Abstract

Acoustic emission (AE) monitoring was conducted in order to ensure safe construction of an arch dam under severe climate conditions. The AE was detected during the secondary cooling in the winter time while the construction was suspended due to low temperature and heavy snow. In the spring time just before the construction restarted, AE was monitored during grouting into a joint of dam blocks. A multi-channel digital signal processing system was used to perform a quantitative AE waveform analysis based on the moment tensor analysis as well as the conventional AE parameter measurement. Low frequency AE sensors (15 kHz resonant) were employed to detect AE signals since the signals with ordinary frequencies attenuate greatly during the propagation in concrete of the dam. Twelve sensors were buried from the dam surface and four were mounted on the corridor floor inside the dam. Neither critical AE activity nor intense AE cluster were observed in the AE monitoring. Thus, it was confirmed that the dam was safe during both the secondary cooling and the grouting. The AE monitoring was proven to be very useful for the safety inspection of a dam under construction in severe conditions.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call