Theoretical and experimental study of the nonlinear resonance vibration of cementitious materials with an application to damage characterization.

J Acoust Soc Am

Department of Civil Engineering, School of Transportation Science and Engineering, Beihang University, Beijing, 100191, People's Republic of China.

Published: November 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • This paper studies the nonlinear flexural vibrations in cement-based materials affected by alkali-silica reaction (ASR), focusing on how microcracks contribute to this behavior.
  • A general motion equation is derived for slender beams, leading to a formula for how resonance frequency shifts with varying excitation, indicating that greater ASR damage significantly alters the material's nonlinearity parameters.
  • Experimental results show that ASR damage increases nonlinearity parameters by up to six times, while only causing a 16% change in linear resonance frequency, highlighting the effectiveness of the combined theoretical and experimental methods for assessing ASR damage.

Article Abstract

This paper presents a theoretical and experimental study of the nonlinear flexural vibration of a cement-based material with distributed microcracks caused by an important deterioration mechanism, alkali-silica reaction (ASR). The general equation of motion is derived for the flexural vibration of a slender beam with the nonlinear hysteretic constitutive relationship for consolidated materials, and then an approximate formula for excitation-dependent resonance frequency is obtained. A downward shift of the resonance frequency is related to the nonlinearity parameters defined in the constitutive relationship. Vibration experiments are conducted on standard mortar bar samples undergoing progressive ASR damage. The absolute nonlinearity parameters are determined from these experimental results using the theoretical solution in order to investigate their dependence on the damage state of the material. With the progress of the ASR damage, the absolute value of the hysteresis nonlinearity parameter increases by as much as six times from the intact (undamaged) state in the sample with highly reactive aggregate; this is in contrast to a change of about 16% in the linear resonance frequency. It is demonstrated that the combined theoretical and experimental approach developed in this research can be used to quantitatively characterize ASR damage in mortar samples and other cement-based materials.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.3647303DOI Listing

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