2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.proeng.2013.03.016
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Investigation on Wall Crack Damage and Its Proposed Repair Method

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Cited by 10 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Thin cracks have less than 1mm, medium cracks have a size of 1mm to 2mm, and large cracks have more than 2mm [27]. The width of the fracture can widen since there are still structural faults that have not been repaired, which are referred to as active cracks [29]. According to Gebregziabhier in [29], an active crack is a growth crack induced by foundation settlement, joint, and expansion, such as a wall-column junction.…”
Section: Crack On the Buildingmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Thin cracks have less than 1mm, medium cracks have a size of 1mm to 2mm, and large cracks have more than 2mm [27]. The width of the fracture can widen since there are still structural faults that have not been repaired, which are referred to as active cracks [29]. According to Gebregziabhier in [29], an active crack is a growth crack induced by foundation settlement, joint, and expansion, such as a wall-column junction.…”
Section: Crack On the Buildingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The width of the fracture can widen since there are still structural faults that have not been repaired, which are referred to as active cracks [29]. According to Gebregziabhier in [29], an active crack is a growth crack induced by foundation settlement, joint, and expansion, such as a wall-column junction. While a dormant crack, also known as a non-active crack, is originally an active crack, it stops expanding.…”
Section: Crack On the Buildingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Advanced Composite Materials (ACM) in the form of fibre reinforced polymer (FRP) can be applied to strengthen reinforced concrete structures and ageing infrastructure where cracking is caused by corrosion of steel reinforcement [5]. The foundation can be inadequate to fully support the imposed loads [6] and this result in an increase in foundation settlement/differential settlement which may cause structure movement [7]. Wall cracks result from excessive stress on the masonry wall.…”
Section: Current Repair Strategiesmentioning
confidence: 99%