Pavement Design Principles For T3
Pavement Design Principles For T3
Pavement Design Principles For T3
Sensitivity
asphalt.
Pavement Design
Modern asphalt pavements are difficult
to analyze mathematically.
Road Test Era, 1909-1961
Bates Road Test (1922-23)
In 1920, Illinois passed a $200 million bond
issue to build 9000 miles of paved roads.
To determine the best paving material,
they built sections of brick, asphalt, and
concrete.
Developed first thickness design
procedures and chose concrete for the
Illinois pavements.
Old WWI Army trucks with 18,000 pound wheel
loads were used to load the pavement.
Road Test Era, 1909-1961
AASHO Road Test
Determine relationship between traffic and
performance
Determine effect of loads on bridges
Perform special studies (base types, paved
shoulders, tire pressures)
Develop instrumentation, test procedures,
data, charts, graphs, and formulas for
future highway design
AASHO Road Test Layout
N 23
Loop 2 Loop 1
71
OTTAWA
178
AASHO Road Test
Started
Nov. 1958, Ended Nov. 1960
Loops 3-6:
6 vehicles/lane
10 vehicles/lane (Jan ‘60)
AASHO Road Test
Operation
18 hours, 40 minutes per day
6 days/week
1,114,000 Applications
4.2 Pt
log
4 . 2 1 . 5 log 1 0.372( SSV 3.0)
log( ESAL) 9.36 log( SN 1) 0.2
1094 R
0.4
SN 1 5.19
4.13
Use nomograph to calculate SN (PT= 2.5)
4.40
Design Pavement of SN=4.13
From our previous example:
200 psy Surface 200/105 = 1.90” * 0.44 = 0.84
200 psy Binder 200/105 = 1.90” * 0.44 = 0.84
8 inches GAB 8.00” * 0.18 = _____
1.44
Assume 105 psy/inch SN= 3.12
Construction Practice
Subgrade
Climate
Practical Considerations
Current specifications require granular
base courses to placed in no more than
8 inch lifts. Will be increased to 10
inches soon.
Total granular base thickness should
not exceed 12 inches.
Cement Modified Subbase should be
either 6” or 8” thick.
Practical Considerations
For surface courses, thickness range is
150 to 200 psy. Should only use one
course of surface.
For intermediate (binder) courses,
thickness range is 200 to 300 psy.
For Asphalt Aggregate Base courses,
thickness range is 300 to 450 psy.
Practical Considerations
For construction traffic, the
perpendicular drop-off between lanes
must not exceed 1”. With a slope, the
drop-off must not exceed 2”.
Costs can vary depending on the
project setting.
Designs with the minimum number of
operations may be cheaper in urban
settings.
Rehabilitation
Extent
Distress Identification
Pavement distress falls into two broad
categories
Functional distress – Distress that causes a loss of
serviceability but does not affect the structural
capacity of the pavement
Examples:
Rutting
Block cracking
Faulting
Skid resistance
Distress Identification
Pavement distress falls into two broad
categories
Structural distress – Distress that is caused
by the loss of the structural capacity of the
pavement structure
Examples:
Fatigue/Alligator Cracking
Distress Identification
Manual of Distress Identification was
developed for SHRP LTPP. Is available
online at:
www.tfhrc.gov/pavement/ltpp/reports/03031/
Common Distresses
Fatigue Cracking
Generally a sign of insufficient
pavement strength for the traffic and
subgrade conditions.
Often associated with localized poor
drainage.
In the terminal condition, will start to rut
and deform the subgrade.
Fatigue cracking
Fatigue cracking
Subbase – 80%
No rutting
Overlay Design
Coefficient Depreciation Example
Pavement design indicates a 5.0 SN is
necessary for the next 10-year period.
Overlay Design
Coefficient Depreciation Example
Cracking probably extends fully through
the asphalt.
Assume the surface/binder/AAB are
depreciated.
No rutting, so assume GAB is intact.
No depreciation on base.
Overlay Design
Coefficient Depreciation Example