Abstract

The combined application of distributed fibre optical strain measurements on reinforcing bars and digital image correlation (DIC) measurements on the concrete surface has a great potential to increase knowledge in many fields of structural concrete. This paper explores the advantages of these measurement techniques for concrete tests and the key aspects to be considered in order to obtain reliable measurements suitable for quantitative analysis. The uncertainty of DIC analysis is highly dependent on the test conditions and user carefulness, and should be assessed for each test. A procedure to quantify the DIC uncertainty in large scale structural tests is presented, showing that it is highly dependent on the quality of the calibration. Comparative tests on distributed fibre optical strain measurements with different fibre coatings show that polyimide-coated fibres capture properly high strain gradients and, therefore, should be used when instrumenting reinforcing bars in RC specimens. Moreover, the measuring noise was found to be dependent on the absolute strain level. Combined plots of crack kinematics and reinforcement strains, stresses and forces are shown for the results of a series of two concrete panel tests subjected to diagonal tension. Crack locations predicted by both measurements match perfectly in these experiments.

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