Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
464349 | Optical Fiber Technology | 2008 | 5 Pages |
We successfully measured longitudinal strains in two full-scale steel pipe specimens subjected to loading combinations of internal pressure, axial tensile force and bending moments undergoing local buckling under controlled laboratory conditions. Carbon-coated fibers, for the first time, and standard communication fibers were used. By using the broadening factor of the Brillouin spectrum width, we can successfully predict the location and progression sequence of buckling patterns, prior their visual detection in the laboratory. The broadening factor processing time is more efficient than multiple-peak fitting of the Brillouin spectrum method. Thus, it is capable of proving real-time deformation progression in structural health monitoring applications. High strength carbon-coated fibers are found to be superior to standard communication fibers in two respects: they provide more accurate readings and are able to measure significantly larger strains.