Measuring three-dimensional temperature distributions in steel–concrete composite slabs subjected to fire using distributed fiber optic sensors

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Abstract

Detailed information about temperature distribution can be important to understand structural behavior in fire. This study develops a method to image three-dimensional temperature distributions in steel–concrete composite slabs using distributed fiber optic sensors. The feasibility of the method is explored using six 1.2 m × 0.9 m steel–concrete composite slabs instrumented with distributed sensors and thermocouples subjected to fire for over 3 h. Dense point clouds of temperature in the slabs were measured using the distributed sensors. The results show that the distributed sensors operated at material temperatures up to 960◦C with acceptable accuracy for many structural fire applications. The measured non-uniform temperature distributions indicate a spatially distributed thermal response in steel–concrete composite slabs, which can only be adequately captured using approaches that provide a high density of through-depth data points.

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Bao, Y., Hoehler, M. S., Smith, C. M., Bundy, M., & Chen, G. (2020). Measuring three-dimensional temperature distributions in steel–concrete composite slabs subjected to fire using distributed fiber optic sensors. Sensors (Switzerland), 20(19), 1–19. https://doi.org/10.3390/s20195518

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