5,054 research outputs found

    Performance Assessment of Concrete Crack Repairing Materials using PZT Transducers

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    Department of Urban and Environmental Engineering (Urban Infrastructure Engineering)Concrete is a widely used material in construction of civil infrastructure engineerings such as dams, houses, bridges, and energy plants. Due to shrinkage, rapid dry of the concrete, and overload, cracks are usually generated on the concrete structures and can possibly cause durability-related issues and structural damages. Thus, the concrete crack is an important indicator of potential durability degradation and damage, and the crack should be monitored and repaired through regular maintenance. Indeed, identifying and repairing the concrete cracks using healing materials is important. While most research efforts to date have been devoted to investigation of crack locations and sizes and effective repair, few are evaluating the repairing performance. Therefore, to find an effective nondestructive evaluation (NDE) method for assessing the repairing performance of different healing materials is necessary. Meanwhile, the electro-mechanical impedance (EMI) employing the Piezoelectric Ceramic Lead Zirconate Titanate (PZT) is widely used in structural health monitoring (SHM) as an NDE method in the civil engineering field. The PZT-based EMI is usually applied to detect and locate structural damage in operation. This study used PZT EMI to extract the impedance, which was used as the damage indicator to evaluate the repairing performance of three different materials of the healing cement material from Intchem company, superabsorbent polymer (SAP), and epoxy. A comparison study on the different computation methods of damage index (the root-mean-square deviation (RMSD), the shift of resonance frequency (SRF) and the mean absolute percentage deviation (MAPD)) is also conducted. Results show that the increase of crack depth level and the completing process of repairing crack can be carried out by the change rates of the impedance (admittance) and the shifts of the resonance frequency of PZT sensor in the selected frequency range clearly. .ope

    Pose-Invariant 3D Face Alignment

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    Face alignment aims to estimate the locations of a set of landmarks for a given image. This problem has received much attention as evidenced by the recent advancement in both the methodology and performance. However, most of the existing works neither explicitly handle face images with arbitrary poses, nor perform large-scale experiments on non-frontal and profile face images. In order to address these limitations, this paper proposes a novel face alignment algorithm that estimates both 2D and 3D landmarks and their 2D visibilities for a face image with an arbitrary pose. By integrating a 3D deformable model, a cascaded coupled-regressor approach is designed to estimate both the camera projection matrix and the 3D landmarks. Furthermore, the 3D model also allows us to automatically estimate the 2D landmark visibilities via surface normals. We gather a substantially larger collection of all-pose face images to evaluate our algorithm and demonstrate superior performances than the state-of-the-art methods
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