• Title/Summary/Keyword: Pull-out Tests

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A Study on the Impact Fracture Behavior of Carbon Fiber Reinforced Plastics (CFRP 복합재료의 충격파괴거동에 관한 연구)

  • 고성위;김학돌;엄윤성;최영근;김형진;김재동;김엄기
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Fisheries and Ocean Technology
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    • v.38 no.4
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    • pp.300-306
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    • 2002
  • In this paper the failure mechanisms and Charpy impact tests of carbon fiber polypropylene composites have been studied in the temperature range -5$0^{\circ}C$ to 6$0^{\circ}C$ and 3 different supported length of specimen (span length). There are significant effects of temperature and span length on impact fracture toughness, which shows a peak at ambient temperature and decrease as temperature is reduced. Fracture toughness shows a maximum at span length s=20mm. Failure mechanisms are characterized based on SEM examination, which is correlated the measured fracture toughness. Mafor mechansms of this composites can be classified as fiber matrix debonding, delamination, fiber pull-out and matrix deformation.

Effect of Fiber Volume Fraction on Bond Properties of Structural Synthetic Fiber in Polypropylene Fiber Reinforced Cement Composites (폴리프로필렌섬유보강 시멘트 복합재료에 정착된 구조용 합성섬유의 부착거동에 미치는 섬유 혼입률의 효과)

  • Lee, Jin Hyeong;Park, Chan Gi
    • Journal of the Korea institute for structural maintenance and inspection
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    • v.15 no.4
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    • pp.125-135
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    • 2011
  • The bond properties between polypropylene fiber reinforced cement composites and structural synthetic fiber have been investigated. in this paper. Three levels of polypropylene fibers volume fraction were used, 0.10%, 0.15%, and 0.20% in a series of Dog-bone pull out tests. The bond strength between structural synthetic fiber and polypropylene fiber reinforced cement composites increases with the volume fraction of polypropylene fiber, but the bond strength decreases above the amount of 0.20% by volume of polypropylene fiber reinforced cement composites. Also, the addition of polypropylene fiber a significant improved the interface toughness and the frictional resistance, The microstructure of structural synthetic fiber surface was investigated after the pullout test. The scratched of structural synthetic fiber increased with the polypropylene fiber volume fraction.

New emerging surface treatment of GFRP Hybrid bar for stronger durability of concrete structures

  • Park, Cheolwoo;Park, Younghwan;Kim, Seungwon;Ju, Minkwan
    • Smart Structures and Systems
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    • v.17 no.4
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    • pp.593-610
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    • 2016
  • In this study, an innovative and smart glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) hybrid bar was developed for stronger durability of concrete structures. As comparing with the conventional GFRP bar, the smart GFRP Hybrid bar can promise to enhance the modulus of elasticity so that it makes the cracking reduced than the case when the conventional GFRP bar is used. Besides, the GFRP Hybrid bar can effectively resist the corrosion of conventional steel bar by the GFRP outer surface on the steel bar. In order to verify the bond performance of the GFRP hybrid bar for structural reinforcement, uniaxial pull-out test was conducted. The variables were the bar diameter and the number of strands and pitch of the fiber ribs. Tensile tests showed a excellent increase in the modulus of elasticity, 152.1 GPa, as compared to that of the pure GFRP bar (50 GPa). The stress-strain curve was bi-linear, so that the ductile performance could be obtained. For the bond test, the entire GFRP hybrid bar test specimens failed in concrete splitting due to higher shear strength resulting in concrete crushing as a function of bar deformation. Investigation revealed that an increase in the number of strands of fiber ribs enhanced the bond strength, and the pitch guaranteed the bond strength of 19.1 mm diameter hybrid bar with 15.9 mm diameter of core section of deformed steel the ACI 440 1R-15 equation is regarded as more suitable for predicting the bond strength of GFRP hybrid bars, whereas the CSA S806-12 prediction is considered too conservative and is largely influenced by the bar diameter. For further study, various geometrical and material properties such as concrete cover, cross-sectional ratio, and surface treatment should be considered.

Soil and ribbed concrete slab interface modeling using large shear box and 3D FEM

  • Qian, Jian-Gu;Gao, Qian;Xue, Jian-feng;Chen, Hong-Wei;Huang, Mao-Song
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.295-312
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    • 2017
  • Cast in situ and grouted concrete helical piles with 150-200 mm diameter half cylindrical ribs have become an economical and effective choice in Shanghai, China for uplift piles in deep soft soils. Though this type of pile has been successful used in practice, the reinforcing mechanism and the contribution of the ribs to the total resistance is not clear, and there is no clear guideline for the design of such piles. To study the inclusion of ribs to the contribution of shear resistance, the shear behaviour between silty sand and concrete slabs with parallel ribs at different spacing and angles were tested in a large direct shear box ($600mm{\times}400mm{\times}200mm$). The front panels of the shear box are detachable to observe the soil deformation after the test. The tests were modelled with three-dimensional finite element method in ABAQUS. It was found that, passive zones can be developed ahead of the ribs to form undulated failure surfaces. The shear resistance and failure mode are affected by the ratio of rib spacing to rib diameter. Based on the shape and continuity of the failure zones at the interface, the failure modes at the interface can be classified as "punching", "local" or "general" shear failure respectively. With the inclusion of the ribs, the pull out resistance can increase up to 17%. The optimum rib spacing to rib diameter ratio was found to be around 7 based on the observed experimental results and the numerical modelling.

A Study on Technology Commercialization in the 4th Industrial Revolution (제4차 산업혁명의 기술 상용화에 관한 연구)

  • Sung, Tae kyung
    • Journal of Service Research and Studies
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.73-86
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    • 2019
  • This study discusses the 4th industrial revolution and technology commercialization (TC), identifies success factor (SFs) for TC from the literature review, and empirically tests these factors through questionnaires to executives in the 4th industrial revolution industries. Literature review identifies 11 SFs and they are communication, management support, incentives for TC, common goals, understanding business, awareness of TC, cooperation among partners, government support, concreteness of technology, demand-pull technology, and experience of TC. Questionnaires were administered to CEOs and CIOs in 202 companies in the 4th industrial revolution industries and final response rate was 64.4% (260 out of 404) that is considered to be high. Respondents rate cooperation among partners as the most important, followed by management support, communication, common goals, and incentives for TC. To successfully pursue technology commercialization projects in the 4th industrial revolution industries, the attention should be focused on SFs that are evaluated as very important.

Experimental Evaluation of Shear Strength of Surface Soil Beneath Greenhouse Varying Compaction Rate (비닐하우스 기초 토양의 다짐률 변화에 따른 전단강도 특성)

  • Lim, Seongyoonc;Heo, Giseok;Kwak, Dongyoup
    • Journal of The Korean Society of Agricultural Engineers
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    • v.63 no.6
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    • pp.17-26
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    • 2021
  • Greenhouses have been damaged due to the uplift pressure from strong wind, for which rebar piles are often installed near the greenhouse to resist the pressure. For the effective design of rebar piles, it is necessary to access the shear strength of soil on which the greenhouse is constructed. This study experimentally evaluates the shear strength of the soil beneath the greenhouse. Four soil samples were collected from four agricultural sites, and prepared for testing with 75, 80, 85, and 90% compaction rates. One-dimensional unconfined compression test (UC), consolidated-undrained triaxial test (CU), and resonant column test (RC) were performed for the evaluation of shear strength and shear modulus. Generally, the higher shear strength and modulus were observed with the higher compaction rates. In particular, the UC shear strength increases with the increase of #200 sieve passing rate. Resulting from the CU test, the sample with the most of coarse soil had the highest friction angle, but the variation is small among samples. Resulting from the CU and RC tests, the ratio of maximum shear modulus with the major principle stress at failure was the higher at the finer soil. The ratio was two to three times greater than the ratio from the standard sand. This indicates that the shear strength is lower for the fine soil than the coarse soil at the same shear modulus. The results of this study will be a useful resource for the estimation of the pull-out strength of the rebar pile against the uplift pressure.

Processing and Characterization of Polyamide 610/Carbon Fiber/Carbon Nanotube Composites through In-Situ Interfacial Polymerization (계면중합법을 이용한 폴리아마이드 610/탄소섬유/탄소나노튜브 복합재 제조 및 물성 평가)

  • Cho, Beom-Gon;Hwang, Sang-Ha;Park, Young-Bin
    • Composites Research
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    • v.33 no.6
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    • pp.415-420
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    • 2020
  • The interfacial properties in carbon fiber composites, which control the overall mechanical properties of the composites, are very important. Effective interface enhancement work is conducted on the modification of the carbon fiber surface with carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Nonetheless, most surface modifications methods do have their own drawbacks such as high temperatures with a range of 600~1000℃, which should be implemented for CNT growth on carbon fibers that can cause carbon fiber damages affecting deterioration of composites properties. This study includes the use of in-situ interfacial polymerization of polyamide 610/CNT to fabricate the carbon fiber composites. The process is very fast and continuous and can disperse CNTs with random orientation in the interface resulting in enhanced interfacial properties. Scanning electron microscopy was conducted to investigate the CNT dispersion and composites morphology, and the thermal stability of the composites was analyzed via thermogravimetric analysis. In addition, fiber pull-out tests were used to assess interfacial strength between fiber and matrix.

Punching Test for Development of High-strength Rockfall Net (고강도 포획망 개발을 위한 펀칭시험)

  • Hyunwoo Jin;Sanghoon Seo;Youngcheol Hwang
    • Journal of the Korean GEO-environmental Society
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.25-30
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    • 2023
  • The high-strength rockfall net developed in this study is to replace the fallout prevention net method using PVC coating net made of core wire thickness 3.2 mm and tensile strength 290-540 MPa class steel wire. General PVC coating net have low performance, and in the event of falling rocks or surface loss, they cannot withstand the load and are torn, which rather adds to the damage. Developed rockfall net was manufactured using steel wires with a core wire thickness of 2.8 to 3.2 mm and a tensile strength of 1,000 to 2,000 MPa. Test method was referred to the international standard Steel wire rope net panels and rolls-Definitions and specifications (ISO 17746:2016), and was conducted in accordance with the provisions of the punching test. Through indoor punching tests, the load-displacement curves of the general PVC coating network and the developed high-strength capture net (1,000 and 2,000 MPa) were compared, and the maximum Pull-out load was analyzed to be improved by 324.47% (2,000 MPa high-strength net).

A Study on Methodology for Improvement of Bond of FRP reinforcement to Concrete (초단유리섬유(milled glass fibers)와 에폭시 혼합물을 이용한 FRP 보강근 표면성형기법 연구)

  • Moon, Do-Young;Sim, Jongsung;Oh, Hongseob
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
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    • v.26 no.4A
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    • pp.775-785
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    • 2006
  • This study focused on the development of surface deformations of GFRP rebars with a better bond characteristic for reinforcing concrete, and simultaneously, of GFRP rebars with more simple and economic production process. This research paper describes a development and bond performance of GFRP rebar with molded deformations, which is composed of polymer resin and milled glass fiber. To determine proper mix ration of milled fibers, material test of hardened epoxy and pullout tests of GFRP rebar with various mix ratio were conducted. The test results indicate that the new strategy of using a mixture of epoxy resin and milled fiber could be successfully applied to a surface structure of GFRP rebar to enhance bond with concrete. The bearing resistance of the ribs was further enhanced by the milled fibers at mechanical and environmental loading state.

Influence of loading rate on flexural performance and acoustic emission characteristics of Ultra High Performance Concrete

  • Prabhat Ranjan Prem;Vignesh Kumar Ramamurthy;Vaibhav Vinod Ingle;Darssni Ravichandran;Greeshma Giridhar
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.89 no.6
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    • pp.617-626
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    • 2024
  • The study investigated the behavior of plain and fibered Ultra-High Performance Concrete (UHPC) beams under varying loading conditions using integrated analysis of the flexure and acoustic emission tests. The loading rate of testing is -0.25 -2 mm/min. It is observed that on increasing loading rate, flexural strength increases, and toughness decreases. The acoustic emission testing revealed that higher loading rates accelerate crack propagation. Fiber effect and matrix cracking are identified as significant contributors to the release of acoustic emission energy, with fiber rupture/failure and matrix cracking showing rate-dependent behavior. Crack classification analysis indicated that the rise angle (RA) value decreased under quasi-static loading. The average frequency (AF) value increased with the loading rate, but this trend reversed under rate-dependent conditions. K-means analysis identified distinct clusters of crack types with unique frequency and duration characteristics at different loading rates. Furthermore, the historic index and signal strength decreased with increasing loading rate after peak capacity, while the severity index increased in the post-peak zone, indicating more severe damage. The sudden rise in the historic index and cumulative signal strength indicates the possibility of several occurrences, such as the emergence of a significant crack, shifts in cracking modes, abrupt failure, or notable fiber debonding/pull-out. Moreover, there is a distinct rise in the number of AE knees corresponding to the increase in loading rate. The crack mapping from acoustic emission testing aligned with observed failure patterns, validating its use in structural health monitoring.