibers following the elastic deformation and the debonding of the SMA fiber/matrix.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/11/2/315smart materialsimpedance spectroscopyfiber pullout resistanceshape memory materialsgeometric modification |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Eui-Hyun Kim Hyunbae Lee Jae-Hwan Kim Seung-Muk Bae Heesu Hwang Heesun Yang Eunsoo Choi Jin-Ha Hwang |
spellingShingle |
Eui-Hyun Kim Hyunbae Lee Jae-Hwan Kim Seung-Muk Bae Heesu Hwang Heesun Yang Eunsoo Choi Jin-Ha Hwang Electrical/Mechanical Monitoring of Shape Memory Alloy Reinforcing Fibers Obtained by Pullout Tests in SMA/Cement Composite Materials Materials smart materials impedance spectroscopy fiber pullout resistance shape memory materials geometric modification |
author_facet |
Eui-Hyun Kim Hyunbae Lee Jae-Hwan Kim Seung-Muk Bae Heesu Hwang Heesun Yang Eunsoo Choi Jin-Ha Hwang |
author_sort |
Eui-Hyun Kim |
title |
Electrical/Mechanical Monitoring of Shape Memory Alloy Reinforcing Fibers Obtained by Pullout Tests in SMA/Cement Composite Materials |
title_short |
Electrical/Mechanical Monitoring of Shape Memory Alloy Reinforcing Fibers Obtained by Pullout Tests in SMA/Cement Composite Materials |
title_full |
Electrical/Mechanical Monitoring of Shape Memory Alloy Reinforcing Fibers Obtained by Pullout Tests in SMA/Cement Composite Materials |
title_fullStr |
Electrical/Mechanical Monitoring of Shape Memory Alloy Reinforcing Fibers Obtained by Pullout Tests in SMA/Cement Composite Materials |
title_full_unstemmed |
Electrical/Mechanical Monitoring of Shape Memory Alloy Reinforcing Fibers Obtained by Pullout Tests in SMA/Cement Composite Materials |
title_sort |
electrical/mechanical monitoring of shape memory alloy reinforcing fibers obtained by pullout tests in sma/cement composite materials |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Materials |
issn |
1996-1944 |
publishDate |
2018-02-01 |
description |
Self-healing is an essential property of smart concrete structures. In contrast to other structural metals, shape memory alloys (SMAs) offer two unique effects: shape memory effects, and superelastic effects. Composites composed of SMA wires and conventional cements can overcome the mechanical weaknesses associated with tensile fractures in conventional concretes. Under specialized environments, the material interface between the cementitious component and the SMA materials plays an important role in achieving the enhanced mechanical performance and robustness of the SMA/cement interface. This material interface is traditionally evaluated in terms of mechanical aspects, i.e., strain–stress characteristics. However, the current work attempts to simultaneously characterize the mechanical load-displacement relationships synchronized with impedance spectroscopy as a function of displacement. Frequency-dependent impedance spectroscopy is tested as an in situ monitoring tool for structural variations in smart composites composed of non-conducting cementitious materials and conducting metals. The artificial geometry change in the SMA wires is associated with an improved anchoring action that is compatible with the smallest variation in resistance compared with prismatic SMA wires embedded into a cement matrix. The significant increase in resistance is interpreted to be associated with the slip of the SMA fibers following the elastic deformation and the debonding of the SMA fiber/matrix. |
topic |
smart materials impedance spectroscopy fiber pullout resistance shape memory materials geometric modification |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/11/2/315 |
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