Acoustic emission energy b-value for local damage evaluation in reinforced concrete structures subjected to seismic loadings
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/89008Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Sagasta, Francisco; Zitto, Miguel E.; Piotrkowski, Rosa; Benavent-Climent, Amadeo; Suárez Vargas, Elisabet; Gallego Molina, AntolinoEditorial
Elsevier
Fecha
2017Resumen
A modification of the original b-value (Gutenberg-Richter parameter) is proposed to evaluate
local damage of reinforced concrete structures subjected to dynamical loads via the
acoustic emission (AE) method. The modification, shortly called energy b-value, is based
on the use of the true energy of the AE signals instead of its peak amplitude, traditionally
used for the calculation of b-value. The proposal is physically supported by the strong correlation
between the plastic strain energy dissipated by the specimen and the true energy
of the AE signals released during its deformation and cracking process, previously demonstrated
by the authors in several publications. AE data analysis consisted in the use of guard
sensors and the Continuous Wavelet Transform in order to separate primary and secondary
emissions as much as possible according to particular frequency bands. The approach has
been experimentally applied to the AE signals coming from a scaled reinforced concrete
frame structure, which was subjected to sequential seismic loads of incremental acceleration
peak by means of a 3 3m2 shaking table. For this specimen two beam-column connections—
one exterior and one interior—were instrumented with wide band low frequency
sensors properly attached on the structure. Evolution of the energy b-value along the loading
process accompanies the evolution of the severe damage at the critical regions of the
structure (beam-column connections), thus making promising its use for structural health
monitoring purposes.