Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jeong-Soo Nam is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jeong-Soo Nam.


Journal of The Korea Concrete Institute | 2013

Evaluation on the Impact Resistant Performance of Fiber Reinforced Concrete by High-Velocity Projectile and Contacted Explosion

Jeong-Soo Nam; Hongseop Kim; In-Cheol Lee; Hiroyuki Miyauchi; Gyu-Yong Kim

In this study we experimentally evaluated an impact resistant performance of fiber reinforced concrete in the moment of explosion by high-velocity projectile with emulsion explosive. To assess the impact resistance, we conducted the impact test of high-velocity projectile which reaches an impact speed of 350 m/s and the experiment of contact exploding emulsion explosive. As a result, bending and tensile performance depending on type of PVA, PE fiber (polyvinyl alcohol fiber, polyethylene fiber) and steel fiber affects destruction of rear side in the form of spalling. Destroying the backside of the concrete compressive strength compared to suppress the bending and tensile performance is affected. In addition, the experiment shows that the destruction patterns of concrete specimen producted by high velocity impact and contact explosion are significantly similar. Therefore, it is possible to predict the destruction patterns of specimens in the situation of contact explosion by high-velocity projectile.


Materials | 2016

Effectiveness of Fiber Reinforcement on the Mechanical Properties and Shrinkage Cracking of Recycled Fine Aggregate Concrete

Jeong-Soo Nam; Gyu-Yong Kim; Jae-Chul Yoo; Gyeong-Cheol Choe; Hongseop Kim; Hyeonggil Choi; Young-Duck Kim

This paper presents an experimental study conducted to investigate the effect of fiber reinforcement on the mechanical properties and shrinkage cracking of recycled fine aggregate concrete (RFAC) with two types of fiber—polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and nylon. A small fiber volume fraction, such as 0.05% or 0.1%, in RFAC with polyvinyl alcohol or nylon fibers was used for optimum efficiency in minimum quantity. Additionally, to make a comparative evaluation of the mechanical properties and shrinkage cracking, we examined natural fine aggregate concrete as well. The test results revealed that the addition of fibers and fine aggregates plays an important role in improving the mechanical performance of the investigated concrete specimens as well as controlling their cracking behavior. The mechanical properties such as compressive strength, splitting tensile strength, and flexural strength of fiber-reinforced RFAC were slightly better than those of non-fiber-reinforced RFAC. The shrinkage cracking behavior was examined using plat-ring-type and slab-type tests. The fiber-reinforced RFAC showed a greater reduction in the surface cracks than non-fiber-reinforced concrete. The addition of fibers at a small volume fraction in RFAC is more effective for drying shrinkage cracks than for improving mechanical performance.


Journal of The Korea Concrete Institute | 2013

A Study on the Penetration Resistance and Spalling Properties of High Strength Concrete by Impact of High Velocity Projectile

Hongseop Kim; Jeong-Soo Nam; Heon-Kyu Hwang; Joong-Kyu Jeon; Gyu-Yong Kim

Concrete materials subjected to impact by high velocity projectiles exhibit responses that differ from those when they are under static loading. Projectiles generate localized effects characterized by penetration of front, spalling of rear and perforation as well as more widespread crack propagation. The magnitude of damage depends on a variety of factors such as material properties of the projectile, impact velocity, the mass and geometry as well as the material properties of concrete specimen size and thickness, reinforcement materials type and method of the concrete target. In this study, penetration depth of front, spalling thickness of rear and effect of spalling suppression of concrete by fiber reinforcement was evaluated according to compressive strength of concrete. As a result, it was similar to results of the modified NDRC formula and US ACE formula that the more compressive strength is increased, the penetration depth of front is suppressed. On the other hand, the increase in compressive strength of concrete does not affect spalling of rear suppression. Spalling of rear is controlled by the increase of flexural, tensile strength and deformation capacity.


Journal of the Korean Institute of Building Construction | 2013

Evaluation of Protective Performance of Fiber Reinforced Concrete T-Wall

In-Cheol Lee; Hongseop Kim; Jeong-Soo Nam; Suk-Bong Kim; Gyu-Yong Kim

Concrete is an outstanding material in terms of its impact and blast resistance performance. However, there a limitation of concrete is its risk of collapse due to the brittle failure and spalling. Increasing the thickness of members was used as a method to enhance the protective performance of concrete, despite the resulting inefficient space. To solve this problem, different types of fiber reinforced concrete were developed. Recently, another type of fiber reinforced concrete is also being developed and applied as a material that offers protection against impacts and blasts by increasing the flexural toughness of concrete. In this study, the test was conducted to evaluate the impact resistance performance of fiber reinforced concrete and mortar according to impact of high-velocity projectile. A concrete T-wall was also tested to evaluate its protective performance from fragment by 155mm-thick artillery shell. The test results revealed that improving flexural strength through fiber reinforcement inhibited cracks and spalling of rear, and spalling of front by high-velocity impact. As such, it is expected to improve the protective performance of the T-wall and reduce the thickness of the member.


Journal of The Korea Concrete Institute | 2012

Evaluation of Spalling Property and Water Vapor Pressure of Concrete with Heating Rate

Gyeong-Cheol Choe; Tae-Gyu Lee; Jeong-Soo Nam; Byung-Keun Park; Gyu-Yong Kim

Spalling of concrete occurs due to vapor pressure ignited explosion, temperature difference across a section, and combination of these factors. Factors affecting spalling can be classified into internal and external factors such as material property and environmental condition, respectively, have to be considered to precisely understand spalling behavior. An external environmental factor such as differences in heating rate cause internal humidity cohesion and different vapor pressure behavior. Therefore, spalling property, vapor pressure and thermal strain property were measured from concrete with compressive strengths of 30 MPa, 50 MPa, 70 MPa, 90 MPa, and 110 MPa, applied with ISO-834 standard heating curve of 1 o C/min heating rate. The experimental results showed that spalling occurred when rapid heating condition was applied. Also, when concrete strength was higher, the more cross section loss from spalling occurred. Also, spalling property is influenced by first pressure cancellation effect of thermal expansion caused by vapor pressure and heating rates.


Journal of The Korea Concrete Institute | 2011

A Study on the Residual Mechanical Properties of Fiber Reinforced Concrete with High Temperature and Load

Young-Sun Kim; Tae-Gyu Lee; Jeong-Soo Nam; Gyu-Yeon Park; Gyu-Yong Kim

Recently, the effects of high temperature and fiber content on the residual mechnical properties of high-strength concrete were experimentally investigated. In this paper, residual mechanical properties of concrete with water to cement (w/c) ratios of 0.55, 0.42 and 0.35 exposed to high temperature are compared with those obtained in fiber reinforced concrete with similar characteristics ranging from 0.05% to 0.20% polypropylene (PP) fiber volume percentage. Also, factors including pre-load levels of 20% and 40% of the maximum load at room temperature are considered. Outbreak time, thermal strain, length change, and mass loss were tested to determine compressive strength, modulus of elasticity, and energy absorption capacity. From the results, in order to prevent the explosive spalling of 50 MPa grade concretes exposed to high temperature, more than 0.05 vol. % of PP fibers is needed. Also, the cross-sectional area of PP fiber can influence the residual mechanical properties and spalling tendency of fiber reinforced concrete exposed to high temperature. Especially, the external loading increases not only the residual mechanical properties of concrete but also the risk of spalling and brittle failure tendency.


Materials | 2017

Creep Behavior of High-Strength Concrete Subjected to Elevated Temperatures

Min-Ho Yoon; Gyu-Yong Kim; Young-Sun Kim; Tae-Gyu Lee; Gyeong-Cheol Choe; Euichul Hwang; Jeong-Soo Nam

Strain is generated in concrete subjected to elevated temperatures owing to the influence of factors such as thermal expansion and design load. Such strains resulting from elevated temperatures and load can significantly influence the stability of a structure during and after a fire. In addition, the lower the water-to-binder (W–B) ratio and the smaller the quantity of aggregates in high-strength concrete, the more likely it is for unstable strain to occur. Hence, in this study, the compressive strength, elastic modulus, and creep behavior were evaluated at target temperatures of 100, 200, 300, 500, and 800 °C for high-strength concretes with W–B ratios of 30%, 26%, and 23%. The loading conditions were set as non-loading and 0.33fcu. It was found that as the compressive strength of the concrete increased, the mechanical characteristics deteriorated and transient creep increased. Furthermore, when the point at which creep strain occurred at elevated temperatures after the occurrence of transient creep was considered, greater shrinkage strain occurred as the compressive strength of the concrete increased. At a heating temperature of 800 °C, the 80 and 100 MPa test specimens showed creep failure within a shrinkage strain range similar to the strain at the maximum load.


Journal of the Korean Institute of Building Construction | 2012

Evaluation of Impact Resistance of Steel Fiber and Organic Fiber Reinforced Concrete and Mortar

Gyu-Yong Kim; Heon-Kyu Hwang; Jeong-Soo Nam; Hongseop Kim; Jong-Ho Park; Jeong-Jin Kim

In this study, the Impact resistance of steel fiber and organic fiber reinforced concrete and mortar was evaluated and the improvement in toughness resulting from an increase in compressive strength and mixing fiber for impact resistance on performance was examined. The types of fiber were steel fiber, PP and PVA, and these were mixed in at 0.1, 0.5 and 1.0 vol.%, respectively. Impact resistance is evaluated with an apparatus for testing impact resistance performance by high-speed projectile crash by gas-pressure. For the experimental conditions, Specimen size was 100×100×20, 30mm (width×height×thickness). Projectile diameter was 7 and 10 mm and impact speed is 350m/s. After impact test, destruction grade, penetration depth, spalling thickness and crater area were evaluated. Through this evaluation, it was found that as compressive strength is increased, penetration is suppressed. In addition, as the mixing ratio of fiber is increased, the spalling thickness and crater area are suppressed. Organic fibers have lower density than the steel fiber, and population number per unit area is bigger. As a result, the improvement of impact resistance is more significant thanks to dispersion and degraded attachment performance.


Journal of the Korean Institute of Building Construction | 2011

Evaluation on the Mechanical Properties of Strain Hardening Cement Composite by Mixing Method for Application at Building Construction Site

Young-Seok Jeon; Gyu-Yong Kim; Jeong-Soo Nam; Young-Deok Kim; Jae-Hong Jeong; Seung-Hoon Lee

The purpose of this study is to examine material performance of fiber reinforced cement composite for mass production. It is necessary to manufacture SHCC(Strain Hardening Cement Composite) by batch plant for field application and mass production. For the study, a mock-up test of SHCC manufactured in the batch plant was conducted, and the performance was compared with SHCC manufactured in the laboratory. Assessment items were freshness and hardening properties. Specifically, direct tensile test machine was used for performance verification of SHCC. As a result, there was a tendency of less satisfactory fiber dispersion and performance of strain hardening compared with the performance of SHCC manufactured in the laboratory. To address this, dry mixing and mortar mixing time should be increased compared to laboratory mixing, and injection time of an agent such as a water reducing agent should be properly controlled according to mixing combination, or the capacity to secure dispersion and homogeneity of material.


Materials | 2018

Strain Behavior of Concrete Panels Subjected to Different Nose Shapes of Projectile Impact

Sangkyu Lee; Gyu-Yong Kim; Hongseop Kim; Minjae Son; Gyeong-Cheol Choe; Jeong-Soo Nam

This study evaluates the fracture properties and rear-face strain distribution of nonreinforced and hooked steel fiber-reinforced concrete panels penetrated by projectiles of three different nose shapes: sharp, hemispherical, and flat. The sharp projectile nose resulted in a deeper penetration because of the concentration of the impact force. Conversely, the flat projectile nose resulted in shallower penetrations. The penetration based on different projectile nose shapes is directly related to the impact force transmitted to the rear face. Scabbing can be more accurately predicted by the tensile strain on the rear face of concrete due to the projectile nose shape. The tensile strain on the rear face of the concrete was reduced by the hooked steel fiber reinforcement because the hooked steel fiber absorbed some of the impact stress transmitted to the rear face of the concrete. Consequently, the strain behavior on the rear face of concrete according to the projectile nose shape was confirmed.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jeong-Soo Nam's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gyu-Yong Kim

Chungnam National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hongseop Kim

Chungnam National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gyeong-Cheol Choe

Chungnam National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yasuji Shinohara

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jung-Hyun Kim

Chungnam National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Min-Ho Yoon

Chungnam National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sang-Hyu Han

Chungnam National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tae-Gyu Lee

Chungnam National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bo-Kyeong Lee

Chungnam National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Euichul Hwang

Chungnam National University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge