In order to (1) determine the minimum adhesion length for the OF fixed between the two FRP strips to exert sufficient strength, and to (2) investigate whether the FBG sensor can sufficiently display the strain information that occurs in the FRP, a tensile test was conducted using the adhesion length of the OF between the FRPs as a variable. In the actual concrete member strengthened with the NSM FRP, the tensile stress in the longitudinal direction of the FRP governs. The optical fiber embedded between the FRPs is subjected to the tensile stress almost like the FRP, thus a test for the tensile stress was conducted.
3.1. Plan of Tensile Test
To accurately identify the tensile strength of the OF used in this study, a tensile test was conducted after fixing both ends of the OF between the two Carbon FRP (CFRP) strips as shown in
Figure 6. In the fabrication process of specimens, the adhesion length was set to 10, 30, 50, and 100 mm, respectively, in order to determine the minimum adhesion length for the OF to exert sufficient tensile strength when using epoxy as the bonding material. These were based on the results of related studies [
26,
27] and the adhesion strength of epoxy. Meanwhile, when the FBG is formed in the OF with a laser, the tensile strength decreases due to the cross-sectional loss of the OF. Therefore, a specimen designed to identify the tensile strength of the OF in which a grating is formed was fabricated as well.
Table 1 shows a list of tensile specimens, and three samples were produced for each specimen. In the fabrication of tensile specimens, two FRP strips with a width of 16 mm and a thickness of 1.2 mm were fixed at both ends of the OF while maintaining a thickness of 2.6 mm of epoxy resin.
Figure 7 shows the ends of the fabricated specimen. Epoxy may be affected by temperature during curing [
28]. However, the epoxy used in this study was cured for two days in the range of 22 ± 2 °C, as suggested by the manufacturer. The experiment was conducted under 22 ± 2 °C which is a temperature condition where the adhesive strength of the epoxy could be sufficiently achieved. The Japan Shimadzu’s UTM (AG-250) with a capacity of 250 kN was used in the tensile test. The tensile force was gradually increased with a loading speed of 3.6 mm/min until the specimen underwent failure after 50 mm of the FRP portions at both ends of the specimen were held tightly by plate-type grips with a lightly serrated surface as shown in
Figure 8. The material properties of the OF, FRP, and epoxy used are summarized in
Table 2,
Table 3 and
Table 4, respectively. These data are all provided by the manufacturer.
3.2. Tensile Strength of Optical Fiber Inserted between FRP Strips
From the test, the tensile strength of the specimens decreased rapidly after the concentration of failure at the coating part regardless of adhesion lengths as shown in
Figure 9. SEM photographs of the fractured OF in each specimen were performed using Japan JEOL’s JSM-7610.
Figure 10 shows the SEM image. The unit length indicated by the white bar at the bottom of each figure is 100 μm. The images show (a) the OF before tensile stress is applied, (b) the slip that occurs between the core and coating after the failure of the coating part, and (c) tensile fracture. The tensile strengths according to the adhesion length are summarized in
Table 5. The third test specimen of OF-100 was fractured early and the test result was excluded from the analysis. The tensile strength is obtained by dividing the load by the cross-sectional area including the coating. Although the deviation of the values between the specimens with the same adhesion length is large, the maximum tensile strength tends to increase in proportion to the attachment length.
Figure 11 shows the minimum and maximum values of three specimens for each adhesion length. There was no difference in strength, even when the adhesion length was increased from 10 mm to 30 mm. However, at longer adhesion lengths than 30 mm, the maximum strength increased in proportion to the adhesion length. When the adhesion length was 100 mm, the maximum strength was reached as the tensile fracture occurred in the OF. At this time, the tensile strength obtained by dividing the load by the cross-sectional area including coating was 237 MPa on average, while the tensile strength divided by the cross-sectional area of the core excluding the coating was 950 MPa on average. When the FBG was formed, the strength was 21.6% lower than that of the case without an FBG. When the adhesion length between the FRP and OF is not less than 30 mm, the interface can have a higher bond strength than the tensile strength of the OF with an FBG. In the OF-100-B specimen, the strain of the OF was measured from the FBG on an optical fiber.
Figure 12 shows the strain-stress curve of the specimen in which the FBG was formed. The stress on the vertical axis is the value obtained by dividing the applied load by the cross-sectional area of the core part, while the horizontal axis represents the strain measured from the FBG sensor. The process of converting the value measured from the FBG sensor to the strain is described in
Section 3.2. The stress-strain relationship is linear, and the tensile fracture occurs immediately after the maximum strength. In the curve of
Figure 12, the stiffness obtained by dividing the stress by the strain ranged from 18,982 to 19,335 MPa, showing an average of 19,146 MPa.
3.3. Sensing Capacity of Optical Fiber Inserted between FRP Strips
As stated above, the strain generated in the FRP may not be appropriately transferred to the OF sensor according to the shear lag phenomenon that occurs between the core part and coating as well as between coating and epoxy. This is closely related to the adhesion length of the OF. Accordingly, an experiment was conducted to observe the sensing performance according to the change in the adhesion length of the OF.
Table 6 shows a list of specimens for evaluating the sensing performance of the OF embedded into FRP strips with epoxy. The shape of the FRP strip with the OF is as shown in
Figure 5. It was made by integrating with epoxy resin after placing the OF with an FBG between the two FRP strips.
Figure 13 represents the FRP strip. The adhesion length “L” of the OF was changed to 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50 mm, and the electric strain gauge was attached at the center of each specimen length. The sensing performance was evaluated by comparing the result obtained from the strain gauge and the sensing result of the OF. Regarding the production of the FRP strip with the OF, the epoxy thickness between the two FRP strips was 2.6 mm in consideration of the outer diameter of the tube. FRP pieces were installed with a cyanoacrylate CN bond to maintain an interval between two FRPs. The OF was placed to keep the planned adhesion length at the center of the test specimen, point bonded with a CN bond, applied with epoxy, and then attached with the upper FRP plate to produce the FRP strip reinforcement with the OF.
Figure 14 shows the tensile test setup. The end portion of the FRP strip was reinforced with an epoxy-filled square steel box with reference to ASTM D3039 [
29]. The OF, FRP strip, and epoxy resin are the same as those used in
Section 3.2, and the material properties are summarized in
Table 2,
Table 3 and
Table 4. As loading equipment, the UTM of Korea Daeyeong’s DYHU-200TC was used. The tensile force applied to the specimen was a third of the tensile strength of the OF-100-B specimen shown in
Table 4, which is the OF with an FBG, and the experiment was carried out by repeating it three times for each specimen with a loading speed of 3.6 mm/min.
The measurement principle of the OF sensor is to use the characteristic that the wavelength of light reflected from each grating varies depending on changes in external conditions, such as temperature and intensity. As shown in
Figure 15, when a wide spectrum is incident, the fiber Bragg grating reflects only a specific wavelength and transmits the other wavelengths. In addition, when the ambient temperature of the grating changes or tension is applied to the grating, the reflective index or length of the OF changes, and the specific wavelength reflected also changes. Therefore, temperature, tension, pressure, and bending, etc., can be detected by measuring the wavelength of light reflected from the FBG. When the wide spectrum is incident on the OF, the reflected signal causes interference and is reflected on the OF grating, and the remaining wavelengths pass through and are not involved in the measurement as shown in Equation (1) [
30].
where
is the reflected wavelength (
,
is the effective reflection index, and
is the period of the FBG.
The Bragg wavelength reflected from the grating is a function of the effective refractive index and the grating period. Since the main meaning of the effective refractive index and the grating is a function of the temperature and strain, the reflected wavelength changes as temperature or deformation are given to the fiber Bragg grating. In the Bragg equation, if the Bragg wavelength is differentiated, and the temperature, strain, effective refractive index, and grating period are then substituted, Equation (2) can be obtained as shown below.
where
is the change of the wavelength (
,
is the expansion coefficient corresponding to temperature,
is the coefficient considering the change of reflection corresponding to temperature,
is temperature change,
is the photo-elastic coefficient,
is the change of strain in the FBG, and
and
are coefficients considering the changes of temperature and reflection, respectively.
Therefore, the strain can be calculated from the measured wavelength change information as shown in Equation (3).
The photo-elastic modulus (
), reflected wavelength (
), expansion coefficient corresponding to temperature (
), and coefficient considering the change of reflection corresponding to temperature (
) values of the OF used in this study are summarized in
Table 7. The temperature change was not considered in the calculation since the temperature was kept constant in the laboratory.
Equation (3) was used to convert the tensile test results of the FRP strip with an OF according to the adhesion length into strain and compare it with the strain information of the electric gauge as shown in
Figure 16. It was found that the strain value of the electric gauge and the strain of the OF exhibit a linear relationship for all adhesion lengths. However, when the adhesion length “L” is 10 mm, the strain of the OF sensor consistently shows a value corresponding to 74% of the electric gauge strain. This is because the strain that occurred in the FRP is not sufficiently transferred to the OF due to the shear lag effect. On the other hand, when the adhesion length is 20 mm or more, the strain of the OF sensor is almost identical to that of the electric gauge. These results suggest that an adhesion length of 20 mm or more in one direction from the center, with a total adhesion length of more than 40 mm, needs to be secured when the OF is attached and fixed between the two FRP strips with epoxy.