• Title/Summary/Keyword: vertical cracks

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Determination of the Vertical Crack Depth in Concrete by the Ultrasonic Time of Flight (초음파 도달시간에 의한 콘크리트에서의 수직 균열의 깊이 측정에 관한 연구)

  • 김영환;이세경;김호철
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 1990.04a
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    • pp.35-38
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    • 1990
  • Depths of the vertical cracks in the concrete were determined by the time of flight of the ultrasonic waves. The ultrasonic waves are diffracted at the crack tip, and the arrival time of ultrasonic waves are dependent on the crack depth and speration distance between transmitting and receiving ultrasonic transducers. The vertical cracks with 0.2-2mm width and 10-100mm depth were examined by multi-layered ultrasonic transducers. It was found that the time of flight of ultrasonic waves were proportional to the depth of vertical cracks. The depth of vertical cracks in the range of 20-100mm depth could be determined by the transient time of the diffracted ultrasonic waves

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Angle Beam Ultrasonic Testing Models and Their Application to Identification and Sizing of Surface Breaking Vertical Cracks

  • Song, Sung-Jin;Kim, Hak-Joon;Jung, Hee-Jun;Kim, Young-H.
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Nondestructive Testing
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    • v.22 no.6
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    • pp.627-636
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    • 2002
  • Identification and sizing of surface breaking vertical cracks using angle beam ultrasonic testing in practical situation quite often become very difficult tasks due to the presence of non-relevant signals caused by geometric reflectors. The present work introduces effective and systematic approaches to take care of such a difficulty by use oi angle beam ultrasonic testing models that can predict the expected signals from various targets very accurately. Specifically, the model-based TIFD (Technique for Identification of Flaw signals using Deconvolution) is Proposed for the identification of the crack tip signals from the non-relevant geometric reflection signals. In addition, the model-based Size-Amplitude Curve is introduced for the reliable sizing of surface breaking vertical cracks.

Influence of undercut and surface crack on the stability of a vertical escarpment

  • Banerjee, Sounik K.;Chakraborty, Debarghya
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.12 no.6
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    • pp.965-981
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    • 2017
  • Stability of vertical escarpments has been the subject of discussion for long time. However, available literature provides scarce knowledge about the effect of the formation of undercut and surface cracks on the stability of a vertical escarpment. The present study deals with a systematic analysis of the effect of surface cracks and undercut on slope stability using finite element based lower bound limit analysis. In the present analysis, the non-dimensional stability factor (${\gamma}H/c$) is used to inspect the degrading effect of undercut and cracks developed at different offset distances from the edge of the vertical escarpment. Failure patterns are also studied in detail to understand the extent and the type of failure zone which may generate during the state of collapse.

A study on the Surface Cracks in the West Stone Pagoda of Gameunsa Temple Site, Gyeongju, Korea: Examples from the second story stone body and the third story capstone (경주 감은사지 삼층석탑(서탑)에 발달한 표면균열에 대한 연구: 2층 탑신과 3층 옥개석의 사례)

  • Jwa, Yong-Joo;Kim, Jae-Hwan;Park, Sung-Cheol
    • The Journal of the Petrological Society of Korea
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    • v.17 no.4
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    • pp.238-244
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    • 2008
  • The west stone pagoda of Gameunsa temple site(National Treasure No. 112) has been seriously damaged by surface weathering, and conservation treatment is needed. In the second story body stone, vertical cracks developed parallel to the main compressional axis. The vertical cracks seem to grow much more with the compression. Chemical and biological weathering along the vertical cracks could have enhanced the crack growth. In the third story capstone, the surface cracks strike toward NE and NW directions, which are intersecting each other. In the eastern and southern parts of the third story capstone, lots of vertical cracks develop along the lines from the axial center to outer rim, whereas horizontal cracks are easily observed at the outer rim of the capstone. On the other hand, a few horizontal cracks develop in the western and northern parts of the third story capstone. This fact indicates that the compression along the vertical axis is not uniform in direction. The west stone pagoda leans toward the east and the south, so it is considered that compression by deviatoric stress prevailed at these directions.

Analytical solutions for crack initiation on floor-strata interface during mining

  • Zhao, Chongbin
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.237-255
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    • 2015
  • From the related engineering principles, analytical solutions for horizontal crack initiation and propagation on a coal panel floor-underlying strata interface due to coal panel excavation are derived in this paper. Two important concepts, namely the critical panel width of horizontal crack initiation on the panel floor-underlying strata interface and the critical panel width of vertical fracture (crack) initiation in the panel floor, have been presented. The resulting analytical solution indicates that: (1) the first criterion can be used to express the condition under which horizontal plane cracks (on the panel floor-underlying strata interface or in the panel floor because of delamination) due to the mining induced vertical stress will initiate and propagate; (2) the second criterion can be used to express the condition under which vertical plane cracks (in the panel floor) due to the mining induced horizontal stress will initiate and propagate; (3) this orthogonal set of horizontal and vertical plane cracks, once formed, will provide the necessary weak network for the flow of gas to inrush into the panel. Two characteristic equations are given to quantitatively estimate both the critical panel width of vertical fracture initiation in the panel floor and the critical panel width of horizontal crack initiation on the interface between the panel floor and its underlying strata. The significance of this study is to provide not only some theoretical bases for understanding the fundamental mechanism of a longwall floor gas inrush problem but also a benchmark solution for verifying any numerical methods that are used to deal with this kind of gas inrush problem.

Fracture formation and fracture Volume on Vertical Load by Blasting Demolition of Model Reinforced Concrete Pillars (철근 콘크리트 기둥 발파시 수직하중에 따른 파쇄형태 및 파쇄체적)

  • Park Hoon;Song Jung-Un;Kim Seung-Kon
    • Explosives and Blasting
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.45-56
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    • 2005
  • In this study, fracture formation and fracture volume by blasting demolition of model reinforced concrete pillars were compared with various vertical load and influence of reinforced steel bar. The more vertical load increased, the more tensile cracks and vertical direction cracks produced. In vertical load of 2.0ton, tensile cracks on vertical direction were predominantly produced. Generally, the more vertical load increased, the more bending deformation of concrete steel bar decreased. As a result, vertical load was influenced fracture formation of concrete and bending deformation of reinforced steel bar. Reinforced steel bar was influenced fracture volume of concrete. According to vertical load and influence of reinforce steel bar by blasting demolition of reinforced concrete pillars, drilling and blasting pattern may be modified.

Crack behaviour of top layer in layered rocks

  • Chang, Xu;Ma, Wenya;Li, Zhenhua;Wang, Hui
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.16 no.1
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    • pp.49-58
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    • 2018
  • Open-mode cracks could be commonly observed in layered rocks. A concept model is firstly used to explore the mechanism of the vertical cracks (VCs) in the top layer. Then the crack behaviour of the two-layer model is simulated based on a cohesive zone model (CZM) for layer interfaces and a plastic-damage model for rocks. The model indicates that the tensile stress normal to the VCs changes to compression if the crack spacing to layer thickness ratio is lower than a threshold. The results indicate that there is a threshold for interfacial shear strength that controls the crack patterns of the layered system. If the shear strength is lower than the threshold, the top layer is meshed by the VCs and interfacial cracks (ICs). When the shear strength is higher than the threshold, the top layer is meshed by the VCs and parallel cracks (PCs). If the shear strength is comparative to the threshold, a combining pattern of VCs, PCs and ICs for the top layer can be formed. The evolutions of stress distribution in the crack-bound block indicate that the ICs and PCs can reduce the load transferred for the substrate layer, and thus leads to a crack saturation state.

A Study on the Recognition of Concrete Cracks using Fuzzy Single Layer Perceptron

  • Park, Hyun-Jung
    • Journal of information and communication convergence engineering
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.204-206
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    • 2008
  • In this paper, we proposed the recognition method that automatically extracts cracks from a surface image acquired by a digital camera and recognizes the directions (horizontal, vertical, -45 degree, and 45 degree) of cracks using the fuzzy single layer perceptron. We compensate an effect of light on a concrete surface image by applying the closing operation, which is one of the morphological techniques, extract the edges of cracks by Sobel masking, and binarize the image by applying the iterated binarization technique. Two times of noise reduction are applied to the binary image for effective noise elimination. After the specific regions of cracks are automatically extracted from the preprocessed image by applying Glassfire labeling algorithm to the extracted crack image, the cracks of the specific region are enlarged or reduced to $30{\times}30$ pixels and then used as input patterns to the fuzzy single layer perceptron. The experiments using concrete crack images showed that the cracks in the concrete crack images were effectively extracted and the fuzzy single layer perceptron was effective in the recognition of the extracted cracks directions.

Thermal Cracking Control of Mass Concrete by Vertical Pipe Cooling Method (연직파이프쿨링 공법에 의한 매스콘크리트 온도균열 제어)

  • Seo, Tae-Seok;Lim, Chang-Keun;Cho, Yun-Gu
    • Journal of the Korean Recycled Construction Resources Institute
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    • v.2 no.3
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    • pp.233-238
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    • 2014
  • In case of the slender mass concrete like attached wall, retaining wall and bridge tower, the low heat cement and the control joint are mainly used for thermal cracking control. However, even if these cracking control methods are considered, it is impossible to control thermal cracks perfectly, because the external restraint is largely in these mass concrete. Because these cracks occurring in slender mass concrete members almost penetrate concrete member, the special cracking control is demanded in these mass concretes. The vertical pipe cooling method improving existing pipe cooling method was developed for the active thermal cracking control of slender mass concrete, and applied at the field attached wall. In results, the maximum temperature dropped more than $10^{\circ}C$ by vertical pipe cooling method, and the cracks decreased about more than 50%.