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  4. Addressing the need to monitor concrete fatigue with Non Destructive Testing: results of Infrastar European project
 
conference paper not in proceedings

Addressing the need to monitor concrete fatigue with Non Destructive Testing: results of Infrastar European project

Abraham, O.
•
Niederleithinger, E.
•
Chapeleau, X.
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2018
Structural Materials Technology for Highways and Bridges (SMT) and the International Symposium on Non-Destructive Testing in Civil Engineering (NDT-CE)

Fatigue is one of the most prevalent issues, which directly influences the service life expectancy of concrete structures. Fatigue has been investigated for years for steel structures. However, recent findings suggest that concrete structures may also be significantly subjected to fatigue phenomena that could lead to premature failure of certain structural elements. To date, fatigue of reinforced concrete has been given little focus. Knowledge on the influence factors and durability/capacity effects on this material should be improved. Current technological means to measure fatigue in civil structures like bridges and wind turbines (both onshore and offshore) are outdated, imprecise and inappropriate. Meanwhile, this topic has got much more attention as time-variant loading on concrete structures plays an increasing role, e.g. in bridges with increasing traffic and heavier trucks, and for wind turbines for renewable energy production, e.g. for offshore wind turbine support structures affected by wind and waves. The European Innovative Training Networks (ITN) Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions project INFRASTAR (Innovation and Networking for Fatigue and Reliability Analysis of Structures - Training for Assessment of Risk) provides research training for 12 PhD students. The project aims to improve knowledge for optimizing the design of new structures as well as for more realistic verification of structural safety and more accurate prediction of the remaining fatigue lifetime of existing concrete structures. First, the INFRASTAR research framework is detailed. Then it will be exemplified through the presentation of the major results of the four PhD students involved in the work package dealing with auscultation and monitoring. This includes the development and improvement of Fiber Optics (FO) and Coda Wave Interferometry (CWI) for crack sizing and imagery, new sensor technologies and integration, information management, monitoring strategy for fatigue damage investigation and lifetime prediction.

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Type
conference paper not in proceedings
Author(s)
Abraham, O.
Niederleithinger, E.
Chapeleau, X.
Klikowicz, P.
Brühwiler, Eugen  
Bassil, A.
Wang, X.
Chakraborty, J.
Bayane, Imane  
Leduc, D.
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Date Issued

2018

Subjects

concrete

•

fatigue

•

crack

•

monitoring

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non-destructive testing

•

coda wave interferometry

•

embedded

•

ultrasonics sensors

•

distributed fiber optic sensors

•

mechanical transfer function

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
MCS  
GIS-GE  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
Structural Materials Technology for Highways and Bridges (SMT) and the International Symposium on Non-Destructive Testing in Civil Engineering (NDT-CE)

New Brunswick, NJ, USA

August 27-29, 2018

Available on Infoscience
January 16, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/153483
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