关于举办国际土木工程复合材料学会(IIFC)现任主席Scott Smith教授学术讲座的通知
发布时间: 2019-01-02

  目:FRP Composites in the Built Environment: An Overview of Research Activity

  间:20191310001130

  点:七号楼二楼大会议室

报告人: Scott Smith 教授,国际土木工程复合材料学会(IIFC)现任主席(澳洲Southern Cross University教授)

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                                                                    土木与交通学院

                                                                      2019年1月2日

 

报告人简介:

Professor Scott Smith is Dean of Engineering and Foundation Professor of Engineering at Southern Cross University, Australia. He was awarded BE (Civil, 1994) and PhD (Structural Engineering, 1999) degrees from the University of New South Wales, Australia, and he was formerly an Associate Professor at the University of Hong Kong. Professor Smith is President of the International Institute for FRP in Construction (IIFC), and he holds Fellowships of IIFC, The Hong Kong Institution of Engineers, American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), Engineers Australia, and the Royal Society of New South Wales. He is an Editor of the journal Construction and Building Materials and he is a member of the International Editorial Board of the ASCE Journal of Composites for Construction. Professor Smith’s research interests encompass the repair and strengthening of concrete, timber and metallic structures with advanced composite materials, as well as sustainable materials development. http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8837-1214

 

报告摘要:

The high strength, light weight and durable nature of fibre-reinforced polymer (FRP) composites makes it an attractive material for use in construction activities. As a result, applications of FRP composites in the built environment are gaining in importance and popularity. This presentation firstly provides an overview of the various research topics around the world related to FRP for strengthening of existing infrastructure and FRP for building new infrastructure. Next, an overview of the speaker’s research on the strengthening of concrete and timber structures with FRP composites, as well as anchorage of FRP-to-concrete bonded interfaces using spike anchors, is presented. A selection of knowledge gaps are also identified throughout the presentation.