Abstract

Rapid identification of structural damage positions is essential to the post-disaster rehabilitation of structures and infrastructures. Large shear deformation, e.g., shear failure of bridge piers, shear-slip of slopes, and shear cracking of structural walls, is often the cause of structural instability. Distributed optical fibre sensing (DOFS) techniques have an advantage over point-based sensors in terms of spatial continuous structural condition monitoring. This paper presents the development of new measurement theory and algorithm to evaluate the structural shear deflection based on the large beam deflection and optical bend loss theories. The proposed technique adopted a photon-counting Optical Time Domain Reflectometer (ν-OTDR) with polymer optical fibres (POFs) which has a large deformation measurement range and high spatial resolution. In the experiment, shear deformation events can be successfully detected and evaluated from the proposed technique. When the normalised shear deformation is larger than 0.2, both the event locations and the magnitudes can be accurately determined. When normalised shear deformation is lesser than 0.2, the error in the magnitude evaluation increased, but the event location can be found with an absolute error <0.5 m. Multiple shear events can be treated as independent events when they are separated by more than 5 m. Various configurations of POFs attached to concrete beam specimens for rupture failure monitoring were also studied. The configuration that could maximise the POF curvature at the beam failure produced the largest ν-OTDR signals. In other configurations in which the POFs were only stretched at failure, the signals were less strong and were influenced by the POF-structure bonding strength.

Highlights

  • Massive post-disaster rehabilitation and reconstruction program is a heavy burden to the governments of developing countries

  • Plastic deformation occurs in polymer optical fibres (POFs) after an approximate axial strain of 5% [16] that leads to the memory effect observed in the OTDR

  • Large shear damage/rupture is well-known to be the major cause of the instability of buildings, bridge piers, and slopes [24,25], but shear deformation sensing with POFs has been scarcely studied

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Summary

Introduction

Massive post-disaster rehabilitation and reconstruction program is a heavy burden to the governments of developing countries. Over the past few decades, studies on optical fibre have started, leading to the proposal of various ideas and techniques for structural health monitoring and damage detection [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. An alternative to silicate-based SMFs is polymer optical fibres (POFs), which are ductile and flexible under stress. Plastic deformation occurs in POFs after an approximate axial strain of 5% [16] that leads to the memory effect observed in the OTDR. Large shear damage/rupture is well-known to be the major cause of the instability of buildings, bridge piers, and slopes [24,25], but shear deformation sensing with POFs has been scarcely studied. Various configurations of POFs attached to concrete beams for failure monitoring were studied

Measurement Principles and Events
Optical and Mechanical of the Optical
Large Deformation Theory endurance
OTDR Trace Characteristics of Single Shear Events
OTDR Trace Characteristics of Double Shear Events
Test Procedures
Findings
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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