• Title/Summary/Keyword: compressive performance

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Effect of Recycled PET Fiber Reinforced Concrete on Chemical Environment (화학적 환경하에서 재생 PET섬유보강 콘크리트의 성능)

  • Jang, Chang-Il;Lee, Sang-Woo;Choi, Min-Jung;Kim, Joon-Mo;Won, Jong-Pil;Kim, Wan-Young
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2008.04a
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    • pp.709-712
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    • 2008
  • This study evaluated a mechanical performance of recycled polyethylene terephthalate(PET) fiber reinforced concrete on chemical environment. This study applied to three types of environmental condition including alkaline, salt, $CaCl_2$ in water solution and measured a reduction of mechanical performance of recycled PET fiber reinforced concrete for 30, 60, 90 days under chemical solutions. The mechanical performance of recycled PET fiber reinforced concrete evaluated to carried out a compressive strength test. As the result of test, it was found that the mechanical performance decreased as the exposure time to alkaline environment and indicated a excellence performance under salt, $CaCl_2$ environment conditions.

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Estimation of the Autogenous Shrinkage of the High Performance Concrete Containing Expansive Additive and Shrinkage Reducing Agent (팽창재와 수축저감제를 조차 사용한 고성능 콘크리트의 자기수축 해석)

  • Han, Min-Cheol
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Building Construction
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.123-130
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    • 2007
  • This study investigated the fundamental properties and shrinkage properties of high performance concrete with water/binder ratio of 0, 30 and with combination of expansive additive and shrinkage reducing agent. According to the results, the fluidity of high performance concrete showed lower the using method in combination with expansive additive and shrinkage reducing agent than the separately using method of that, so the amount of superplasticizer increased when the adding ratio of expansive additive and shrinkage reducing agent increased. However the air content of concrete increased when used in combination with expansive additive and shrinkage reducing agent, so the amount of AE agent decreased. The compressive strength showed the highest at 5% of expansive additive, and decreased with an increase of the amount of shrinkage reducing agent. Furthermore, in order to reduce the shrinkage of high performance concrete, it was found that the using method in combination with expansive additive and shrinkage reducing agent was more effective than separately using method of that. Autogenous shrinkage was predicted using JCI model. Because JCI model is unable to consider the effect of EA and SRA, correction factor should be added to enhance the accuracy.

Static and fatigue performance of stud shear connector in steel fiber reinforced concrete

  • Xu, Chen;Su, Qingtian;Masuya, Hiroshi
    • Steel and Composite Structures
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    • v.24 no.4
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    • pp.467-479
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    • 2017
  • The stud is one of the most frequently used shear connectors which are important to the steel-concrete composite action. The static and fatigue behavior of stud in the steel fiber reinforced concrete (SFRC) were particularly concerned in this study through the push-out tests and analysis. It was for the purpose of investigating and explaining a tendency proposed by the current existing researches that the SFRC may ameliorate the shear connector's mechanical performance, and thus contributing to the corresponding design practice. There were 20 test specimens in the tests and 8 models in the analysis. According to the test and analysis results, the SFRC had an obvious effect of restraining the concrete damage and improving the stud static performance when the compressive strength of the host concrete was relatively low. As to the fatigue aspect, the steel fibers in concrete also tended to improve the stud fatigue life, and the favorable tensile performance of SFRC may be the main reason. But such effect was found to vary with the fatigue load range. Moreover, the static and fatigue test results were compared with several design codes. Particularly, the fatigue life estimation of Eurocode 4 appeared to be less conservative than that of AASHTO, and to have higher safety redundancy than that of JSCE hybrid structure guideline.

Spalling Properties of High-Performance Concrete with the Kinds of Admixture and Polypropylene Fiber Contents (혼화재 종류 및 폴리프로필렌 섬유의 혼입률 변화에 따른 고성능 콘크리트의 폭열 특성)

  • Han, Cheon-Goo;Yang, Seong-Hwan;Lee, Byung-Yul;Hwang, Yin-Seong
    • Journal of the Korea institute for structural maintenance and inspection
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    • v.4 no.1
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    • pp.85-92
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    • 2000
  • Recently. there has been steadily applied in high-performance concrete using powder type admixture in construction field. It has been reported that high-performance concrete is likely to cause the spalling by fire more seriously due to the dense microstructure. In this paper, spalling properties of high-performance concrete with the kinds of admixture and polypropylene(PP) fiber contents are presented. According to the experimental results concrete contained no PP fiber take place in the form of the surface spalling, regardless of admixture. Concrete contained more than 0.05% of PP fiber and admixture do not take place the spalling, however the concrete using silica fume do spalling. Concrete using blast furnace slag have good performance in spalling resistance. It is found that residual compressive strength has 60~70% of its original strength when spalling do not occur. Although specimens after exposed at high temperature are cured at water for 28days, they do not recover their original strength.

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Experimental and numerical studies on seismic performance of hollow RC bridge columns

  • Han, Qiang;Zhou, Yulong;Du, Xiuli;Huang, Chao;Lee, George C.
    • Earthquakes and Structures
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.251-269
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    • 2014
  • To investigate the seismic performance and to obtain quantitative parameters for the requirement of performance-based bridge seismic design approach, 12 reinforced concrete (RC) hollow rectangular bridge column specimens were tested under constant axial load and cyclic bending. Parametric study is carried out on axial load ratio, aspect ratio, longitudinal reinforcement ratio and transverse reinforcement ratio. The damage states of these column specimens were related to engineering limit states to determine the quantitative criteria of performance-based bridge seismic design. The hysteretic behavior of bridge column specimens was simulated based on the fiber model in OpenSees program and the results of the force-displacement hysteretic curves were well agreed with the experimental results. The damage states of residual cracking, cover spalling, and core crushing could be well related to engineering limit states, such as longitudinal tensile strains of reinforcement or compressive strains of concrete, etc. using cumulative probability curves. The ductility coefficient varying from 3.71 to 8.29, and the equivalent viscous damping ratio varying from 0.19 to 0.31 could meet the requirements of seismic design.

Exposure to elevated temperatures and cooled under different regimes-a study on polypropylene concrete

  • Yaragal, Subhash C.;Ramanjaneyulu, S.
    • Advances in materials Research
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.21-34
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    • 2016
  • Fire is one of the most destructive powers to which a building structure can be subjected, often exposing concrete elements to elevated temperatures. The relative properties of concrete after such an exposure are of significant importance in terms of the serviceability of buildings. Unraveling the heating history of concrete and different cooling regimes is important for forensic research or to determine whether a fire-exposed concrete structure and its components are still structurally sound or not. Assessment of fire-damaged concrete structures usually starts with visual observation of colour change, cracking and spalling. Thus, it is important to know the effect of elevated temperatures on strength retention properties of concrete. This study reports the effect of elevated temperature on the mechanical properties of the concrete specimen with polypropylene fibres and cooled differently under various regimes. In the heating cycle, the specimen were subjected to elevated temperatures ranging from $200^{\circ}C$ to $800^{\circ}C$, in steps of $200^{\circ}C$ with a retention period of 1 hour. Then they were cooled to room temperature differently. The cooling regimes studied include, furnace cooling, air cooling and sudden cooling. After exposure to elevated temperatures and cooled differently, the weight loss, residual compressive and split tensile strengths retention characteristics were studied. Test results indicated that weight and both compressive and tensile strengths significantly reduce, with an increase in temperature and are strongly dependent on cooling regimes adopted.

Modal parameter identification with compressed samples by sparse decomposition using the free vibration function as dictionary

  • Kang, Jie;Duan, Zhongdong
    • Smart Structures and Systems
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    • v.25 no.2
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    • pp.123-133
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    • 2020
  • Compressive sensing (CS) is a newly developed data acquisition and processing technique that takes advantage of the sparse structure in signals. Normally signals in their primitive space or format are reconstructed from their compressed measurements for further treatments, such as modal analysis for vibration data. This approach causes problems such as leakage, loss of fidelity, etc., and the computation of reconstruction itself is costly as well. Therefore, it is appealing to directly work on the compressed data without prior reconstruction of the original data. In this paper, a direct approach for modal analysis of damped systems is proposed by decomposing the compressed measurements with an appropriate dictionary. The damped free vibration function is adopted to form atoms in the dictionary for the following sparse decomposition. Compared with the normally used Fourier bases, the damped free vibration function spans a space with both the frequency and damping as the control variables. In order to efficiently search the enormous two-dimension dictionary with frequency and damping as variables, a two-step strategy is implemented combined with the Orthogonal Matching Pursuit (OMP) to determine the optimal atom in the dictionary, which greatly reduces the computation of the sparse decomposition. The performance of the proposed method is demonstrated by a numerical and an experimental example, and advantages of the method are revealed by comparison with another such kind method using POD technique.

Experimental study on axial compressive behavior of welded built-up CFT stub columns made by cold-formed sections with different welding lines

  • Naghipour, Morteza;Yousofizinsaz, Ghazaleh;Shariati, Mahdi
    • Steel and Composite Structures
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    • v.34 no.3
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    • pp.347-359
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    • 2020
  • The objective of this study is to experimentally scrutinize the axial performance of built-up concrete filled steel tube (CFT) columns composed of steel plates. In this case, the main parameters cross section types, compressive strength of filled concrete, and the effect of welding lines. Welded built-up steel box columns are fabricated by connecting two pieces of cold-formed U-shaped or four pieces of L-shaped thin steel plates with continuous penetration groove welding line located at mid-depth of stub column section. Furthermore, traditional square steel box sections with no welding lines are investigated for the comparison of axial behavior between the generic and build-up cross sections. Accordingly, 20 stub columns with thickness and height of 2 and 300 mm have been manufactured. As a result, welding lines in built-up specimens act as stiffeners because have higher strength and thickness in comparison to the plates. Subsequently, by increasing the welding lines, the load bearing capacity of stub columns has been increased in comparison to the traditional series. Furthermore, for specimens with the same confinement steel tubes and concrete core, increment of B/t ratio has reduced the ductility and axial strength.

Laboratory tests for studying the performance of grouted micro-fine cement

  • Aflaki, Esmael;Moodi, Faramarz
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.20 no.2
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    • pp.145-154
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    • 2017
  • In geological engineering, grouting with Portland cement is a common technique for ground improvement, during which micro-fine cement is applied as a slurry, such that it intrudes into soil voids and decreases soil porosity. To determine the utility and behavior of cements with different Blaine values (index of cement particle fineness) for stabilization of fine sand, non-destructive and destructive tests were employed, such as laser-ray determination of grain size distribution, and sedimentation, permeability, and compressive strength tests. The results of the experimental study demonstrated a suitable mix design for the upper and lower regions of the cement-grading curve that are important for grouting and stabilization. Increasing the fineness of the cement decreased the permeability and increased the compressive strength of grouted sand samples considerably after two weeks. Moreover, relative to finer (higher Blaine value) or coarser (lower Blaine value) cements, cement with a Blaine value of $5,100cm^2/g$ was optimal for void reduction in a grouted soil mass. Overall, study results indicate that cement with an optimum Blaine value can be used to satisfy the designed geotechnical criteria.

Multipath Ghosts in Through-the-Wall Radar Imaging: Challenges and Solutions

  • Abdalla, Abdi T.;Alkhodary, Mohammad T.;Muqaibel, Ali H.
    • ETRI Journal
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    • v.40 no.3
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    • pp.376-388
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    • 2018
  • In through-the-wall radar imaging (TWRI), the presence of front and side walls causes multipath propagation, which creates fake targets called multipath ghosts. They populate the scene and reduce the probability of correct target detection, classification, and localization. In modern TWRI, specular multipath exploitation has received considerable attention for reducing the effects of multipath ghosts. However, this exploitation is challenged by the requirements of the reflecting geometry, which is not always available. Currently, the demand for a high radar image resolution dictates the use of a large aperture and wide bandwidth. This results in a large amount of data. To tackle this problem, compressive sensing (CS) is applied to TWRI. With CS, only a fraction of the data are used to produce a high-quality image, provided that the scene is sparse. However, owing to multipath ghosts, the scene sparsity is highly deteriorated; hence, the performance of the CS algorithms is compromised. This paper presents and discusses the adverse effects of multipath ghosts in TWRI. It describes the physical formation of ghosts, their challenges, and existing suppression techniques.