• Title/Summary/Keyword: subsurface materials

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A Study of In-hole Method to Measure Dynamic Stiffness of Subsurface Materials (지반의 동적물성치 측정을 위한 인홀시험법에 대한 연구)

  • Mok, Young-Jin;Jung, Jin-Hun;Kim, Young-Su;Jung, Jae-Woo
    • Proceedings of the Korean Geotechical Society Conference
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    • 2004.03b
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    • pp.261-273
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    • 2004
  • An in-hole seismic method has been developed to meet the requirement of economical testing cost and practicality in engineering practice to measure dynamic soil properties. The in-hole prove developed herein is small and light enough to be fit in three-inch boreholes and to be handled with bare hands. And author modified the existing equipment for the convenient purpose. In addition, the best damper suited to in-hole test was also developed. The performance of the source has been evaluated through extensive cross-hole tests and in-hole tests at various sites.

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Crystal Plasticity Simulation of Ti-6Al-4V Under Fretting Fatigue (프레팅 피로를 받는 Ti-6Al-4V의 결정소성 시뮬레이션)

  • Goh Chung Hyun;Lee Kee Seok;Ko Jun Bin
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.29 no.4 s.235
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    • pp.511-517
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    • 2005
  • Fretting fatigue is often the root cause of the nucleation of cracks at attachments of structural components. Since fretting fatigue damage accumulation occurs over relatively small volumes, the subsurface cyclic plastic strain is expected to be rather non-uniformly distributed in polycrystalline materials. The scale of the cyclic plasticity and the damage process zones is often on the order of microstructure dimensions. Fretting damage analyses using cyclic crystal plasticity constitutive models have the potential to account for the influence of size, morphology, and crystallographic orientation of grains on fretting damage evolution. Two-dimensional plane strain simulations of fretting fatigue are performed using the cyclic properties of Ti-6Al-4V. The crystal plasticity simulations are compared to an initially isotropic $J_{2}$ theory with nonlinear kinematic hardening as well as to experiments. The influence of initially isotropic versus textured microstructure in the presence of crystallographic slip is studied.

Reinforcing Effect of Dredged Marine Clay Mixed with Micro-Fiber (Micro-Fiber 흔라네 의한 준설해성점토의 보강효과)

  • 박영목;우문정;허상목;정연인
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.75-81
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    • 2003
  • To investigate the reinforcing effect of subsurface layers of marine dredged clay(DMC) mixed with the micro-fiber(MF), a series of laboratory tests were performed on the DMC specimens with and without MF through uniaxial and triaxial compression tests. For the test programme, the elapsed time after dredging of marine clay, mixing rate and length of MF, and curing time of the composite were chosen as the important factors affecting the strength behaviour. The strength of the DMC mixed with MF and waste lime(WL) used for the admixture was found to be enhanced with the increasing content and length of MF, and with decreasing water content of DMC. MF and WL were applied as materials for trafficability improvement of the very soft reclaimed ground by DMC.

Analyses of Apparent Resistivity Responses from Near-Surface Cavities (지하천부의 공동에 의한 외견 비저항의 해석)

  • Kim, Hee Joon
    • Economic and Environmental Geology
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.101-107
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    • 1984
  • This paper describes dipole-dipole apparent resistivity responses from near-surface cavities in otherwise homogeneous earth materials. In applying the dipole-dipole resistivity method to the problem of locating and delineating subsurface cavities, it is important to know apparent resistivity responses not only for conductive bodies but also for resistive ones. Dipole-dipole apparent resistivities for these bodies are calculated by the numerical modeling technique using an integral equation solution. The magnitude and pattern of apparent resistivity is highly dependent on the ratio of body resistivity to background resistivity. In conductive bodies, the largest anomaly of apparent resistivity appears at the outside of the body. In resistive bodies, however, the position of the largest anomaly coincides with the location of the body. The field results gathered at Okinawa, Japan in 1978 showed that peak anomalies occurred at the locations of air-filled cavities.

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GEOTECHNICAL ENVIRONMENT SURVEY (1) (고심도 지반환경 조사 - 지반조사 (1))

  • HoWoongShon;DaeKeunLee;SangKyuKim
    • Journal of the Korean Geophysical Society
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    • v.6 no.4
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    • pp.231-244
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    • 2003
  • Lots of various utilities are buried under the surface of the earth. The effective handling of the underground utilities is becoming the big subject and project for the harmonious management and administration of the city. To detect the position and depth of buried underground utilities, GPR and Induced EM surveys are commonly used. However, they have limitations, such as shallow skin-depth and non-availability in the areas where subsurface materials are not homogeneous and are compose of clays and/or salts and gravels. The aim of this study is to find the efficient geophysical method which can overcome these limitations. For this purpose, various geophysical mehods were applied in the site of poor geotechnical environment.

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A Study on Dosimetric Characterization of Direct Yellow 12 Dye at High Radiation γ-Dose

  • Batool, Javaria;Shahid, Shaukat Ali;Ramiza, Ramiza;Akhtar, Nasim;Naz, Afshan;Yaseen, Maria;Ullah, Inam;Nadeem, Muhammad;Shakir, Imran
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.33 no.7
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    • pp.2265-2268
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    • 2012
  • Aqueous solution of oxygenated Direct yellow 12 dye has been evaluated spectrophotometrically as a possible gamma rays dosimeter. The neutral (pH-7), alkaline (pH-12.5) and acidic (pH-5.5) aqueous solution of the dye were prepared and exposed to various gamma doses. Absorption spectra of unirradiated and irradiated solutions were recorded at 400 nm peak. The increase in absorbance with the increase in irradiation dose was observed from 1 to 6 kGy. The stability response of the dye solution for different environmental conditions such as temperature (low & high), light and darkness were investigated during post irradiation storage for ten days. The dye solution showed high stability in darkness for the studied period. The optical density of the dye solution was found to be decreased at high temperature storage.

Determination of Shallow Velocity-Interface Model by Pseudo Full Waveform Inversion (유사파형역산에 의한 천부의 속도-경계면 모델 결정)

  • Jeong, Sang Yong;Shin, Chang Soo;Yang, Seung Jin
    • Economic and Environmental Geology
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    • v.28 no.5
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    • pp.481-485
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    • 1995
  • This paper presents a new approaching method to determine the velocity and geometry of shallow subsurface from seismic refraction events. After picking the first breaks from seismic refraction data, we assume that field refraction seismogram can be replaced by the unit delta function having time shift of first break. Time curves are generated by shooting ray tracing. The partial derivatives seismogram for a damped least squares method is computed analytically at each step of the forward ray tracing. The technique is successfully tested on synthetic and real data. It has the advantage of real full waveform inversion, which is robust at low frequency band even if the initial guess is far from the true model.

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Effect of reaction temperature and time on the formation of calcite precipitation of recycled concrete aggregate (RCA) for drainage applications

  • Boo Hyun Nam;Jinwoo An;Toni Curate
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.33 no.1
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    • pp.65-75
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    • 2023
  • Recycled concrete aggregate (RCA) is widely used as a construction material in road construction, concrete structures, embankments, etc. However, it has been reported that calcite (CaCO3) precipitation from RCA can be a cause of clogging when used in drainage applications. An accelerated calcite precipitation (ACP) procedure has been devised to evaluate the long-term geochemical performance of RCA in subsurface drainage systems. While the ACP procedure was useful for the French Drain application, there remained opportunities for improvement. In this study, key factors that control the formation of calcite precipitation were quantitatively evaluated, and the results were used to improve the current prototype ACP method. A laboratory parametric study was carried out by investigating the effects of reaction temperature and time on the formation of calcite precipitation of RCA, with determining an optimum reaction temperature and time which maximizes calcite precipitation. The improved ACP procedure was then applied to RCA samples that were graded for Type I Underdrain application, to compare the calcite precipitation. Two key findings are (1) that calcite precipitation can be maximized with the optimum heating temperature (75℃) and time (17 hours), and (2) the potential for calcite precipitation from RCA is not as significant as for limestone. With the improved ACP procedure, the total amount of calcite precipitation from RCAs within the life cycle of a drain system can be determined when RCAs from different sources are used as pipe backfill materials in a drain system.

Monitoring Time-Series Subsidence Observation in Incheon Using X-Band COSMO-SkyMed Synthetic Aperture Radar

  • Sang-Hoon Hong
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.40 no.2
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    • pp.141-150
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    • 2024
  • Ground subsidence in urban areas is mainly caused by anthropogenic factors such as excessive groundwater extraction and underground infrastructure development in the subsurface composed of soft materials. Global Navigation Satellite System data with high temporal resolution have been widely used to measure surface displacements accurately. However, these point-based terrestrial measurements with the low spatial resolution are somewhat limited in observing two-dimensional continuous surface displacements over large areas. The synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) technique can construct relatively high spatial resolution surface displacement information with accuracy ranging from millimeters to centimeters. Although constellation operations of SAR satellites have improved the revisit cycle, the temporal resolution of space-based observations is still low compared to in-situ observations. In this study, we evaluate the extraction of a time-series of surface displacement in Incheon Metropolitan City, South Korea, using the small baseline subset technique implemented using the commercial software, Gamma. For this purpose, 24 COSMO-SkyMed X-band SAR observations were collected from July 12, 2011, to August 27, 2012. The time-series surface displacement results were improved by reducing random phase noise, correcting residual phase due to satellite orbit errors, and mitigating nonlinear atmospheric phase artifacts. The perpendicular baseline of the collected COSMO-SkyMed SAR images was set to approximately 2-300 m. The surface displacement related to the ground subsidence was detected approximately 1 cm annually around a few Incheon Subway Line 2 route stations. The sufficient coherence indicates that the satellite orbit has been precisely managed for the interferometric processing.

Effect of Pro-eutectoid Ferrite and Cementite-spheroidization on the Sliding Wear Resistance of Carbon Steels (탄소강의 초석페라이트와 시멘타이트 구상화가 미끄럼마멸 거동에 미치는 영향 분석)

  • Hur, H.L.;Gwon, H.;Kim, M.G.;Kim, Y.S.
    • Transactions of Materials Processing
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    • v.23 no.6
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    • pp.345-350
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    • 2014
  • The current study elucidates the effects of cementite spheroidization and pro-eutectoid ferrite on the sliding wear resistance in medium carbon (0.45wt%C) and high carbon (1wt%C) steels. Both steels were initially heat treated to obtain a fully pearlite or ferrite + pearlite microstructure. Spheroidizing heat treatments were performed on both steels to spheroidize the pearlitic cementite. Sliding wear tests were conducted using a pin-on-disk wear tester with the steel specimens as the disk and an alumina ($Al_2O_3$) ball as the pin. The sliding wear tests were carried out at room temperature in air with humidity of $40{\pm}2%$. Adapted sliding distance and applied load was 300m and 100N, respectively. Sliding speed was 0.1m/s and the wear-track radius was 9 mm. Worn surfaces and cross-sections of the wear track were examined using an SEM. Micro Vickers hardness of the wear-track subsurface was measured as a function of depth from the worn surface. Hardness and sliding-wear resistance of both steel decreased with increased spheroidization of the cementite. The decrease was more significant in the fully pearlitic steel (1wt%C steel). The steel with the pro-eutectoid ferrite showed relatively higher wear resistance compared to the spheroidized pearlitic steel.