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Note to the Editor: To receive photos of the waterjet
drill, contact Mary Wymer at 205/348-6444 or mwymer@coe.eng.ua.edu.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Dr. Andrew Graettinger, assistant professor
of civil and environmental engineering at The University of Alabama,
and Dr. Philip Johnson, associate professor of civil and environmental
engineering at UA, have developed a method of drilling long, straight,
small holes in typical building materials, without compromising
the strength of the structure. This new method will be used for
building stabilization, especially in areas that are considered
earthquake zones.
Masonry structures can withstand tremendous vertical loads, but
problems arise when the structure moves horizontally. Even a fraction
of an inch of horizontal movement can produce severe and lasting
damage. Steel reinforcing bars inserted vertically and horizontally
through the walls can stabilize the structure, but how do you get
the bars into an existing wall? Conventional drilling equipment
can’t be controlled well enough to stay in the wall.
Graettinger and Johnson wanted something to drill straight, long,
small-diameter holes. Their new waterjet drill makes long holes
that are smaller and straighter than any other current drill. The
waterjet is also portable, making it easy to bring to, and move
around, the work site.
The UA engineering professors modified a pressure washer to incorporate
grit into the water stream. The mixture of water, polymer and grit
shoots out of a one-fourth-inch drill rod that is connected to an
abrasive injection system and a 5,000 pounds per-square-inch pressure
washer. At 545 miles per hour, the mixture sands and washes away
almost any material including steel, concrete and brick.
“The holes allow for post tensioning to be added to older
structures to prevent damage from an earthquake,” Johnson
said.
The holes can be used to internally tie a structure together to
resist shaking. This new method could preserve historical structures
and save thousands of dollars in construction costs.
“Cutting materials with high-pressure water jets has been
done before, but this method uses lower pressure and an abrasive
which makes it less expensive and safer,” Graettinger explained.
“We’re trying to preserve the building with reinforcement
that no one can see.”
This drilling method also can be used to strengthen older bridges
instead of tearing them down and building new ones, which saves
taxpayer dollars. The small size of the equipment means fewer lane
closures and less traffic congestion as well.
The team submitted a proposal to the University
Transportation Center for Alabama for funding. The UTCA conducts
transportation education, research and technology transfer activities
using faculty members and students from The University of Alabama,
The University of Alabama at Birmingham and The University of Alabama
in Huntsville.
In 1837, UA became the first university in the state to offer
engineering classes and was one of the first five in the nation
to do so. Today, the College
of Engineering, with about 1,900 students and more than 90 faculty,
is one of the three oldest continuously operating engineering programs
in the country and has been fully accredited since accreditation
standards were implemented in the 1930s.
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