Correlation of Load-Bearing Behavior of Reinforced Concrete Members and Velocity Changes of Coda Waves.
Felix ClaußNiklas EppleMark Alexander AhrensErnst NiederleithingerPeter MarkPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The integral collection of information such as strains, cracks, or temperatures by ultrasound offers the best prerequisites to monitor structures during their lifetime. In this paper, a novel approach is proposed which uses the collected information in the coda of ultrasonic signals to infer the condition of a structure. This approach is derived from component tests on a reinforced concrete beam subjected to four-point bending in the lab at Ruhr University Bochum. In addition to ultrasonic measurements, strain of the reinforcement is measured with fiber optic sensors. Approached by the methods of moment-curvature relations, the steel strains serve as a reference for velocity changes of the coda waves. In particular, a correlation between the relative velocity change and the average steel strain in the reinforcement is derived that covers 90% of the total bearing capacity. The purely empirical model yields a linear function with a high level of accuracy (R2=0.99, RMSE≈90μstrain).