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Journal ArticleDOI

Very early age concrete hydration characterization monitoring using piezoceramic based smart aggregates

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TLDR
In this article, a smart aggregate transducer is designed as a sandwich structure using two marble blocks and a pre-soldered lead zirconate titanate (PZT) patch.
Abstract
Very early age (0–20 h) concrete hydration is a complicated chemical reaction. During the very early age period, the concrete condition dramatically changes from liquid state to solid state. This paper presents the authors' recent research on monitoring very early age concrete hydration characterization by using piezoceramic based smart aggregates. The smart aggregate (SA) transducer is designed as a sandwich structure using two marble blocks and a pre-soldered lead zirconate titanate (PZT) patch. Based on the electromechanical property of piezo materials, the PZT patches function as both actuators and sensors. In addition, the marble blocks provide reliable protection to the fragile PZT patch and develop the SA into a robust embedded actuator or sensor in the structure. The active-sensing approach, which involved a pair of smart aggregates with one as an actuator and the other one as a sensor, was applied in this paper's experimental investigation of concrete hydration characterization monitoring. In order to completely understand the hydration condition of the inhomogeneous, over-cluttering, high-scattering characteristics of concrete (specifically of very early concrete), a swept sine wave and several constant frequency sine waves were chosen and produced by a function generator to excite the embedded actuating smart aggregate. The PZT vibration induced ultrasonic wave propagated through the concrete and was sent to the other smart aggregate sensor. The electrical signal transferred from the smart aggregate sensor was recorded during the test. As the concrete hydration reaction was occurring, the characteristic of the electrical signal continuously changed. This paper describes the successful investigation of the three states (the fluid state, the transition state, and the hardened state) of very early age concrete hydration based on classification of the received electrical signal. Specifically, the amplitude and frequency response of the electrical signal were of main interest. Both the swept sine wave and the constant frequency sine wave excitation methods presented the same conclusion on the three concrete states during the hydration, which enhances the reliability of the active-sensing approach for very early age concrete hydration monitoring.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cyclic Crack Monitoring of a Reinforced Concrete Column under Simulated Pseudo-Dynamic Loading Using Piezoceramic-Based Smart Aggregates

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used piezoceramic-based transducers, known as smart aggregates, to perform structural health monitoring of a reinforced concrete (RC) bridge column subjected to pseudo-dynamic loading.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crack detection and leakage monitoring on reinforced concrete pipe

TL;DR: In this article, a wavelet packet-based energy analysis was developed to distinguish the type of crack and determine the further leakage based on different stress wave energy attenuation propagated through the cracks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Damage detection of concrete piles subject to typical damage types based on stress wave measurement using embedded smart aggregates transducers

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper developed a monitoring system that can detect common pile damages, such as cracks, cracks, mud intrusion and secondary concrete pouring, which may directly result in casualties and economic loss, using embedded piezoceramic-based smart aggregates transducers along with the active sensing approach.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detection of Debonding Between Fiber Reinforced Polymer Bar and Concrete Structure Using Piezoceramic Transducers and Wavelet Packet Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, a stress wave-based active sensing approach was proposed to monitor debonding process of fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) bar with the hosting concrete structure, where two smart aggregates (SAs) were fabricated by sandwiching a shear type PZT patch between two protection marble pieces to detect the wave response.
Journal ArticleDOI

A novel embeddable spherical smart aggregate for structural health monitoring: part I. Fabrication and electrical characterization

TL;DR: In this paper, a novel embeddable spherical smart aggregate (SSA) for the health monitoring of concrete structures is presented, which can generate or receive omni-directional stress waves that can significantly improve the detection aperture and provide additional functionalities in SHM.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Overview of Piezoelectric Impedance-Based Health Monitoring and Path Forward

TL;DR: In this article, Niezrecki et al. summarized the hardware and software issues of impedance-based structural health modi- toring based on piezoelectric materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart aggregates: multi-functional sensors for concrete structures—a tutorial and a review

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a multi-functional smart aggregate for early-age concrete strength monitoring, impact detection and structural health monitoring, which can be applied to the comprehensive monitoring of concrete structures from their earliest stages and throughout their lifetime.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concrete early-age strength monitoring using embedded piezoelectric transducers

TL;DR: In this article, a fuzzy logic system is trained to correlate the harmonic response amplitude with the concrete strength based on the experimental data, and the experimental results show that the concrete strengths estimated by the trained fuzzy correlation system matches the experimental strength data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sensitivity of PZT Impedance Sensors for Damage Detection of Concrete Structures

TL;DR: A dynamic system consisting of a number of single-degree-of-freedom elements with mass, spring and damper components to model the structural mechanical impedance (SMI) is proposed, which is more sensitive to the damage than the EM admittance thus a better indicator for damage detection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of ultrasonic wave transmission and reflection measurements with P- and S-waves on early age mortar and concrete

TL;DR: In this paper, the results of round robin tests comparing two nondestructive, ultrasonic techniques: the wave transmission method using P-waves and the wave reflection method using S-waves were reported.
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