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Acoustic Emission As Large Cracked Foundation Response On Static and Dynamic Loading

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Acoustic Emission as Large Cracked

Foundation Response on Static and Dynamic


Loading
Nora Vilchinska
Energolaboratory, 56/58 Ventspils Street, Riga, LV-1046, Latvia
Abstract.Large scale long time experiment is carried out in situ on foundations of hydro
power station located on soft soil. Loading assessment and analyses of recorded response
are developed. Foundation load may bee varied from quasi static to strong motion
regimes. AE spectra configuration is the same in quasi static and slow dynamic and its
energy carried frequency show frequency shift by loading-unloading. AE spectra are
high sensitive to static load changes. By regime strong motion in some measurement
points fracture opening are observe. Development of AE as the sum of the nonlinear
resonance frequencies of fractals and cracks under dynamic loads is discussed.
Experiment results future applicability may bee in non destructive nonlinear testing of
large objects in-situ and in modeling fractured media response to long time dynamic
with goal to estimate dynamic loading time and amplitude limits for intensification of
filtration of fluids through porous media.

INTRODUCTION
The non-linear methods of investigating the earth's crust were rapidly
developed in the recent decades; soft soil, rocks, concrete cracked and
fractured massifs were under research. The non-linear methods of analysis
of response require a medium with a clearly expressed non-linearity.
The requirement of the practice of forecast and analysis of the response of
cracked media to dynamic loading - this is the main stimulus of concentration
of attention to intensive studies of non-linear processes [1] in these media.
Information about the non-linear phenomena in geophysics was accumulated
from the last quarter of the past century [3, 4] during the study of the propagation
of waves in the earth's crust, in the grainy media, with the vibration
action to the earth's crust and with studies of strong earthquakes. Concrete
belongs to the class of non-linear materials, beginning from a certain stage of
hardening [6]. Non-linear wave methods for the examination of
damage in materials are the new frontier of acoustical non-destructive
testing [6,8]. As practice shows, in the process of operation concrete is
cracked and it becomes an ever more non-linear material. The non-linearity of
concrete plus the non-linearity of soil [2] under it not only complicates the task,
but also considerably increases practical interest in it, that also made us use the
non-destructive testing methods of non-linear acoustics. They are the only and
unique methods, which are able to clear up the complex spectral picture of the

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EXCEPT THOSE PAPERS ON PP. 59 - 62, 540 - 543, and 659 - 662
CP838, Innovations in Nonlinear Acoustics: 17th International Symposium on Nonlinear Acoustics,
edited by A. A. Atchley, V. W. Sparrow, and R. M. Keolian
2006 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0330-9/06/$23.00
112

CREDIT LINE (BELOW) TO BE INSERTED ONLY ON THE FIRST PAGE OF THE

response. The evaluation of changes in the foundation after the boosting regimes
and recommendations regarding the selection of the saving regimes with the
daily operation - these are the primary tasks of this investigation.
70 m
3

10

11 12

13

14

M easuring point galery


2

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

Water owerflow gates

22

23

1. HA

2.HA

3.H A

4.HA

5.HA

6.HA

7.HA

8.H A

9.HA

10.H A

100 m
A

20 m

Hydrogenerator

200 m

point

Measuring

Vertical

Concrete

A -A

Galery

B -B

C -C

35

Steel

40

200

MP -measuring point

construction

MPG

(a)

(b)

FIGURE 1. There are 23 MPs (measurement points) in the MPG (measurement


point gallery); their locations and configuration are shown on Fig. 1(a). Crosssection of the dam along the axis of a hydraulic turbine generator in the flow
direction, Fig.(1b).

Measurements
Measurement location.
The work was carried out investigating foundation concrete structures of an
operational hydroelectric power station, site and setup description was published
in[2], in short form it is seen in Fig.1.
All the units are operational and 2 overflow floodgates are open

S u r fa c e w a ve ve lo c ity in M P G
3400

0,14

m /s

+3%
-3 %

3200

V29.03.04

0,12
P29.03.04

0,1
g, RMS

3000

2800

T29.03.04

0,08
0,06

2600

0,04
2400

0,02
0

2200

1
2000

10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
Measuring Points

V vertical

1800

P flow direction
1600
2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10 .

11 .

12 .

13.

14.

15.

1 6.

1 7.

1 8.

19 .

20 .

21 .

22.

T- transverse to flow
direction

(a)
(b)
FIGURE 2 (a) Surface wave propagation velocity along the MPG. (b) Response RMS by
overflow in 23 MP

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The surface wave propagation velocity along the gallery is distributed as given in
Figure 2(a). Vertical polarized Rayleigh wave propagation velocity is measured
between MPs and it is within 1850-3200 m/s. The latter reflects the fractures
inside the concrete body (the less is the wave velocity, the higher is the crack
concentration). Propagating impulse spectral changes allow to assess the fracture
size. Measurements are made in silence.

Equipment.
The following equipment was used during the work: 8 accelerometers
manufactured by Wilcoxon Research, a SONY 8-channel digital data recorder,
type PC208A, an 8-channel data analysis software PCscan MKII and a
specialised 8-channel spectrum analysis programme. In some cases, a
one-channel data collector-analyser CMVA55 and vibration sensor manufactured
by SKF Condition Monitoring were used, allowing carrying out the signal
analyses in situ. The data analyses of all kinds were aimed at determining
vibration acceleration.

Load assessment
Dynamic load assessment is made for future analysis of response spectra within
the framework of non-linear elasticity.

Quasi-static realization: the power station foundation is 200 m long and it is


based on soft soils and preloaded with total vertical stress approximately 350
kPa. In the basement of the foundation, there are silty-clayey and clayey-silty
soils with non-uniform settlement and non-uniform relaxation time. All
hydroelectric generators are idle. Static stressed state of the foundation changes
with the change of the previous history of grouping of working hydroelectric
units and duration of their work. The possible explanation for that phenomenon:
the impact of vibrations of the working hydroelectric unit acts on the bearing
capacity of weak soil directly under the unit, as well as the difference in
consolidation time for clayey sand and sandy clay. That means that the relaxation
processes take place in a different way, and the process of consolidation of weak
soils is at a different stage under each unit, causing slow and weakly changing
stress in the body of the foundation. Thus, in the silent regime, the conditions
of quasi-static loading of the dam foundation due to relaxation processes are
complied
with.
response RMS in MP = 0.001 0.004 g

Slow dynamic realization: Working some hydroelectric generators.


response RMS in MP = 0.002 0.02 g

114

Strong motion realization : Working 10 hydroelectric generators + water


overflow
response RMS in MP = 0.02 0.08 g
assessment of the emitted and dissipated energy: 25-73 MJ

Response RMS of the foundation by overflow


RMS vibration accelerations by overflow (Fig.2b) (0.02 0.08) g, corresponding
to: a strong or very strong earthquake (Force 5-7) on the seismic scale of the
Institute of the Earth Physics (Moscow), slight to medium on the Richter
scale, Force 3-4 on the Mercalli scale.
Based on approximate estimates, the maximum lost energy, which is,
consequently, 1% from the generated energy, the possible seismic event
comprises 25-73 MJ with all the units in operation plus water discharge
that corresponds to a slight to medium earthquake. The bulk of the energy
was emitted in the high frequency range (1- 4) kHz, thus ensuring that the
event is local. There still remained a possibility of the excitation of the
medium by high-frequency energy, which later is emitted in the low-frequency
range.

Measurement results and analysis


What do we measure?
Two little simple experiments on the samples (diameter 7 cm, length 40 cm)
of foundation concrete give an answer to that question. The sensor is glued on
the one end (cross section) of the specimen, see Figure 3.

Experiment 1
Compression of a sample in metal clamps acts from two sides in the middle of
the specimen length; The response contains the low-frequency part - sample
oscillations and the high-frequency part. It is shown in Fig. 3 (b). The highfrequency area is caused by friction of metal about a granular surface of
concrete, that is acoustic emission (AE). AE frequencies depend on the pressure
on a sample and on amplitudes of sample low-frequency oscillations.

Experiment 2
Two samples are in contact with the end of a rough surface. They are squeezed
manually. Response spectra are shown in Fig. 3(a). The dynamic contact metal concrete is absent, see Fig. 4. The high-frequency area is caused by friction

115

granular surfaces of concrete against concrete that is acoustic emission (AE). AE


frequencies depend on the pressure between the samples and on amplitudes of
sample low-frequency oscillations.

(a)

(b)
FIGURE 3 (a) Response spectra: two samples are in contact with the end of rough surface.(b).
Response spectra: compression of a sample-pressure is transferred through metal tips and acts
from two sides in the middle of specimen length. In both cases the gauge is glued on one end face
of one specimen

.
FIGURE 4 The collector-analyzer CMVA55 was used. Sensor is glued on one end of the
specimen

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We measure the wide range response spectra. The response contains the low
frequency part the part of foundation oscillations and the high-frequency part,
caused by friction of metal over concrete against the granularar surface concrete,
that is acoustic emission (AE).

Detailed response analysis in MPs


Figure 5(a) gives a comparison of spectra V17 of the response in silence before
(18-Mar -04) and after (14-May-04) floods of 2004, the same forV18 on fig.6.
Fig. 5 (b), (c) show V17 response spectra development from 2003 to 2005 in two
frequency bands. Fig.5 (d) shows the response strength growth. By the
application of maximum loading 16-Mar-2004, resonance occurred. Real
response in MP, Fig. 5, and response in laboratory experiment, Fig. 3 (a, b) are
similar, only in situ energy-carrying frequencies are in the range (2000 5000)
Hz, but low-frequency oscillations (0.3 1000) Hz exist at low amplitudes. It is
explained simply: a laboratory sample is extracted from a borehole in solid
concrete, MPs in situ are located in cracked concrete and close to cracks. High
signal level is obtained from there, the source of which is friction of crack edges.

Response analysis simultaneously in 23 MPs.


Informatively, V,P,T spectra from 23 MP considerably expands and deepens the
research. It is possible to track the resonances arising in iron rods of Ferroconcrete, and their distribution in space, on distance some tens meter. In a
concrete body, it is possible to single out volume into some hundreds cubic
meters, which oscillates as a single whole on the nonlinear resonant frequency.
Volume border cracks on three dimensions in space create it. For great volumes
it is required to enter significant energy into system that these oscillations in
general have occurred.

Summary
The purpose of the publication is to show an opportunity of a method of
auscultation of an object with the subsequent analysis of the recorded signals,
applying latest developments in the theory of non-linear dynamic elasticity and
in acoustic emission. The simple and non-destructive mode of detailed research
and monitoring of so big an object needs future development. It is necessary to
have 3D visualisation of accumulated spectra and detailed laboratory
experiments for the exact assessment of the interdependence of the emitted
frequencies of the material and the applied stress for the object under
investigation.

117

(a)

(c)

(b)
(d)
FIGURE 5. (a) Comparison of spectra of the response in silence before (18-Mar -04) and after
(14-May-04) the floods of 2004. (b), (c) Response development in V17 (MP17). 7 measurements
were made: 1) 15-Apr -03 - silence, 2) 27-May-03 8 HG worked, 3) 18-Mar-04 - silence, 4) 29Mar-04 10 HG + 2 overflow, 5) 1-Apr-2004 (in the report it is 16-Mar-2004 but it is operators
mistake) -10 HG + 3 overflow (it is the maximum dynamic load), 6)14-May-04 - silence, 7) 27May-05 - 10 HG worked, (d) Response spectra on maximum load, 2005 and equivalent load +
overflow, 2004.

Figure 6. V18 till and after floods 2004 Analyze in details two silences /High pressure drop
down as results of strong oscillations. Q-factor is changed. Additional 2 max. in low frequency
range are seen

118

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by Energolaboratory. All measurements were carried
out by engineers of the Energolaboratory. In the processing of results software of
the Laboratory was used. Energolaboratory is an industrial laboratory. Thanks
for financial support and for the opportunities given me to carry out this
research

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