Electro-Mechanical Impedance-Based Structural Health Monitoring of Fiber-Reinforced Concrete Specimens under Four-Point Repeated Loading
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Program
2.1. Materials
2.2. Tests and Specimens
2.3. SHM Technique and PZT Transducer Configuration
- One PZT patch was bonded in the middle of the facade of the specimen, in the tension zone (FTM: Facade Tension Middle);
- Two PZT patches were bonded on the right side of the facade of the prism at a 100 mm distance from the middle of the specimen; one in the tension zone (FTR: Facade Tension Right) and one in the compression zone (FCR: Facade Compression Right);
- Two PZT patches were bonded on the left side of the facade of the prism at a 100 mm distance from the middle of the specimen; one in the tension zone (FTL: Facade Tension Left) and one in the compression zone (FCL: Facade Compression Left);
- Two PZT patches were bonded to the bottom of the prism, one on the right side (BR: Bottom Right) and one on the left side (BL: Bottom Left), each at a 100 mm distance from the middle of the specimen. Both transducers (BL and BR) were cast at a 45o predefined angle;
- Two PZT patches were bonded to the mid-height and mid-width of each side of the prism; one on the right side (SR: Side Right) and one on the left side (SL: Side Left).
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Damage Quantification
3.2. Voltage and Indices Analysis
3.2.1. Specimen 1
3.2.2. Specimen 2
3.2.3. Specimen 3
3.3. Discussion and Suggestions for Future Works
4. Conclusions
- Voltage frequency responses of the piezoelectric transducers extracted from the custom-made SHM system during the four-point testing measurements indicated significant discrepancies between the voltage signatures of the healthy and each examined damage levels for the three examined FRC specimens. These voltage changes mean the presence of potential cracks, and the increasing trend suggests the damage’s severity;
- The well-known statistical index RMSD was successfully used to evaluate the cracking in FRC specimens while improving the efficiency and accuracy of damage detection;
- The new dynamic metric index, mRMSD, was successfully used to evaluate the cracking in FRC specimens while improving the efficiency and accuracy of damage detection;
- From the results obtained, an increasing upward trend in the values of the RMSD index results from the changes in the signal measurements of the PZTs, which confirm the damage’s existence and the increase in the damage severity. Most of the above PZT signals exhibited such a response. Some fluctuations presented in the RMSD values are attributed to the shear lag effect [32] and the localized redistribution of the stresses in the specimens’ internal mass through the transducer’s effective monitoring area;
- The results suggest that the measurements obtained from PZT transducers installed to such specific locations or at a predefined angle created between the direction of the formed crack and the direction of the PZT’s polarization could be useful in damage diagnosis and predict the forthcoming failure early damage stages, such as at the onset of the flexural crack;
- In the case of Specimen 2 and according to the previous conclusion, PZT mounted to the left side of the prism showed better results due to the angle of the crack formed, which is slightly inclined and towards the left span of the prism;
- The metric index mRMSD ensured the above aspect at most of the examined loading/damage levels;
- The effect of the PZT’s coating to cause unwilling response variations and potential false warnings should be checked and limited through compensation algorithms. Further, the effectiveness of the proposed SHM technique in complex, large-scale, and real-life structures should be tested. Moreover, extensions and improvements of the EMI-based PZT-implemented monitoring techniques could be achieved by creating a database of measurements to determine the baseline structural condition or by combining this method with other NDT techniques.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Load Step | Specimen 1 | Specimen 2 | Specimen 3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Flexural stress (MPa) | 1 | 1.0 | 1.0 | 1.0 |
2 | 2.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 | |
3 | 3.3 | 3.3 | 3.3 | |
4 | 4.8 | 4.0 | 3.9 | |
Ultimate damage level | 1 | UL_1MPa | UL_1MPa | UL_1MPa |
2 | UL_2MPa | UL_2MPa | UL_2MPa | |
3 | UL_3.3MPa | UL_3.3MPa | UL_3.3MPa | |
4 | Failure_4.8MPa | Failure_4MPa | Failure_3.9MPa | |
The ratio of the max flexural strength | 1 | 21% | 25% | 25% |
2 | 42% | 50% | 51% | |
3 | 69% | 83% | 85% | |
4 | Failure | Failure | Failure |
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Naoum, M.C.; Chalioris, C.E.; Karayannis, C.G.; Karabinis, A.I.; Elenas, A. Electro-Mechanical Impedance-Based Structural Health Monitoring of Fiber-Reinforced Concrete Specimens under Four-Point Repeated Loading. CivilEng 2023, 4, 856-880. https://doi.org/10.3390/civileng4030047
Naoum MC, Chalioris CE, Karayannis CG, Karabinis AI, Elenas A. Electro-Mechanical Impedance-Based Structural Health Monitoring of Fiber-Reinforced Concrete Specimens under Four-Point Repeated Loading. CivilEng. 2023; 4(3):856-880. https://doi.org/10.3390/civileng4030047
Chicago/Turabian StyleNaoum, Maria C., Constantin E. Chalioris, Chris G. Karayannis, Athanasios I. Karabinis, and Anaxagoras Elenas. 2023. "Electro-Mechanical Impedance-Based Structural Health Monitoring of Fiber-Reinforced Concrete Specimens under Four-Point Repeated Loading" CivilEng 4, no. 3: 856-880. https://doi.org/10.3390/civileng4030047
APA StyleNaoum, M. C., Chalioris, C. E., Karayannis, C. G., Karabinis, A. I., & Elenas, A. (2023). Electro-Mechanical Impedance-Based Structural Health Monitoring of Fiber-Reinforced Concrete Specimens under Four-Point Repeated Loading. CivilEng, 4(3), 856-880. https://doi.org/10.3390/civileng4030047