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Kim, Gun
Smart Materials and Intelligent Structures Lab.
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Quantitative evaluation of carbonation in concrete using nonlinear ultrasound

Author(s)
Kim, GunKim, Jin-YeonKurtis, Kimberly E.Jacobs, Laurence J.Le Pape, YannGuimaraes, Maria
Issued Date
2016-01
DOI
10.1617/s11527-014-0506-1
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/48619
Fulltext
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1617%2Fs11527-014-0506-1
Citation
MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES, v.49, no.1-2, pp.399 - 409
Abstract
A new nonlinear ultrasonic technique for nondestructive evaluation of concrete components is developed and implemented to characterize the effects of carbonation on concrete. The physical principle of this method is the second harmonic generation (SHG) in propagating Rayleigh surface waves which are detected by a non-contact air-coupled transducer. The nonlinearity parameter, as an indicator of material properties, is experimentally obtained from measured Rayleigh wave signals and is used to quantitatively evaluate the progress of carbonation under accelerated conditions. The experimental results show that there is a significant decrease in the measured nonlinearity parameter, most likely originated from the deposit of the carbonation product, CaCO3, in pre-existing voids and microcracks. The sensitivity of the nonlinearity parameter is also verified by comparing with the measured Rayleigh wave velocity. The results in this paper demonstrate that the SHG technique using Rayleigh surface waves can be used to monitor carbonation in concrete.
Publisher
SPRINGER
ISSN
1359-5997
Keyword (Author)
NDE for cement-based materialsNonlinear Rayleigh wavesNonlinearity parameterCarbonation
Keyword
RAYLEIGH SURFACE-WAVESAIR-COUPLED DETECTIONFATIGUE DAMAGECEMENTALKALIPERMEABILITYDURABILITYRESISTANCE

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