• Title/Summary/Keyword: Bonded repair

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Numerical Prediction of Ultimate Strength of RC Beams and Slabs with a Patch by p-Version Nonlinear Finite Element Modeling and Experimental Verification (p-Version 비선형 유한요소모델링과 실험적 검증에 의한 팻취 보강된 RC보와 슬래브의 극한강도 산정)

  • Ahn Jae-Seok;Park Jin-Hwan;Woo Kwang-Sung
    • Journal of the Computational Structural Engineering Institute of Korea
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    • v.17 no.4
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    • pp.375-387
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    • 2004
  • A new finite element model will be presented to analyze the nonlinear behavior of RC beams and slabs strengthened by a patch repair. The numerical approach is based on the p-version degenerate shell element including theory of anisotropic laminated composites, theory of materially and geometrically nonlinear plates. In the nonlinear formulation of this model, the total Lagrangian formulation is adopted with large deflections and moderate rotations being accounted for in the sense of von Karman hypothesis. The material model is based on hardening rule, crushing condition, plate-end debonding strength model and so on. The Gauss-Lobatto numerical quadrature is applied to calculate the stresses at the nodal points instead of Gauss points. The validity of the proposed p-version nonlinear finite element model is demonstrated through the load-deflection curves, the ultimate loads, and the failure modes of RC beams or slabs bonded with steel plates or FRP plates compared with available result of experiment and other numerical methods.

Self-healing Elastomers As Dream Smart Materials (꿈의 스마트 재료로서 자기치유 탄성체)

  • Kim, Il;Shin, Nam-Ho;Jo, Jung-Kyu;Hur, A-Young;Li, Haiqing;Ha, Chang-Sik
    • Elastomers and Composites
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    • v.44 no.3
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    • pp.196-208
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    • 2009
  • Sophisticated polymeric materials with 'responsive' properties are beginning to reach the market. The use of reversible, noncovalent interactions is a recurring design principle for responsive materials. Recently developed hydrogen-bonding units allow this design principle to be taken to its extreme. Supramolecular polymers, where hydrogen bonds are the only force keeping the monomers together, form materials whose (mechanical) properties respond strongly to a change in temperature or solvent. In this review, we describe some examples of hydrogen-bonded supramolecular polymers that can be utilized for self-healing materials. Synthesis of a rubber-like material that can be recycled might not seem exciting. But one that can also repeatedly repair itself at room temperature, without adhesives, really stretches the imagination. Autonomic healing materials respond without external intervention to environmental stimuli in a nonlinear and productive fashion, and have great potential for advanced engineering systems.