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      NDE application of ultrasonic tomography to a full-scale concrete structure.

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          Abstract

          Newly developed ultrasonic imaging technology for large concrete elements, based on tomographic reconstruction, is presented. The developed 3-D internal images (velocity tomograms) are used to detect internal defects (polystyrene foam and pre-cracked concrete prisms) that represent structural damage within a large steel reinforced concrete element. A hybrid air-coupled/contact transducer system is deployed. Electrostatic air-coupled transducers are used to generate ultrasonic energy and contact accelerometers are attached on the opposing side of the concrete element to detect the ultrasonic pulses. The developed hybrid testing setup enables collection of a large amount of high-quality, through-thickness ultrasonic data without surface preparation to the concrete. The algebraic reconstruction technique is used to reconstruct p-wave velocity tomograms from the obtained time signal data. A comparison with a one-sided ultrasonic imaging method is presented for the same specimen. Through-thickness tomography shows some benefit over one-sided imaging for highly reinforced concrete elements. The results demonstrate that the proposed through-thickness ultrasonic technique shows great potential for evaluation of full-scale concrete structures in the field.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          IEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control
          IEEE transactions on ultrasonics, ferroelectrics, and frequency control
          Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
          1525-8955
          0885-3010
          Jun 2015
          : 62
          : 6
          Article
          10.1109/TUFFC.2014.006962
          26067042
          4bd52563-b327-492f-a94e-cf92a18f01fc
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