Use of non-linear ultrasonic techniques to detect cracks due to steel corrosion in reinforced concrete structures

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Abstract

In this work, non-linear ultrasonic wave techniques have been used to detect the onset of micro-cracking due to steel corrosion in model reinforced concrete elements. The specimens were of prismatic shape with a single steel rebar. The corrosion was forced by admixing an appropriate amount of sodium chloride at the moment of preparing the concrete mix, and by the application of an electric field, using a constant current density power source, and making the steel rebar work as the anode, and an external counter-electrode as the cathode. The preliminary results indicate that the onset of cracking seems to be accompanied by the appearance of higher-harmonic generation at the output signal (harmonic distortion), when the system is excited by the means of an ultrasound wave with a burst central frequency. Other phenomena related to the micro-cracks induced by corrosion, such is the parametric generation with respect to the fundamental amplitude, have not been observed until now.

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Climent, M. Á., Miró, M., Carbajo, J., Poveda, P., de Vera, G., & Ramis, J. (2019). Use of non-linear ultrasonic techniques to detect cracks due to steel corrosion in reinforced concrete structures. Materials, 12(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/MA12050813

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