Abstract

AbstractThe deteriorating national infrastructure demands improved nondestructive evaluation (NDE) and structural health monitoring methods for existing concrete structures. Vibration resonance tests offer an efficient NDE method to identify and characterize shallow (near-surface) delamination defects that afflict RC structures. However, efficient implementation of effective modal analysis methods for this purpose is hindered by practical testing limitations. This paper studies vibration resonance data from square, rectangular, and circular near-surface delamination defects in concrete using two testing configurations: a coupled source-receiver set configuration (driving point type), which is analogous to the impact-echo (IE) test, and a fixed-source moving sensor configuration, which represents a conventional modal analysis test. All data were collected using contactless air-coupled sensors, which enable efficient data collection from large structures from prepared laboratory samples. An approach to self...

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