Crack depth measurement in reinforced concrete using ultrasonic techniques

Concrete is the most widely used construction material in the world, so the assessment of damage in concrete is critical from the point of view of both safety and cost. Of particular interest are macro cracks that extend through the concrete cover of the reinforcement, which can potentially expose t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Arne, Kevin C.
Other Authors: Jacobs, Laurence J.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/51914
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-519142014-09-12T03:33:39ZCrack depth measurement in reinforced concrete using ultrasonic techniquesArne, Kevin C.Nondestructive evaluationConcreteCrack depth measurementReinforced concrete CrackingUltrasonic testingConcrete is the most widely used construction material in the world, so the assessment of damage in concrete is critical from the point of view of both safety and cost. Of particular interest are macro cracks that extend through the concrete cover of the reinforcement, which can potentially expose the reinforcement to corrosive elements. The high density of scatterers such as aggregate and voids in concrete makes quantitative imaging with coherent ultrasound difficult. As an alternative, this research focuses on diffuse energy based ultrasonic methods rather than coherent ultrasonic methods for crack depth assessment. Two types of ultrasonic measurements were made on real cracks formed under four point bending: one that focuses on time of flight measurements from an impactor; while the other uses the arrival time of maximum energy in a diffuse field excited by an impulsive load from a transducer. Each of these ultrasonic techniques is used to interrogate a macro crack in a concrete beam, and the results are compared to determine their accuracy and robustness. The actual crack depth is determined using direct surface measurements and a destructive dye-injected approach with drilled cores. The results suggest that the diffusion method, using a maximum energy approach, more accurately estimates the crack than visual inspection and impact echo methods, which overestimate the depth.Georgia Institute of TechnologyJacobs, Laurence J.2014-05-22T15:36:16Z2014-05-22T15:36:16Z2014-052014-04-09May 20142014-05-22T15:36:16ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/51914en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Nondestructive evaluation
Concrete
Crack depth measurement
Reinforced concrete Cracking
Ultrasonic testing
spellingShingle Nondestructive evaluation
Concrete
Crack depth measurement
Reinforced concrete Cracking
Ultrasonic testing
Arne, Kevin C.
Crack depth measurement in reinforced concrete using ultrasonic techniques
description Concrete is the most widely used construction material in the world, so the assessment of damage in concrete is critical from the point of view of both safety and cost. Of particular interest are macro cracks that extend through the concrete cover of the reinforcement, which can potentially expose the reinforcement to corrosive elements. The high density of scatterers such as aggregate and voids in concrete makes quantitative imaging with coherent ultrasound difficult. As an alternative, this research focuses on diffuse energy based ultrasonic methods rather than coherent ultrasonic methods for crack depth assessment. Two types of ultrasonic measurements were made on real cracks formed under four point bending: one that focuses on time of flight measurements from an impactor; while the other uses the arrival time of maximum energy in a diffuse field excited by an impulsive load from a transducer. Each of these ultrasonic techniques is used to interrogate a macro crack in a concrete beam, and the results are compared to determine their accuracy and robustness. The actual crack depth is determined using direct surface measurements and a destructive dye-injected approach with drilled cores. The results suggest that the diffusion method, using a maximum energy approach, more accurately estimates the crack than visual inspection and impact echo methods, which overestimate the depth.
author2 Jacobs, Laurence J.
author_facet Jacobs, Laurence J.
Arne, Kevin C.
author Arne, Kevin C.
author_sort Arne, Kevin C.
title Crack depth measurement in reinforced concrete using ultrasonic techniques
title_short Crack depth measurement in reinforced concrete using ultrasonic techniques
title_full Crack depth measurement in reinforced concrete using ultrasonic techniques
title_fullStr Crack depth measurement in reinforced concrete using ultrasonic techniques
title_full_unstemmed Crack depth measurement in reinforced concrete using ultrasonic techniques
title_sort crack depth measurement in reinforced concrete using ultrasonic techniques
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/51914
work_keys_str_mv AT arnekevinc crackdepthmeasurementinreinforcedconcreteusingultrasonictechniques
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