Performance and cost effectiveness of permeable friction course (PFC) pavements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-02-01
In this project, the research team evaluated the performance of Permeable Friction Courses (PFC) over time and compared it against other types of wearing surface pavement layers. Several pavement sections including Asphalt Rubber (AR) PFCs, Performan...
Open friction courses on an asphaltic concrete base: A seven-year progress report
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dodge, K. S.
1982-10-01
The performance of two open-friction courses (OFC) having 1/2 in. and 1/4 in. maximum-sized aggregates - and their adjacent conventional New York State 1A top-course (control) is documented over the final 4 years of their 7-year design lives. The pavements were evaluated by analysis of mix properties and surface performance. The physical properties examined by means of extracted pavement cores were aggregate gradation, binder penetration and viscosities, and void content. Testing of frictional performance, rut depths, microtecture and macrotexture, rideability, and cracking were used to evaluate the pavement's surface performance.
14 CFR 151.77 - Runway paving: General rules.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... project include pavement construction and reconstruction, and include runway grooving to improve skid... course to correct major irregularities in the pavement. Runway resealing or refilling joints as an... Specification P-609) on a pavement the current surface of which consists of that kind of a bituminous surface...
14 CFR 151.77 - Runway paving: General rules.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... project include pavement construction and reconstruction, and include runway grooving to improve skid... course to correct major irregularities in the pavement. Runway resealing or refilling joints as an... Specification P-609) on a pavement the current surface of which consists of that kind of a bituminous surface...
14 CFR 151.77 - Runway paving: General rules.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... project include pavement construction and reconstruction, and include runway grooving to improve skid... course to correct major irregularities in the pavement. Runway resealing or refilling joints as an... Specification P-609) on a pavement the current surface of which consists of that kind of a bituminous surface...
14 CFR 151.77 - Runway paving: General rules.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... project include pavement construction and reconstruction, and include runway grooving to improve skid... course to correct major irregularities in the pavement. Runway resealing or refilling joints as an... Specification P-609) on a pavement the current surface of which consists of that kind of a bituminous surface...
14 CFR 151.77 - Runway paving: General rules.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... project include pavement construction and reconstruction, and include runway grooving to improve skid... course to correct major irregularities in the pavement. Runway resealing or refilling joints as an... Specification P-609) on a pavement the current surface of which consists of that kind of a bituminous surface...
Design high water clearances for highway pavements : [executive summary].
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2008-01-01
The majority of state roads in Florida are built using asphalt concrete surfaces. They are constructed in layers. The bottom layer consists of the native soil. The top layer is the surface course, or pavement. It is built upon one or more intermediat...
Implementation of MEPDG for asphalt pavement with RAP.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-06-01
This study explored the potential of using high reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) content with hot mix asphalt (HMA) in base and surface courses for conditions prevailing in Oklahoma. A total of eight Superpave mixes (four mixes for each of two field ...
Investigation of using steel slag in hot mix asphalt for the surface course of flexible pavements
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nguyen, Hien Q.; Lu, Dai X.; Le, Son D.
2018-04-01
The rapid development of heavy industry in Vietnam leads to the establishments of steel industry. Steel slag, a by-product of steelwork industry, under Vietnamese’s law, was considered as a deleterious solid waste which needed to be processed and landfilled. However, this has changed recently, and steel slag is now seen as a normal or non-deleterious solid waste, and has been studied for reuse in the construction industry. In this study, steel slag was used, as a replacement for mineral aggregate, in hot mix asphalt. Two hot mix asphalt mixtures with an equivalent nominal aggregate size of 12.5 (C12.5) and 19 mm (C19) were produced using steel slag. In addition, one conventional hot mix asphalt mixture of C19 was produced using mineral aggregate for comparison purpose. Investigation in laboratory condition and trial sections was carried out on Marshall tests, surface roughness, skid resistance, and modulus of the pavement before and after applying a new surface course of hot mix asphalt. The study showed that all steel slag asphalt mixtures passed the Marshall stability and flow test requirements. The skid resistance of steel slag hot mix asphalt mixtures for the surface course satisfied the Vietnamese specification for asphalt. Moreover, the pavement sections with the surface course of steel slag hot mix asphalt showed a considerable higher modulus than that of the conventional one. Only the roughness of the surface course paved with C19 did not pass the requirement of the specification.
Landing-Zone and Drop-Zone Criteria
2017-05-01
orientation. UFC 3-260-01 does not discuss pavement design or required soil struc- tural or bearing capacity of a site to support aircraft operations...UFC 3- 260-02: Pavement Design for Airfields (USACE 2001) presents this. The criteria in UFC 3-260-02 are beyond the scope of this review. 2.1.2...crete surface course designed as a structural member with weather- and abrasion-resistant properties • A rigid pavement , or one that contains Portland
Landing Zone and Drop Zone Criteria
2017-05-01
orientation. UFC 3-260-01 does not discuss pavement design or required soil struc- tural or bearing capacity of a site to support aircraft operations...UFC 3- 260-02: Pavement Design for Airfields (USACE 2001) presents this. The criteria in UFC 3-260-02 are beyond the scope of this review. 2.1.2...crete surface course designed as a structural member with weather- and abrasion-resistant properties • A rigid pavement , or one that contains Portland
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-04-01
The Florida Department of Transportation currently allows up to 20% recycled asphalt : pavement (RAP) in asphalt mixes to be used for roadway surfaces. The abundance of RAP and : savings in cost and to natural resources make increased use of RAP desi...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-07-01
The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (DOTD) has been : using asphalt surface treatment (AST) interlayers over soil cement base courses : as a means to mitigate shrinkage cracks from reflecting through the asphaltic : concrete (A...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-09-01
This document summarizes the acoustic properties and pavement performance of three asphalt quieter pavement projects. Each of the projects included open graded friction course pavement built with sections of crumb rubber and polymer modified asphalt ...
Results of reflective crack questionnaire survey.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1973-01-01
Department engineers were surveyed to obtain their opinions on the potential detrimental effects of transverse reflective cracks through the surface course of bituminous pavements and the costs of preventive measures. The majority of respondents (67%...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-06-01
This experimental project is being conducted as a part of WSDOTs effort to produce pavements that reduce the noise : generated at the tire/pavement interface. Experimental sections of open-graded friction courses were built using asphalt rubber : ...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-06-01
This report describes the second of three experimental installations of open-graded friction course (OGFC) quieter pavements designed to reduce the noise generated at the tire/pavement interface. Experimental sections of OGFC were built using a...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-04-01
In this study, a total of 28 mixture combinations were designed and evaluated to : determine the maximum allowable amount of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) : material in friction courses without jeopardizing pavement cracking performance. The : exp...
Opening-mode cracking in asphalt pavements : crack initiation and saturation.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-12-01
This paper investigates the crack initiation and saturation for opening-mode cracking. Using elastic governing equations : and a weak form stress boundary condition, we derive an explicit solution of elastic fields in the surface course and : obtain ...
Base course resilient modulus for the mechanistic-empirical pavement design guide : [summary].
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-01-01
Elastic modulus determination is often used in designing pavements and evaluating pavement performance. The Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide (MEPDG) has become an important source of guidance for pavement design and rehabilitation. MEPDG r...
The effect of contaminant on skid resistance of pavement surface
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lubis, A. S.; Muis, Z. A.; Gultom, E. M.
2018-03-01
Skid resistance of the pavement surface is the force generated by the movement of the wheels of the vehicle on the surface of the pavement. Contaminants are materials that cover the surface of the pavement affecting the skid resistance of the pavement surface. The contaminant acts as a coating interface or direct contact of the pavement surface with the wheels of the vehicle which can cause adverse effects, such as the decreasing value of skid resistance of the pavement surface. This study aims to analyze the effect of some types of contaminants on skid resistance of pavement surfaces. The contaminants that used in this study were water, sand, salt, and lubricating oil. The study was conducted by direct testing on two types of pavement: flexible pavement and rigid pavement. The measurements of the skid resistance were made using the British Pendulum Tester with British Pendulum Number for two conditions: before and after the pavement surface was covered with contaminants. The results showed that there was a contaminant effect on skid resistance of pavement surface. Skid resistance of pavement surfaces decreased after the contaminants were covered in water, sand, salt, and lubricant by 20.1%, 22.8%, 37.1% and 50.5% respectively.
Engineering and management experience at Texas A&M Transportation Institute
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chowdhury, Arif Tahjibul
This manuscript presents the author's engineering and management experience during his internship in the Materials and Pavements (M&P) Division at the Texas A&M Transportation Institute (TTI), and is a record of study for the Doctor of Engineering at Texas A&M University. Through this internship, he met his established internship objectives of gaining technical knowledge as well as knowledge and skills in project management, organizational communication, and quality management of pavement condition data, and of attaining professional development. In meeting these objectives, the author describes the history, mission, and organizational structure of his workplace. He also presents his experience of developing and delivering a two-week training course on pavement design and construction in Kosovo. Participating in a number of professional development training courses and other activities prepared him for working as an engineering manager. These activities include Delta-T leadership training, an instructor development course, a time management and organizational skills course, and the M&P Division lecture series. Leadership and skills learned through the Delta-T program were beneficial for the employee as well as the employer. For the class project, the author and his teammates performed a study dealing with improving TTI's deliverables. The Delta-T team composed a report summarizing their efforts of examining the current state of TTI's project deliverables, the deliverables' shortcomings, and potential enhancements to expand the deliverables' appeal to additional types of potential users outside the traditional research community. The team also developed a prototype web-based model of deliverables and presented some implementation recommendations. Participating in the Texas Department of Transportation's (TxDOT's) pavement surface distress data collection program enabled the author to become familiar with pavement distress data quality management and thus attain the technical and nontechnical skills required for project management. He noticed some areas for improvement in TxDOT's rater's manual, rater's training class, and acceptance criteria for visual distress data.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wen, Haifang; Li, Xiaojun; Edil, Tuncer
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the performance of cementitious high carbon fly ash (CHCFA) stabilized recycled asphalt pavement as a base course material in a real world setting. Three test road cells were built at MnROAD facility in Minnesota. These cells have the same asphalt surface layers, subbases, and subgrades, but three different base courses: conventional crushed aggregates, untreated recycled pavement materials (RPM), and CHCFA stabilized RPM materials. During and after the construction of the three cells, laboratory and field tests were carried out to characterize the material properties. The test results were used in the mechanistic-empiricalmore » pavement design guide (MEPDG) to predict the pavement performance. Based on the performance prediction, the life cycle analyses of cost, energy consumption, and greenhouse gasses were performed. The leaching impacts of these three types of base materials were compared. The laboratory and field tests showed that fly ash stabilized RPM had higher modulus than crushed aggregate and RPM did. Based on the MEPDG performance prediction, the service life of the Cell 79 containing fly ash stabilized RPM, is 23.5 years, which is about twice the service life (11 years) of the Cell 77 with RPM base, and about three times the service life (7.5 years) of the Cell 78 with crushed aggregate base. The life cycle analysis indicated that the usage of the fly ash stabilized RPM as the base of the flexible pavement can significantly reduce the life cycle cost, the energy consumption, the greenhouse gases emission. Concentrations of many trace elements, particularly those with relatively low water quality standards, diminish over time as water flows through the pavement profile. For many elements, concentrations below US water drinking water quality standards are attained at the bottom of the pavement profile within 2-4 pore volumes of flow.« less
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-09-01
Most of the damage to concrete pavement results from poor drainage, which can lead to increased freeze-thaw damage, and when combined with heavy loading can contribute to cracking, spalling and surface damage that causes driver discomfort from increa...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Godwin, H. F.; Loyed, D. B.; Miley, W. G.; Page, G. C.
1981-04-01
The degree to which pavement wear (vehicular traffic) could be predicted from testing samples of in-service pavements in the laboratory pavement polishing device was determined. This investigation was made on asphaltic concrete pavements, primarily friction courses used in Florida. These pavements were tested at different levels of accumulative traffic (ADT) for approximately 2 years.
Change in Stiffness of Pavement Layers in the Linear Discontinuous Deformation Area
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Grygierek, Marcin
2017-10-01
The underground mining exploitation causes deformations on the surface of the area which are classified as continuous or discontinuous. Mining deformations cause loosening or compression of the subsoil. Loosening has an impact on the reduction of the subsoil stiffness. As a result the reduction of subsoil stiffness causes loosening of construction layers built in that subsoil. Pavement is a specific case. If there happens to be loosening then the fatigue life of pavement is reduced and premature damages can be observed such as fatigue cracks or/and structural deformation. Discontinuous deformations are an especially interesting case. They not only cause the reduction of the stiffness of the subsoil and pavement layers but also cause rapid deterioration in roughness. Change of roughness is very dangerous especially on fast roads such as a highway. Lately there can be observed the so called linear discontinuous surface deformations in the lanes in the mining area. Unfortunately, the ‘in situ’ research, presenting experiments on the effect of linear discontinuous deformations on the pavement, is in short supply. It is especially crucial with regard to the design of pavement reinforcement and the specification of optimal length of the reinforced part of the road. The article presents the results of ‘in situ’ tests carried out on the chosen pavements where the so called linear discontinuous surface deformation has appeared. The genesis of the damage is connected with the underground mining exploitation. Falling Weight Deflectometer (FWD) has been used in researches. Measuring points were carried out with high frequency which helped to acquire a very interesting distribution of deflections. The distribution of deflections well shows the impact of linear discontinuous deformation on the changes in stiffness pavement layers. In the analysis of data from FWD there has been used back calculation which worked modulus of layers out. The results of researches and analysis have allowed to specify the scale of stiffness reduction of subsoil and pavement layers and, above all, to specify a minimal area of reinforcement. Therefore, the results of the analysis can be very helpful in determining the range of reinforcement as well as designing reinforcement. Of course, researches should be continued for better knowledge about the impact of discontinuous deformations on pavement.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2007-01-01
"Aggregates used in the construction of roads must be durable, abrasion resistant, and freeze-thaw resistant in : order to perform well in pavement or as base course. The objective of this study was to investigate whether the : Micro-Deval test will ...
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Button, J.W.; Prapnnachari, S.
Asphalt concrete field test pavements were placed in District 19 north of Texarkana on US-59/71 in 1987 and 1988 to evaluate the ability of certain asphalt additives to enhance resistance to cracking and rutting. Two 10-inch thick and 0.9 mile (approx.) long test pavements and a similar untreated control section were constructed in the northbound and southbound lanes for a total of 6 field trials. Asphalt additives were incorporated in both the 8-inch base and the overlying 2-inch surface layers. The additives evaluated included Goodyear LPF 5812, Chemkrete-CTI 102, Exxon Polybilt 102, and Styrelf 13. Samples of paving materials includingmore » aggregates, asphalts, compacted mixes, and pavement cores were collected, conveyed to the laboratory, and tested to provide detailed documentation of their properties. Tests included rheological properties of the binders before and after artificial aging, characterization of aggregate, Hveem and Marshall stability, stiffness as a function of temperature, tensile properties before and after moisture conditioning and artificial aging, air void content, creep, and permanent deformation. Field tests and visual evaluations have been conducted to objectively evaluate field performance. Results of these tests are reported herein. Within 6 months after construction of the base layers and prior to placement of the surface course, the Chemkrete modified base became severely cracked. As a result, the surface mix placed on this base section was treated with Goodyear latex rather than Chemkrete. All other modified pavements and the control section have performed well and exhibited essentially equivalent performance after 2 1/2 years in service.« less
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1998-03-01
The contribution of a cement-stabilized base course to the strength of the rigid pavement structure is poorly understood. The objective of this research was to obtain data on the response of the rigid pavement slab-joint-foundation system by conducti...
Improving the properties of reclaimed asphalt pavement for roadway base applications.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-08-01
The objective of this study was to improve Reclaimed Asphalt Pavements (RAP) strength in base course : applications while reducing creep to an acceptable level using compaction techniques, fractionating, : blending with high quality base course ag...
Pratelli, Chiara; Betti, Giacomo; Marradi, Alessandro
2018-01-01
In the last forty, years semi-flexible pavements have been successfully employed, especially in those areas subjected to heavy and slow-moving loads. They usually comprise a wearing course of Grouted Macadam, a composite pavement material that provides significant advantages in comparison to both concrete and asphalt pavements. On the other hand, the laying process of this material is a two-stage operation, and the realization complexity leads to long realization times and high initial costs. Therefore, the use of semi-flexible pavements has been limited to some fields of application and areas. Recently, an innovative material has been developed to be used as an alternative to Grouted Macadam for semi-flexible pavement wearing course realization. This material should provide similar or even superior characteristics compared to traditional Grouted Macadam. This will reduce semi-flexible pavement construction time and avoid the need for dividing the laying process. This paper presents an experimental program involving the use of FastFWD, as an APT device, to evaluate in-situ properties and performance of this material. The achieved results regarding the validation of this new material by means of FastFWD appear promising both in terms of the material’s properties and resistance to dynamic load repetitions. PMID:29659543
Pratelli, Chiara; Betti, Giacomo; Giuffrè, Tullio; Marradi, Alessandro
2018-04-16
In the last forty, years semi-flexible pavements have been successfully employed, especially in those areas subjected to heavy and slow-moving loads. They usually comprise a wearing course of Grouted Macadam, a composite pavement material that provides significant advantages in comparison to both concrete and asphalt pavements. On the other hand, the laying process of this material is a two-stage operation, and the realization complexity leads to long realization times and high initial costs. Therefore, the use of semi-flexible pavements has been limited to some fields of application and areas. Recently, an innovative material has been developed to be used as an alternative to Grouted Macadam for semi-flexible pavement wearing course realization. This material should provide similar or even superior characteristics compared to traditional Grouted Macadam. This will reduce semi-flexible pavement construction time and avoid the need for dividing the laying process. This paper presents an experimental program involving the use of FastFWD, as an APT device, to evaluate in-situ properties and performance of this material. The achieved results regarding the validation of this new material by means of FastFWD appear promising both in terms of the material's properties and resistance to dynamic load repetitions.
Sañudo-Fontaneda, Luis A; Charlesworth, Susanne M; Castro-Fresno, Daniel; Andres-Valeri, Valerio C A; Rodriguez-Hernandez, Jorge
2014-01-01
Pervious pavements have become one of the most used sustainable urban drainage system (SUDS) techniques in car parks. This research paper presents the results of monitoring water quality from several experimental car park areas designed and constructed in Spain with bays made of interlocking concrete block pavement, porous asphalt, polymer-modified porous concrete and reinforced grass with plastic and concrete cells. Moreover, two different sub-base materials were used (limestone aggregates and basic oxygen furnace slag). This study therefore encompasses the majority of the materials used as permeable surfaces and sub-base layers all over the world. Effluent from the test bays was monitored for dissolved oxygen, pH, electric conductivity, total suspended solids, turbidity and total petroleum hydrocarbons in order to analyze the behaviour shown by each combination of surface and sub-base materials. In addition, permeability tests were undertaken in all car parks using the 'Laboratorio Caminos Santander' permeameter and the Cantabrian Portable Infiltrometer. All results are presented together with the influence of surface and sub-base materials on water quality indicators using bivariate correlation statistical analysis at a confidence level of 95%. The polymer-modified porous concrete surface course in combination with limestone aggregate sub-base presented the best performance.
Drainage hydraulics of permeable friction courses
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Charbeneau, Randall J.; Barrett, Michael E.
2008-04-01
This paper describes solutions to the hydraulic equations that govern flow in permeable friction courses (PFC). PFC is a layer of porous asphalt approximately 50 mm thick that is placed as an overlay on top of an existing conventional concrete or asphalt road surface to help control splash and hydroplaning, reduce noise, and enhance quality of storm water runoff. The primary objective of this manuscript is to present an analytical system of equations that can be used in design and analysis of PFC systems. The primary assumptions used in this analysis are that the flow can be modeled as one-dimensional, steady state Darcy-type flow and that slopes are sufficiently small so that the Dupuit-Forchheimer assumptions apply. Solutions are derived for cases where storm water drainage is confined to the PFC bed and for conditions where the PFC drainage capacity is exceeded and ponded sheet flow occurs across the pavement surface. The mathematical solutions provide the drainage characteristics (depth and residence time) as a function of rainfall intensity, PFC hydraulic conductivity, pavement slope, and maximum drainage path length.
Usage of digital image correlation in assessment of behavior of block element pavement structure
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Grygierek, M.; Grzesik, B.; Rokitowski, P.; Rusin, T.
2018-05-01
In diagnostics of existing road pavement structures deflection measurements have fundamental meaning, because of ability to assess present stiffness (bearing capacity) of whole layered construction. During test loading the reaction of pavement structure to applied load is measured in central point or in a few points located along a straight on a 1.5 ÷ 1.8 m distance (i.e. Falling Weight Deflectometer) in similar spacing equal to 20 ÷ 30 cm. Typical measuring techniques are productive and precise enough for most common pavement structures such as flexible, semi-rigid and rigid. It should be noted that in experimental research as well as in pavements in complex stress state, measurement techniques allowing observation of pavement deformation in 3D would have been very helpful. A great example of that type of pavements is a block element pavement structure consisting of i.e. paving blocks or stone slabs. Due to high stiffness and confined ability of cooperation of surrounding block elements, in that type of pavements fatigue life is strongly connected with displacement distribution. Unfortunately, typical deflection measurement methods forefend displacement observations and rotation of single block elements like paving blocks or slabs. Another difficult problem is to carry out unmistakable analysis of cooperation between neighboring elements. For more precise observations of displacements state of block element pavements under a wheel load a Digital Image Correlation (DIC) was used. Application of this method for assessment of behavior of stone slabs pavement under a traffic load enabled the monitoring of deformations distribution and encouraged to formulate conclusions about the initiation mechanism and development of damages in this type of pavement structures. Results shown in this article were obtained in field tests executed on an exploited pavement structure with a surface course made of granite slabs with dimensions 0.5x1.0x0.14 m.
Evaluation of Nontraditional Airfield Pavement Surfaces for Contingency Operations
2014-01-01
such as asphalt or portland cement concrete are not readily available or are too cost-, labor-, or equipment-intensive to use. This report presents a...courses) are generally constructed using hot mix asphalt (HMA) or portland cement concrete (PCC), both of which are suitable for C-17 and C-130...associated with PCC or HMA surfacing. Stabilization can be accomplished by blending additives such as portland cement , lime, fly ash, asphalt binder
Drake, Jennifer; Bradford, Andrea; Van Seters, Tim
2014-06-15
This study examined the spring, summer and fall water quality performance of three partial-infiltration permeable pavement (PP) systems and a conventional asphalt pavement in Ontario. The study, conducted between 2010 and 2012, compared the water quality of effluent from two Interlocking Permeable Concrete Pavements (AquaPave(®) and Eco-Optiloc(®)) and a Hydromedia(®) Pervious Concrete pavement with runoff from an Asphalt control pavement. The usage of permeable pavements can mitigate the impact of urbanization on receiving surface water systems through quantity control and stormwater treatment. The PP systems provided excellent stormwater treatment for petroleum hydrocarbons, total suspended solids, metals (copper, iron, manganese and zinc) and nutrients (total-nitrogen and total-phosphorus) by reducing event mean concentrations (EMC) as well as total pollutant loadings. The PPs significantly reduced the concentration and loading of ammonia (NH4(+)+NH3), nitrite (NO2(-)) and organic-nitrogen (Org-N) but increased the concentration and loading of nitrate (NO3(-)). The PP systems had mixed performances for the treatment of phosphate (PO4(3-)). The PP systems increased the concentration of sodium (Na) and chloride (Cl) but EMCs remained well below recommended levels for drinking water quality. Relative to the observed runoff, winter road salt was released more slowly from the PP systems resulting in elevated spring and early-summer Cl and Na concentrations in effluent. PP materials were found to introduce dissolved solids into the infiltrating stormwater. The release of these pollutants was verified by additional laboratory scale testing of the individual pavement and aggregate materials at the University of Guelph. Pollutant concentrations were greatest during the first few months after construction and declined rapidly over the course of the study. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hizukuri, Akiyoshi; Nagata, Takeshi
2017-03-01
The purpose of this study is to develop a classification method for a crack on a pavement surface image using machine learning to reduce a maintenance fee. Our database consists of 3500 pavement surface images. This includes 800 crack and 2700 normal pavement surface images. The pavement surface images first are decomposed into several sub-images using a discrete wavelet transform (DWT) decomposition. We then calculate the wavelet sub-band histogram from each several sub-images at each level. The support vector machine (SVM) with computed wavelet sub-band histogram is employed for distinguishing between a crack and normal pavement surface images. The accuracies of the proposed classification method are 85.3% for crack and 84.4% for normal pavement images. The proposed classification method achieved high performance. Therefore, the proposed method would be useful in maintenance inspection.
Assessment of burned coal shale properties based on cyclic load
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Grygierek, Marcin; Kalisz, Piotr; Pacześniowski, Krzysztof; Pytlik, Andrzej; Zięba, Magdalena
2018-04-01
Road surfaces that are subjected to cyclic loads generated by vehicle wheels must meet the requirements concerning the durability in the assumed period of use. The durability of the layered pavement construction systems depends on the value and frequency of the load as well as on the mechanical features of its individual layers. Layers of unbound, mechanically stabilized mixtures are a significant aspect of surfaces that are susceptible. Mixtures of this type can be applied both to the subgrade layers as well as to the bottom pavement layers, including the improved course. Considering the cyclic nature of the load on the surface of the entire system, mechanically stabilized layers are subject to continuous, but slow, densification during the period of use, which results in the formation of permanent deformations and so-called structural ruts. Post-mining waste is frequently used in road construction. which is the so-called burned shale that can be used for the bottom layers of the surface and layers of the improved subgrade (soil replacement). This material was the subject of the analysis. The evaluation was based mainly on the results of pilot studies covering cyclic loads of the layer/course made of the so-called red shale. The applied research method was aimed at preliminary assessment of its suitability for the assessment of the behaviour of the disintegrated medium under the conditions of test loads simulating the movement of vehicles.
Identifying dominant controls on the water balance of partly sealed surfaces
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schuetz, Tobias; Schübl, Marleen; Siebert, Caroline; Weiler, Markus
2017-04-01
It is the challenge of modern urban development to obtain a near natural state for the urban water balance. For this purpose permeable alternatives to conventional surface sealing have been established during the last decades. A wealth of studies - under laboratory as well as field conditions - has emerged around the globe to examine the hydrological characteristics of different types of pavements. The main results of these studies - measured infiltration and evaporation rates, vary to a great extent between single studies and pavement types due to methodological approaches and local conditions. Within this study we analyze the controls of water balance components of partly sealed urban surfaces derived from an extensive literature review and a series of infiltration experiments conducted on historical and modern pavements within the city of Freiburg, Germany. Measured values published in 48 studies as well as the results of 30 double-ring infiltration experiments were compiled and sorted according to the measured parameter, the pavement type, pavement condition, age of the pavement, porosity of the pavement material and joint filling material as well as joint proportion of joint pavements. The main influencing factors on infiltration / hydraulic conductivity, evaporation rates and groundwater recharge of permeable pavements were identified and quantified using multiple linear regression methods. The analysis showed for both the literature study and our own infiltration experiments that condition and age of the pavement have the major influence on the pavement's infiltration capacity and that maintenance plays an important role for the long-term effectiveness of permeable pavements. For pavements with joints, the porosity of the pavement material seemed to have a stronger influence on infiltration capacity than the proportion of joint surface for which a clear influence could not be observed. Evaporation rates were compared for different surface categories as not enough measured values for different pavement types have been published. The highest evaporation can be expected for joint filling aggregates such as gravel and sand followed by bare soil (as reference), porous pavements and lastly non-porous pavements. The proportion of precipitation lost due to evaporation/evapotranspiration processes was expectedly highest on turf grid pavements, while maximum groundwater recharge rates were identified under non-porous pavements. Our results improve the tools available for urban water management controlling the state of urban water balances from a dominant surface runoff component to either dominant evaporation or groundwater components.
Estimation of Asphalt Pavement Life
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2002-01-01
The milling of asphalt concrete (AC) pavement surface refers to the mechanical removal of a part of the pavement surface. The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) and the Kansas Turnpike Authority (KTA) routinely mill the surfaces of some AC pa...
Study on road surface source pollution controlled by permeable pavement
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zheng, Chaocheng
2018-06-01
The increase of impermeable pavement in urban construction not only increases the runoff of the pavement, but also produces a large number of Non-Point Source Pollution. In the process of controlling road surface runoff by permeable pavement, a large number of particulate matter will be withheld when rainwater is being infiltrated, so as to control the source pollution at the source. In this experiment, we determined the effect of permeable road surface to remove heavy pollutants in the laboratory and discussed the related factors that affect the non-point pollution of permeable pavement, so as to provide a theoretical basis for the application of permeable pavement.
Depletion of E. coli in permeable pavement mineral aggregate storage and reuse systems.
Myers, B R; Beecham, S; van Leeuwen, J A; Keegan, A
2009-01-01
Permeable pavement reservoirs provide an important opportunity for the harvesting and storage of stormwater for reuse. This research aims to determine whether storage in dolomite, calcite and quartzite mineral aggregates in the base course of a permeable pavement impacts on the survival of the pathogen indicator organism Escherichia coli (E. coli) in storage. The reasons for depletion were also investigated. Twelve model permeable pavement storage reservoirs were filled, in triplicate, with dolomite, calcite and quartzite. Three reservoirs contained no aggregate. After filling with pathogen spiked rainwater, the concentration of E. coli was examined for 22 days in the reservoirs. The reservoirs were then agitated to determine if there was E. coli present which was not in aqueous suspension. The results of the experiments show that there is no significant difference in the depletion of E. coli found in reservoirs without aggregate, and those filled with dolomite or calcite. The rate of depletion was found to be significantly lower in the quartzite filled reservoirs. Agitation of the reservoirs yielded increases in the aqueous concentration of E. coli in all reservoir types, suggesting that the bacteria are adhering to the surface of the mineral aggregate and to the reservoir walls.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Le Touz, Nicolas; Dumoulin, Jean
2015-04-01
Facing the heavy organisational, financial and environmental constraints imposed by usual winter maintenance salting operations, pavement engineers have been led to look for alternative solutions to avoid ice or snow deposit at pavements surface. Among the solutions, one is self-de-icing heating pavements, for which two technologies have been developed so far: one is based on embedded coils circulating a heated calorific fluid under the pavement surface; the other one relies on the use of embedded resistant electric wires. The use and operation of such systems in the world is still limited and was only confined to small road stretches or specific applications, such as bridges which are particularly sensitive to frost. One of the most significant "coil technology" example in Europe is the SERSO-System (Solar Energy recovery from road surfaces) built in 1994, on a Switzerland bridge. Many of these experiences are referenced in the technical literature, which provides state-of-the art papers (see for instance Eugster) and useful detailed information dealing with the construction and operational management of such installation. The present study is taking part of the Forever Open Road Concept addressed by the R5G: 5th Generation Road [1], one of the major project supported by IFSTTAR. It considers a different design of self-de-icing road that simplify its mode of construction and maintenance, compared to the two technologies mentioned above. It should also be noted that similar to pavements instrumented with coils, such structure could be used in the reversible way to capture the solar energy at the pavement surface during sunny days and store it, to either warm the pavement at a later stage or for exogenous needs (e.g. contribution to domestic hot water). To complete our study we also considered the use of semi-transparent pavement course wearing in place of the traditional opaque one. In the present study, a 2D model was developed using FEM approach. It combines 2 numerical models. One is dedicated to the calculation of the heat transfer inside the porous layer between the fluid and the structure according to the geometry studied and the physical properties of the components of the system. The second one addresses the heat transfer inside the different layer of the pavement and was adapted to allow the insertion of a semi-transparent surface layer (for sun radiation). The temperature spatial distribution within the structure and its surface is calculated at different time step according to the evolution of boundary conditions at its surface. Various location in France were selected and calculation of the temperature field was carried-out over a year. Discussion on the performances of such system versus its location is proposed. Influence of a semi-transparent layer is also discussed. Future works will compared numerical simulations with experiments thank to a dedicated test bench under development and that will allow to test various structure in parallel. References [1] W. J. Eugster, Road and Bridge Heating Geothermal Energy. Overview and examples, European Geothermal Congress 2007 [2] http://www.ifsttar.fr/en/recherche-expertise/colonne-1/nos-grands-projets/r5g-5th-generation-road/
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-03-01
This practice provides guidance and example specification language intended for use by Owner- : Agencies in development of specific contract language when requiring the evaluation of : tire/pavement noise for new concrete pavement surfaces. The overa...
Analysis of Load Stress for Asphalt Pavement of Lean Concrete Base
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lijun, Suo; Xinwu, Wang
The study revealed that whether it is early distresses in asphalt pavement or not depends largely on working performance of base. In the field of asphalt pavement, it is widely accepted that lean concrete base, compared with the general semi-rigid base, has better working performance, such as high strength and good eroding resistance. Problem of early distresses in asphalt pavement, which caused by more traffic loadings, can be settled effectively when lean concrete is used in asphalt pavement. Traffic loading is important parameter used in the analysis of the new pavement design. However, few studies have done extensive and intensive research on the load stress for asphalt pavement of lean concrete base. Because of that, it is necessary to study the load stress for the asphalt pavement. In the paper, first of all, three-dimension finite element model of the asphalt pavement is created for the aim of doing mechanical analysis for the asphalt pavement. And then, the two main objectives of this study are investigated. One is analysis for load stress of lean concrete base, and the other is analysis for load stress of asphalt surface. The results show that load stress of lean concrete base decreases, decrease and increase with increase of base's thickness, surface's thickness and ratio of base's modulus to foundation's modulus respectively. So far as the asphalt surface is concerned, maximum shearing stress, which is caused by load, is evident in asphalt surface which is located in transverse contraction joint of lean concrete base of asphalt pavement. Maximum shearing stress decrease, decrease, decrease and increase respectively with increase of the surface's modulus, the surface's thickness, base's thickness and ratio of base's modulus to foundation's modulus.
Surface properties-vehicle interaction
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Huft, D. L.; Her, I.; Agrawal, S. K.; Zimmer, R. A.; Bester, C. J.
Several topics related to the surface properties of aircraft runways are discussed. The South Dakota profilometer; development of a data acquisition method for noncontact pavement macrotexture measurement; the traction of an aircraft tire on grooved and porous asphaltic concrete; holes in the pavements; the effect of pavement type and condition on the fuel consumption of vehicles; the traction loss of a suspended tire on a sinusoidal road; the effect of vehicle and driver characteristics on the psychological evaluation of road roughness; the correlation of subjective panel ratings of pavement ride quality with profilometer-derived measures of pavement roughness; a microprocessor-based noncontact distance measuring control system, and, the representation of pavement surface topography in predicting runoff depths and hydroplaning potential are discussed.
Evaluation Model for Pavement Surface Distress on 3d Point Clouds from Mobile Mapping System
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aoki, K.; Yamamoto, K.; Shimamura, H.
2012-07-01
This paper proposes a methodology to evaluate the pavement surface distress for maintenance planning of road pavement using 3D point clouds from Mobile Mapping System (MMS). The issue on maintenance planning of road pavement requires scheduled rehabilitation activities for damaged pavement sections to keep high level of services. The importance of this performance-based infrastructure asset management on actual inspection data is globally recognized. Inspection methodology of road pavement surface, a semi-automatic measurement system utilizing inspection vehicles for measuring surface deterioration indexes, such as cracking, rutting and IRI, have already been introduced and capable of continuously archiving the pavement performance data. However, any scheduled inspection using automatic measurement vehicle needs much cost according to the instruments' specification or inspection interval. Therefore, implementation of road maintenance work, especially for the local government, is difficult considering costeffectiveness. Based on this background, in this research, the methodologies for a simplified evaluation for pavement surface and assessment of damaged pavement section are proposed using 3D point clouds data to build urban 3D modelling. The simplified evaluation results of road surface were able to provide useful information for road administrator to find out the pavement section for a detailed examination and for an immediate repair work. In particular, the regularity of enumeration of 3D point clouds was evaluated using Chow-test and F-test model by extracting the section where the structural change of a coordinate value was remarkably achieved. Finally, the validity of the current methodology was investigated by conducting a case study dealing with the actual inspection data of the local roads.
1988-05-01
thick asphalt pavement and a unit cost of $10/sy for subbase, binder and wearing courses (22), the following costs can be considered: Road Width Cofts...on exposed surfaces, whereas concrete and asphalt absorb and then transmit heat. This is the same rationale used in selecting a white roof over a...Surfaces Item Avg±L !9PRe± M! Trees 80 Grass Lawn i11 Wall Surface 130 ... Asphalt 160 (From Energy Efficient Site Desgn) What constitutes a good site
Optical microtopographic inspection of asphalt pavement surfaces
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Costa, Manuel F. M.; Freitas, E. F.; Torres, H.; Cerezo, V.
2017-08-01
Microtopographic and rugometric characterization of surfaces is routinely and effectively performed non-invasively by a number of different optical methods. Rough surfaces are also inspected using optical profilometers and microtopographer. The characterization of road asphalt pavement surfaces produced in different ways and compositions is fundamental for economical and safety reasons. Having complex structures, including topographically with different ranges of form error and roughness, the inspection of asphalt pavement surfaces is difficult to perform non-invasively. In this communication we will report on the optical non-contact rugometric characterization of the surface of different types of road pavements performed at the Microtopography Laboratory of the Physics Department of the University of Minho.
Field Test of Expedient Pavement Repairs (Test Items 16-35).
1980-11-01
82 61 Surface Profiles After Repairs, Item 34 ............ ... 83 62 Cracking of Bond, Item 34 ..... ................. . 84 ix JI x LIST OF...Limestone Base Course .... ............... . 79 18 Summary of Test Results ...... .................. . 88 x ABBREVIATIONS AND NOMENCLATURE Abbreviations AFESC...coverage$ Lateral quarter X - M5 coverages -020- - 0.251 +0.10- centerline -0.05- 0 0 I> + o.IO_ quarter point -0.10 -0.20- - 0.25+ TRAFFIC ZONES . Lonituina
Asphalt surface treatment practice in southeastern United States.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-07-01
It costs less to maintain roads in good condition than in poor condition. Pavement preservation is a set of : activities to extend pavement life, improve safety, and meet road user expectations. Surface treatments are : pavement preservation treatmen...
Investigation of image archiving for pavement surface distress survey
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1999-07-26
The categorization and quantification of the type, severity, and extent of pavement surface distress is a primary method for assessing pavement condition. The current data collection system in the Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department ...
Urban evaporation rates for water-permeable pavements.
Starke, P; Göbel, P; Coldewey, W G
2010-01-01
In urban areas the natural water balance is disturbed. Infiltration and evaporation are reduced, resulting in a high surface runoff and a typical city climate, which can lead to floods and damages. Water-permeable pavements have a high infiltration rate that reduces surface runoff by increasing the groundwater recharge. The high water retention capacity of the street body of up to 51 l/m(2) and its connection via pores to the surface lead to higher evaporation rates than impermeable surfaces. A comparison of these two kinds of pavements shows a 16% increase in evaporation levels of water-permeable pavements. Furthermore, the evaporation from impermeable pavements is linked directly to rain events due to fast-drying surfaces. Water-permeable pavements show a more evenly distributed evaporation after a rain event. Cooling effects by evaporative heat loss can improve the city climate even several days after rain events. On a large scale use, uncomfortable weather like sultriness or dry heat can be prevented and the urban water balance can be attenuated towards the natural.
GeoMo 2007 : subgrade stabilization--foundations & pavements
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2007-08-01
One day seminar given by two of the leading authorities on the soil stabilization. Course participants will gain familiarity with the concepts and related topics for optimization of soil stabilization and pavement design. The recently published TRB c...
Determination of Stone-Mastic Asphalt Concrete Durability
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yastremsky, D. A.; Abaidullina, T. N.; Chepur, P. V.
2018-05-01
The paper is focused on determination of durability of the stone-mastic asphalt (SMA) concrete, containing various stabilizing additives: "Armidon" (authors’ development) and "Viatop". At the first stage of experiments, the APA method was used to determine the rutting in the SMA containing these additives. Strength test for only top layers of asphalt concrete surface is insufficient for the calculation of the pavement fatigue resistance limits. Due to this fact, a comprehensive approach was employed which incorporates the interaction of the surface and subgrade natural soil. To analyze the road surface stress-strain state and to determine the durability margin, a numerical model was used (describes the processes of fatigue life). The model was developed basing on the finite element method (FEM) in the ANSYS program. Conducted studies and numerical calculations allowed obtaining the minimum and maximum stress values in the structure affected zones and in the zones of plastic deformations occurrence in artificial and natural bases. It allows predicting deformation processes during repeated wheel loads caused by moving vehicles. In course of studies, the results of static stresses in the pavement were also obtained.
Objectification of Public Bus Stop's Pavement Surface Morphology
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Decký, Martin; Kováč, Matúš; Mužík, Juraj; Mičechová, Lenka; Ďuriš, Lukáš
2018-06-01
The article deals with the road pavement surface morphology objectification in term of the surface unevenness degradation during the life cycle of bus stop pavements. The article presents the results of long-term rut depth measurements performed during 25 years on selected bus stops which were intended to determine correlation dependences of pavement rut depth on a number of design axles. The article also presents different methods for rut depth measurements including the straightedge test, Profilograph GE, TRIMBLE CX, and dynamic Road Scanner.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Li, H.; Harvey, J. T.; Holland, T. J.; Kayhanian, M.
2013-03-01
To help address the built environmental issues of both heat island and stormwater runoff, strategies that make pavements cooler and permeable have been investigated through measurements and modeling of a set of pavement test sections. The investigation included the hydraulic and thermal performance of the pavements. The permeability results showed that permeable interlocking concrete pavers have the highest permeability (or infiltration rate, ˜0.5 cm s-1). The two permeable asphalt pavements showed the lowest permeability, but still had an infiltration rate of ˜0.1 cm s-1, which is adequate to drain rainwater without generating surface runoff during most typical rain events in central California. An increase in albedo can significantly reduce the daytime high surface temperature in summer. Permeable pavements under wet conditions could give lower surface temperatures than impermeable pavements. The cooling effect highly depends on the availability of moisture near the surface layer and the evaporation rate. The peak cooling effect of watering for the test sections was approximately 15-35 °C on the pavement surface temperature in the early afternoon during summer in central California. The evaporative cooling effect on the pavement surface temperature at 4:00 pm on the third day (25 h after watering) was still 2-7 °C lower compared to that on the second day, without considering the higher air temperature on the third day. A separate and related simulation study performed by UCPRC showed that full depth permeable pavements, if designed properly, can carry both light-duty traffic and certain heavy-duty vehicles while retaining the runoff volume captured from an average California storm event. These preliminarily results indicated the technical feasibility of combined reflective and permeable pavements for addressing the built environment issues related to both heat island mitigation and stormwater runoff management.
Recommendations for extending asphalt pavement surface life within Washington State.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-10-01
This study identifies and evaluates hot mix asphalt (HMA) mix design and construction techniques with potential for improving WSDOT pavement surface life. WSDOT pavement failure mechanisms are found to be predominantly cracking. Rutting may reach a f...
Classification of Features of Pavement Profiles Using Empirical Mode Decomposition
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-12-01
The Long-Term Pavement Performance (LTPP) database contains surface profile data for numerous pavements that are used mainly for computing International Roughness Index (IRI).(2) In order to obtain more information from these surface profiles, a Hilb...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wells, Stephen G.; McFadden, Leslie D.; McDonald, Eric V.; Eppes, Martha C.; Young, Michael H.; Wood, Yvonne A.
2014-05-01
Desert pavements are recognized in arid landscapes around the world, developing via diminution of constructional/depositional landform relief and creating a 1-2 stone thick armor over a "stone free" layer. Surface exposure dating demonstrates that clasts forming the desert pavements are maintained at the land surface over hundreds of thousands of years, as aeolian fines are deposited on the land surface, transported into the underlying parent material and incorporated into accretionary soil horizons (e.g., the stone free or vesicular [Av] horizon). This surface armor provides long-term stability over extensive regions of the landscape. Over shorter time periods and at the landform-element scale, dynamic surficial processes (i.e., weathering, runoff) continue to modify the pavement form. Clast size reduction in comparison to underlying parent material, along with armoring and packing of clasts in pavements contribute to their persistence, and studies of crack orientations in pavement clasts indicate physical weathering and diminution of particle size are driven by diurnal solar insolation. Over geologic time, cracks form and propagate from tensile stresses related to temporal and spatial gradients in temperature that evolve and rotate in alignment with the sun's rays. Observed multimodal nature of crack orientations appear related to seasonally varying, latitude-dependent temperature fields resulting from solar angle and weather conditions. Surface properties and their underlying soil profiles vary across pavement surfaces, forming a landscape mosaic and controlling surface hydrology, ecosystem function and the ultimate life-cycle of arid landscapes. In areas of well-developed pavements, surface infiltration and soluble salt concentrations indicate that saturated hydraulic conductivity of Av horizons decline on progressively older alluvial fan surfaces. Field observations and measurements from well-developed desert pavement surfaces landforms also yield significantly lower infiltration rates, enhanced rates of overland flow characterized by high water:sediment ratios and reduced production of desert ecosystems. Consequently, regionally extensive pavement and significantly decreased infiltration over geologic time have resulted in widespread overland flow, elaborate drainage networks on alluvial and eolian-mantled bedrock landscapes, and channel incision and regional dissection of the pavement-mantled landforms. However, these once stable landscapes become progressively unstable with time, serving as sediment source areas for younger alluvial deposits (i.e., geologic life-cycle). Thus, regional dissection (instability) of these desert landscapes can be influenced by the intrinsic properties of pavement-mantled landscapes and not necessarily to external forces of climate change and tectonics.
Asphalt rheology and strengthening through polymer binders : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-11-01
This term paper investigates the influences of polymer modifications to asphalt rheology as compared to : conventional asphalt pavement sections. The addition of 2% to 3% of polymers into the wearing and base courses : of asphalt (flexible) pavements...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1987-08-01
This report is concerned with the detemination of the relationship between asphaltic concrete suface course specifications and the level of performance of pavements constructed under these specifications. The relationship was investigated through com...
Base course resilient modulus for the mechanistic-empirical pavement design guide.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-11-01
The Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guidelines (MEPDG) recommend use of modulus in lieu of structural number for base layer thickness design. Modulus is nonlinear with respect to effective confinement stress, loading strain, and moisture. For d...
Accelerated characterization of full-scale flexible pavements using a vibroseis.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-03-01
Geosynthetic basal reinforcement has been used in flexible pavements and unbound roads to limit the occurrence of rutting, fatigue, and environmental-related cracking, and to permit reduction in base course thickness. However, the lack of a represent...
Interior car noise created by textured pavement surfaces : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1975-01-01
Because of widespread concern about the effect of textured pavement surfaces on interior car noise, sound pressure levels (SPL) were measured inside a test vehicle as it traversed 21 pavements with various textures. A linear regression analysis run o...
Winter tenting of highway pavements : test program and discussion of causes and mechanisms
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2000-10-28
Tenting consists of localized frost heaving in the immediate vicinity of transverse pavement cracks. It produces a highly irregular riding : surface, leads to premature pavement-surface deterioration, occurs on highways designed for high traffic volu...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-01-01
Part 1Pavement Condition Evaluation, Impact, and Durability; Part 2Concrete Pavement Preservation, Repair, and Rehabilitation; Part 3Concrete Pavement Repair Techniques and Experiences; Part 4Concrete Pavement Surface Texture; Part 5Emergin...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-12-12
... Pavement and Asphalt Based Surface Coating.'' The intended effect of this action is to approve control..., ``Asphalt Pavement and Asphalt Based Surface Coating?'' A. Background B. What are the requirements of Part 241, ``Asphalt Pavement and Asphalt Based Surface Coating?'' C. What is EPA's evaluation? VI. What is...
Characterizing rider safety in terms of asphalt pavement surface texture.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-10-01
The overall goal of the pavement design is to meet the intended service life and more importantly to provide a safe riding surface for the traveling : public. Therefore, pavements can experience structural failure (i.e. rutting or cracking) or functi...
Status of runway slipperiness research
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Horne, W. B.
1976-01-01
Runway slipperiness research performed in the United States and Europe since 1968 is reviewed. Topics discussed include: (1) runway flooding during rainstorms; (2) hydroplaning; (3) identification of slippery runways including the results from ground vehicle friction measurements and attempts to correlate these measurements with aircraft stopping performance; (4) progress and problems associated with the development of antihydroplaning runway surface treatments such as pavement grooving and porous friction course (PFC); and (5) runway rubber deposits and their removal.
Design and construction guidelines for thermally insulated concrete pavements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-01-01
The report describes the construction and design of composite pavements as a viable design strategy to use an : asphalt concrete (AC) wearing course as the insulating material and a Portland cement concrete (PCC) structural : layer as the load-carryi...
A bio-wicking system to mitigate capillary water in base course : final project report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-11-01
Water within pavement layers is the major cause of pavement deteriorations. High water content results in significant reduction in soils resilient behavior and increase in permanent deformation. Conventional drainage systems can only drain gravity...
Accelerated Characterization of Full-Scale Reinforced Flexible Pavement Models Using Vibroseis
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-03-01
Geosynthetic basal reinforcement has been used in flexible pavements and unbound roads to limit the occurrence of rutting, fatigue, and environmental-related cracking, and to permit reduction in base course thickness. However, the lack of a represent...
76 FR 5510 - Safety Enhancements Part 139, Certification of Airports
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-02-01
... prevent accidents and incidents in that area. A certificate holder would be required to conduct pavement... Pavement Surface Evaluation Braking performance is critical for all aircraft especially on wet runway surfaces. Under certain conditions, hydroplaning or unacceptable loss of traction (tire/pavement contact...
Evaluation of Surface and Subsurface Processes in Permeable Pavement Infiltration Trenches
The hydrologic performance of permeable pavement systems can be affected by clogging of the pavement surface and/or clogging at the interface where the subsurface storage layer meets the underlying soil. As infiltration and exfiltration are the primary functional mechanisms for ...
Pascucci, Simone; Bassani, Cristiana; Palombo, Angelo; Poscolieri, Maurizio; Cavalli, Rosa
2008-02-22
This paper describes a fast procedure for evaluating asphalt pavement surface defects using airborne emissivity data. To develop this procedure, we used airborne multispectral emissivity data covering an urban test area close to Venice (Italy).For this study, we first identify and select the roads' asphalt pavements on Multispectral Infrared Visible Imaging Spectrometer (MIVIS) imagery using a segmentation procedure. Next, since in asphalt pavements the surface defects are strictly related to the decrease of oily components that cause an increase of the abundance of surfacing limestone, the diagnostic absorption emissivity peak at 11.2μm of the limestone was used for retrieving from MIVIS emissivity data the areas exhibiting defects on asphalt pavements surface.The results showed that MIVIS emissivity allows establishing a threshold that points out those asphalt road sites on which a check for a maintenance intervention is required. Therefore, this technique can supply local government authorities an efficient, rapid and repeatable road mapping procedure providing the location of the asphalt pavements to be checked.
Measurement, Construction, and Maintenance of Skid-Resistant Airport Pavement Surfaces
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1997-03-18
This advisory circular (AC) contains guidelines and procedures for the design : and construction of skid-resistant pavement, pavement evaluation with friction : measuring equipment, and maintenance of high skid-resistant pavements. 45p.
Permeability and stability of base and subbase materials : research implementation plan.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2000-08-01
The purpose of pavement base and subbase courses is to provide a means for free water to drain from : beneath roadways while providing structural support for the pavement. Problems occur when highway : materials which are assumed to have adequate dra...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-03-11
..., to the extent appropriate, safety, bridge, pavement, and congestion management systems for roads...; Pavement features such as number of lanes, length, width, surface type, functional classification, and shoulder information; and pavement condition information such as roughness, distress, rutting, and surface...
Lindenmann, H P
2006-01-01
The significance of the influence of poor pavement skid resistance values on accident frequency in wet pavement conditions has been the object of many studies over several years. The various investigations have produced very diverse findings. Only seldom, however, has detailed consideration been given to the central question of whether pavement skid resistance is a decisive parameter in the occurrence of local accident "black spots." Until now, the focus has been more on describing a relationship between pavement skid resistance and accident frequency. In the course of the network-wide survey of the states of pavements and of accident occurrence on Switzerland's freeways from 1999 to 2003, it emerged that a relationship with inadequate pavement skid resistance was provable for only a small proportion of accident black spots. These findings were used to frame a guideline for authorities and highway operators about how to treat skid resistance when assessing pavements and accident occurrence on freeways.
Evaluation of the Cape Seal Process as a Pavement Rehabilitation Alternative
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1998-10-01
A 1-year research project was conducted to evaluate the Cape seal process as a pavement rehabilitation technique. During the course of this research project, most of the Cape seal projects that have been constructed within the state were visited as p...
Comparison of winter temperature profiles in asphalt and concrete pavements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-06-01
The objectives of this research were to 1) determine which pavement type, asphalt or concrete, has : higher surface temperatures in winter and 2) compare the subsurface temperatures under asphalt and : concrete pavements to determine the pavement typ...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2003-02-01
In order to better understand the effect of tire carcass construction and pavement texture on tire/pavement noise generation, a measurement program was conducted on a group of four automobile tires on three pavement textures. The tires included all c...
A new structure of permeable pavement for mitigating urban heat island.
Liu, Yong; Li, Tian; Peng, Hangyu
2018-09-01
The urban heat island (UHI) effect has been a great threat to human habitation, and how to mitigate this problem has been a global concern over decades. This paper addresses the cooling effect of a novel permeable pavement called evaporation-enhancing permeable pavement, which has capillary columns in aggregate and a liner at the bottom. To explore the efficiency of mitigating the UHI, bench-scale permeable pavement units with capillary columns were developed and compared with conventional permeable pavement. Criteria of capillary capacities of the column, evaporation rates, and surface temperature of the pavements were monitored under simulated rainfall and Shanghai local weather conditions. Results show the capillary column was important in increasing evaporation by lifting water from the bottom to the surface, and the evaporation-enhancing permeable pavement was cooler than a conventional permeable pavement by as much as 9.4°C during the experimental period. Moreover, the cooling effect of the former pavement could persist more than seven days under the condition of no further rainfall. Statistical analysis result reveals that evaporation-enhancing permeable pavement can mitigate the UHI effect significantly more than a conventional permeable pavement. Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Characterization of asphalt drainage course layers.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-08-01
Asphalt Drainage Courses (ADCs) have generally been required under all four-lane flexible : pavements in Mississippi. Asphalt drainage courses are designed in Mississippi using No. 57 limestone, : sandstone or granite combined with 2.5 percent asphal...
Investigation of pavement permeability : Old Bridge Road.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2001-01-01
Several instances of wet pavement and pavement icing on Old Bridge Road were reported to VDOT's Lake Ridge Area Headquarters when no new precipitation had fallen. The pavement structure appears to hold water. This water seeps to the surface at a numb...
Asphalt surface treatment practice in southeastern United States : [tech summary].
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-09-01
Pavement preservation is an approach in enhancing pavement performance using a set of practices that extends the life : of the pavement and improves safety and ride quality. According to the World Banks Pavement Deterioration Model, the : cost of ...
Pascucci, Simone; Bassani, Cristiana; Palombo, Angelo; Poscolieri, Maurizio; Cavalli, Rosa
2008-01-01
This paper describes a fast procedure for evaluating asphalt pavement surface defects using airborne emissivity data. To develop this procedure, we used airborne multispectral emissivity data covering an urban test area close to Venice (Italy).For this study, we first identify and select the roads' asphalt pavements on Multispectral Infrared Visible Imaging Spectrometer (MIVIS) imagery using a segmentation procedure. Next, since in asphalt pavements the surface defects are strictly related to the decrease of oily components that cause an increase of the abundance of surfacing limestone, the diagnostic absorption emissivity peak at 11.2μm of the limestone was used for retrieving from MIVIS emissivity data the areas exhibiting defects on asphalt pavements surface.The results showed that MIVIS emissivity allows establishing a threshold that points out those asphalt road sites on which a check for a maintenance intervention is required. Therefore, this technique can supply local government authorities an efficient, rapid and repeatable road mapping procedure providing the location of the asphalt pavements to be checked. PMID:27879765
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nezlobin, David; Pariente, Sarah; Lavee, Hanoch; Sachs, Eyal; Levenberg, Eyal
2017-04-01
The processes of runoff initiation on smooth impervious surfaces and various asphalt pavements are investigated in laboratory rain simulator experiments and outdoor sprinkling tests. Visual and FLIR observations indicate that runoff initiation is associated with coalescence of drop clusters on the surface and complex changes in micro-connectivity. Depending on surface inclination, several morphological regimes of flow initiation have been observed. In the case of very small inclination the runoff initiation is governed by critical merging of drop clusters on the surface and develops in broad flows (very abrupt, but delayed). For larger inclinations, the runoff occurs in rivulets or strongly directed flow threads. On asphalt pavements the runoff initiation is also strongly affected by pavement SVF (Surface Void Fraction), texture and even by the asphalt hydrophobicity. A simplified bi-level model of the pavement surface may explain principal differences in the runoff initiation on asphalts with small, intermediate and large SVF values. For small SVF (standard fresh asphalts) the runoff develops on the upper surface level, and filling of the surface voids is not always required (especially for the large inclinations). For intermediate SVF (considerably deteriorated asphalts) the runoff develops as well on the upper surface level, but only after considerable filling of the surface voids. Finally, on severely deteriorated asphalts (very large SVFs) the runoff develops on the "bottom" level of asphalt surface, after only partial filling of the surface voids. Other factors, such as drops splash and splitting, also affect the process of runoff initiation and explain rather considerable differences (sometimes of 2-3 mm rain depth) in the runoff thresholds on various non-porous asphalt pavements. Similar phenomena can be probably observed on certain types of rock outcrops.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2007-02-01
This report summarizes the findings of research directed at identifying maintenance solutions for bleeding and : flushed asphalt pavements surfaced with seal coats or surface treatments. Although the basic mechanism associated with : both bleeding an...
Long-term stormwater quantity and quality performance of permeable pavement systems.
Brattebo, Benjamin O; Booth, Derek B
2003-11-01
This study examined the long-term effectiveness of permeable pavement as an alternative to traditional impervious asphalt pavement in a parking area. Four commercially available permeable pavement systems were evaluated after 6 years of daily parking usage for structural durability, ability to infiltrate precipitation, and impacts on infiltrate water quality. All four permeable pavement systems showed no major signs of wear. Virtually all rainwater infiltrated through the permeable pavements, with almost no surface runoff. The infiltrated water had significantly lower levels of copper and zinc than the direct surface runoff from the asphalt area. Motor oil was detected in 89% of samples from the asphalt runoff but not in any water sample infiltrated through the permeable pavement. Neither lead nor diesel fuel were detected in any sample. Infiltrate measured 5 years earlier displayed significantly higher concentrations of zinc and significantly lower concentrations of copper and lead.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-01-01
Not long after the construction of a pavement or a new pavement surface, various : forms of deterioration begin to accumulate due to the harsh effects of traffic loading : combined with weathering action. In a recent NEXTRANS project, a pavement crac...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-08-01
Concrete pavements can be designed and constructed to be as quiet as any other conventional pavement type in use today. This report provides an overview of how this can be doneand done consistently. In order to construct a quieter concrete pavemen...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Miskiewicz, M.; Lachowicz, J.; Tysiac, P.; Jaskula, P.; Wilde, K.
2018-05-01
The article presents the possibility of using non-destructive methods of road pavement diagnostics as an alternative to traditional means to assess the reasons for premature cracks adjacent to bridge objects. Two scanning methods were used: laser scanning to measure geometric surface deformation and ground penetrating radar (GPR) inspection to assess the road pavement condition. With the use of a laser scanner, an effective tool for road deformation assessment several approach pavement surfaces next to the bridges were scanned. As the result, a point cloud was obtained including spatial information about the pavement deformation. The data accuracy was about 3 mm, the deformations were presented in the form of deviation maps between the reference surface and the actual surface. Moreover characteristic pavement surface cross-sections were presented. The in situ measurements of the GPR method were performed and analysed in order to detect non-homogeneity in the density of structural layers of the pavement. Due to the analysis of the permittivity of individual layers, it was possible to detect non-homogeneity areas. The performed GPR measurements were verified by standard invasive tests carried out by drilling boreholes and taking cores from the pavement and testing the compaction and air voids content in asphalt layers. As a result of the measurements made by both methods significant differences in layer compacting factor values were diagnosed. The factor was much smaller in the area directly next to the bridgehead and much larger in the zone located a few meters away. The research showed the occurrence of both design and erection errors as well as those related to the maintenance of engineering structures.
Validation of source approval of HMA surface mix aggregate : research summary.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-04-01
Pavement surfaces must maintain an adequate level of friction in order to provide a : safe surface for vehicles. The Maryland State Highway Administration (SHA) is : responsible for ensuring that flexible pavement construction, using hot mix asphalt ...
Statistical classification of road pavements using near field vehicle rolling noise measurements.
Paulo, Joel Preto; Coelho, J L Bento; Figueiredo, Mário A T
2010-10-01
Low noise surfaces have been increasingly considered as a viable and cost-effective alternative to acoustical barriers. However, road planners and administrators frequently lack information on the correlation between the type of road surface and the resulting noise emission profile. To address this problem, a method to identify and classify different types of road pavements was developed, whereby near field road noise is analyzed using statistical learning methods. The vehicle rolling sound signal near the tires and close to the road surface was acquired by two microphones in a special arrangement which implements the Close-Proximity method. A set of features, characterizing the properties of the road pavement, was extracted from the corresponding sound profiles. A feature selection method was used to automatically select those that are most relevant in predicting the type of pavement, while reducing the computational cost. A set of different types of road pavement segments were tested and the performance of the classifier was evaluated. Results of pavement classification performed during a road journey are presented on a map, together with geographical data. This procedure leads to a considerable improvement in the quality of road pavement noise data, thereby increasing the accuracy of road traffic noise prediction models.
Study of a rehabilitated road using GPR and FWD
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Marecos, Vania; Fontul, Simona; de Lurdes Antunes, Maria; Solla, Mercedes; Pajewski, Lara
2017-04-01
This work focus on the structural evaluation of a rehabilitated road after the conclusion of the first phase of the improvement works. The activities developed in the study comprised the characterization of the pavement layers condition (before the application of the asphalt surface layer) and the prediction of the pavement bearing capacity (taking into account the contribution of the wearing course, to be placed in accordance with the project specifications). For this study two non-destructive tests (NDT) were combined: Falling Weight Deflectometer (FWD) and Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR). The original pavement was essentially composed by a granular layer treated with a bituminous emulsion. The main objectives of the rehabilitation works were the enlargement of the road platform in selected locations, with the construction of a new pavement, and also the reinforcement of the existing pavement to increase its bearing capacity. The FWD tests were performed to assess the bearing capacity of the pavement and were conducted along the outer wheel path, in both directions. The spacing between measurement points was 75 m and the applied impulse load was 50 kN. The results showed a great variability of the deflections measured along the section under study. A preliminary zonation of the pavement was carried out, and was latter adjusted based on the results of the GPR. To determine the thickness of the pavement layers a GPR survey was carried out using a 1.8 GHz antenna and a radar control unit SIR-20, both from GSSI. The GPR tests were performed continuously along the same line as the FWD tests. The GPR tests allowed for the identification of the different structures of the pavement, corresponding to the zones with the new pavement and the existing pavement with reinforcement. Some cores were extracted to calibrate the thickness of the GPR bituminous layers, to verify the conditions of adhesion between layers and also to perform laboratory tests to characterize the bituminous mixtures. Test pits were also carried out to calibrate the GPR thickness for the granular layers. It was concluded that the areas with higher deflections coincided with the new pavement areas. The GPR results showed that in the existing reinforced pavement zones the total thickness of the reinforcement layers were higher than design values. On the other hand, for the new pavement zones, it was observed lower thicknesses for the base and sub-base layers and also for the binder layer, in comparison with the design values. The results of the laboratory tests carried out on samples of the bituminous mixtures showed that, in general, those mixtures had percentages of bitumen and porosities above the expected values. Based on the tests carried out, pavement response models were established and their predictable load capacity was estimated. This abstract is a contribution to COST Action TU1208 Civil Engineering Applications of Ground Penetrating Radar.
Quieter pavements guidance document
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-02-01
This report provides guidance and better practice recommendations to the National Park : Service for selecting pavement surfaces to minimize tire-pavement noise. The report : contains an overview of common technologies and methods for quieter pavemen...
Desert pavement study at Amboy, California
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Williams, S.; Greeley, R.
1984-01-01
Desert pavement is a general term describing a surface that typically consists of a thin layer of cm-sized rock fragments set on top of a layer of finer material in which no fragments are found. An understanding of desert pavement is important to planetary geology because they may play a major role in the formation and visibility of various aeolian features such as wind streaks, which are important on Mars and may be important on Venus. A field study was conducted in Amboy, California to determine the formation mechanism of desert pavements. The probable sequence of events for the formation and evolution of a typical desert pavement surface, based on this experiment and the work of others, is as follows. Starting with a layer of surface material consisting of both fine particles and rock fragments, aeolian deflation will rapidly erode the surface until an armored lag is developed, after which aeolian processes become less important. The concentration of fragments then slowly increases as new fragments are brought to the surface from the subsurface and as fragments move downslope by sheet wash. Sheet wash would be responsible for removing very fine particles from the surface and for moving the fragments relative to one another, forming interlocks.
Development of reliable pavement models.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-05-01
The current report proposes a framework for estimating the reliability of a given pavement structure as analyzed by : the Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide (MEPDG). The methodology proposes using a previously fit : response surface, in plac...
Alternative pavements for snowmobile crossings.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-09-01
Excessive highway pavement wear from snowmobile traffic is a maintenance problem for the New Hampshire Department of : Transportation. The snowmobiles and trail grooming equipment scar and erode the pavement surfaces, eventually creating wide ruts ac...
Ground Penetrating Radar : Pavement Layer Thickness Evaluation
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2003-12-01
The following report demonstrates the accuracy of using Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) to determine both the surface layer thickness for asphalt, and concrete pavements. In addition tests were conducted to identify GPR's repeatability on dry pavement...
Ground penetrating radar, pavement layer thickness evaluation
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2002-12-01
The following report demonstrates the accuracy of using Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) to determine both the surface layer thickness for asphalt, and concrete pavements. In addition tests were conducted to identify GPR's repeatability on dry pavement...
Ground Penetrating Radar : Pavement Layer Thickness Evaluation
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2002-12-01
The following report demonstrates the accuracy of using Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) to determine both the surface layer thickness for asphalt, and concrete pavements. In addition tests were conducted to identify GPR's repeatability on dry pavement...
Evaluation of pavement surface friction treatments.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-12-01
The implementation of a pavement preservation program involves a learning curve with not only a determination to succeed, but : also the courage to fail. Also, successful implementation of pavement preservation program requires knowledge of the perfo...
A theoretical study for the propagation of rolling noise over a porous road pavement
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Keung Lui, Wai; Ming Li, Kai
2004-07-01
A simplified model based on the study of sound diffracted by a sphere is proposed for investigating the propagation of noise in a hornlike geometry between porous road surfaces and rolling tires. The simplified model is verified by comparing its predictions with the published numerical and experimental results of studies on the horn amplification of sound over a road pavement. In a parametric study, a point monopole source is assumed to be localized on the surface of a tire. In the frequency range of interest, a porous road pavement can effectively reduce the level of amplified sound due to the horn effect. It has been shown that an increase in the thickness and porosity of a porous layer, or the use of a double layer of porous road pavement, attenuates the horn amplification of sound. However, a decrease in the flow resistivity of a porous road pavement does little to reduce the horn amplification of sound. It has also been demonstrated that the horn effect over a porous road pavement is less dependent on the angular position of the source on the surface of tires.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sneddon, R. V.
1982-07-01
The VESY-3-A mechanistic design system for asphalt pavements was field verified for three pavement sections at two test sites in Nebraska. PSI predictions from VESYS were in good agreement with field measurements for a 20 year old 3 layer pavement located near Elmwood, Nebraska. Field measured PSI values for an 8 in. full depth pavement also agreed with VESYS predictions for the study period. Rut depth estimates from the model were small and were in general agreement with field measurements. Cracking estimates were poor and tended to underestimate the time required to develop observable fatigue cracking in the field. Asphalt, base course and subgrade materials were tested in a 4.0 in. diameter modified triaxial cell. Test procedures used dynamic conditioning and rest periods to simulate service conditions.
Assessment of asphalt concrete acoustic performance in urban streets.
Paje, S E; Bueno, M; Terán, F; Viñuela, U; Luong, J
2008-03-01
Geo-referenced close proximity rolling noise and sound absorption measurements are used for acoustical characterization of asphalt concrete surfaces in an urban environment. A close proximity noise map of streets with low speed limits is presented for a reference speed of 50 km/h. Different pavements and pavement conditions, common in urban streets, are analyzed: dense and semidense asphalt concrete, with Spanish denomination D-8 and S-12, respectively, and on the other hand, dense pavement at the end of its service life (D-8(*)). From the acoustics point of view, the most favorable surface, by more than 4 dB(A) compared with the S-12 mix, is the smoothest surface, i.e., the D-8 mix, even though it presents a minor absorption coefficient in normal incidence. Noise levels from dense surfaces (D-8) increase significantly over time, principally due to the appearance of surface defects such as cracks and ruts. Longitudinal variability of the close proximity tire/pavement noise emission and surface homogeneity are also analyzed.
Evaluation of pavement surface friction treatments : [technical summary].
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-01-01
The implementation of a pavement preservation program involves a learning curve with not only a determination to succeed, but also the courage to fail. Successful implementation of pavement preservation program requires knowledge of the performance o...
Performance of pavements designed with low-cost materials
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Grau, R. W.; Yrjanson, W. A.; Packard, R. G.; Barksdale, R. D.; Potts, C. F.; Ruth, B. E.; Smith, L. L.; Huddleston, I. J.; Vinson, T. S.; Hicks, R. G.
1980-04-01
The following areas are discussed. Utilization of marginal aggregate materials for secondary road surface layers; econocrete pavements; current practices; construction and performance of sand-asphalt bases and performance of sand-asphalt and limerock pavements in Florida. Cement stabilization of degrading aggregates use of crushed stone screenings in highway construction (abridgement); and sulfur-asphalt pavement technology are also reviewed.
Update to Permeable Pavement Research at the Edison ...
The EPA’s Urban Watershed Management Branch (UWMB) has been monitoring the permeable pavement demonstration site at the Edison Environmental Center, NJ since 2010. This site has three different types of permeable pavements including interlocking concrete permeable pavers, pervious concrete, and porous asphalt. The permeable pavements are limited to parking spaces while adjacent driving lanes are impermeable and drain to the permeable surfaces. The parking lot is instrumented for continuous monitoring with thermistors and water content reflectometers that measure moisture as infiltrate passes through the storage gallery beneath the permeable pavements into the underlying native soil. Each permeable surface of the parking lot has four lined sections that capture infiltrate in tanks for water quality analyses; these tanks are capable of holding volumes up to 4.1 m3, which represents up to 38 mm (1.5 in.) for direct rainfall on the porous pavement and runoff from adjacent driving lanes that drain into the permeable surface.Previous technical releases concerning the demonstration site focused on monitoring techniques, observed chloride and nutrient concentrations, surface hydrology, and infiltration and evaporation rates. This presentation summarizes these past findings and addresses current water quality efforts including pH, solids analysis, total organic carbon, and chemical oxygen demand. Stormwater runoff continues to be a major cause of water pollution in
Friction management on Kansas Department of Transportation highways.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-04-01
The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) estimates that about 70% of wet pavement crashes can be : prevented or minimized by improving pavement friction. High Friction Surface Treatment (HFST), a speciallydesigned : thin surface application of hard ...
Urban pavement surface temperature. Comparison of numerical and statistical approach
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Marchetti, Mario; Khalifa, Abderrahmen; Bues, Michel; Bouilloud, Ludovic; Martin, Eric; Chancibaut, Katia
2015-04-01
The forecast of pavement surface temperature is very specific in the context of urban winter maintenance. to manage snow plowing and salting of roads. Such forecast mainly relies on numerical models based on a description of the energy balance between the atmosphere, the buildings and the pavement, with a canyon configuration. Nevertheless, there is a specific need in the physical description and the numerical implementation of the traffic in the energy flux balance. This traffic was originally considered as a constant. Many changes were performed in a numerical model to describe as accurately as possible the traffic effects on this urban energy balance, such as tires friction, pavement-air exchange coefficient, and infrared flux neat balance. Some experiments based on infrared thermography and radiometry were then conducted to quantify the effect fo traffic on urban pavement surface. Based on meteorological data, corresponding pavement temperature forecast were calculated and were compared with fiels measurements. Results indicated a good agreement between the forecast from the numerical model based on this energy balance approach. A complementary forecast approach based on principal component analysis (PCA) and partial least-square regression (PLS) was also developed, with data from thermal mapping usng infrared radiometry. The forecast of pavement surface temperature with air temperature was obtained in the specific case of urban configurtation, and considering traffic into measurements used for the statistical analysis. A comparison between results from the numerical model based on energy balance, and PCA/PLS was then conducted, indicating the advantages and limits of each approach.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2008-09-01
The primary objective of this study was to evaluate KDOTs pavement surfacing history and recommend : whether or not the departments life-cycle cost analysis (LCCA) procedure should include a surfacing history : component, and, if so, how the LC...
Guidelines for rehabilitating flexible pavements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1986-01-01
The guidelines presented in this report are intended as an aid to the engineer in selecting the most appropriate type of pavement rehabilitation from those that are available. The basic types of distress in pavement surfaces and their causes are desc...
Hammond, Duane R.; Shulman, Stanley A.; Echt, Alan S.
2016-01-01
Asphalt pavement milling machines use a rotating cutter drum to remove the deteriorated road surface for recycling. The removal of the road surface has the potential to release respirable crystalline silica, to which workers can be exposed. This paper describes an evaluation of respirable crystalline silica exposures to the operator and ground worker from two different half-lane and larger asphalt pavement milling machines that had ventilation dust controls and water-sprays designed and installed by the manufacturers. Manufacturer A completed milling for eleven days at four highway construction sites in Wisconsin, while Manufacturer B completed milling for ten days at seven highway construction sites in Indiana. To evaluate the dust controls, full-shift personal breathing zone air samples were collected from an operator and ground worker during the course of normal employee work activities of asphalt pavement milling at eleven different sites. Forty-two personal breathing zone air samples were collected over 21 days (sampling on an operator and ground worker each day). All samples were below 50 µg/m3 for respirable crystalline silica, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health recommended exposure limit. The geometric mean personal breathing zone air sample was 6.2 µg/m3 for the operator and 6.1 µg/m3 for the ground worker for the Manufacturer A milling machine. The geometric mean personal breathing zone air sample was 4.2 µg/m3 for the operator and 9.0 µg/m3 for the ground worker for the Manufacturer B milling machine. In addition, upper 95% confidence limits for the mean exposure for each occupation were well below 50 µg/m3 for both studies. The silica content in the bulk asphalt material being milled ranged from 7% to 23% silica for roads milled by Manufacturer A and from 5% to 12% silica for roads milled by Manufacturer B. The results indicate that engineering controls consisting of ventilation controls in combination with water-sprays are capable of controlling occupational exposures to respirable crystalline silica generated by asphalt pavement milling machines on highway construction sites. PMID:26913983
Hammond, Duane R; Shulman, Stanley A; Echt, Alan S
2016-07-01
Asphalt pavement milling machines use a rotating cutter drum to remove the deteriorated road surface for recycling. The removal of the road surface has the potential to release respirable crystalline silica, to which workers can be exposed. This article describes an evaluation of respirable crystalline silica exposures to the operator and ground worker from two different half-lane and larger asphalt pavement milling machines that had ventilation dust controls and water-sprays designed and installed by the manufacturers. Manufacturer A completed milling for 11 days at 4 highway construction sites in Wisconsin, and Manufacturer B completed milling for 10 days at 7 highway construction sites in Indiana. To evaluate the dust controls, full-shift personal breathing zone air samples were collected from an operator and ground worker during the course of normal employee work activities of asphalt pavement milling at 11 different sites. Forty-two personal breathing zone air samples were collected over 21 days (sampling on an operator and ground worker each day). All samples were below 50 µg/m(3) for respirable crystalline silica, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health recommended exposure limit. The geometric mean personal breathing zone air sample was 6.2 µg/m(3) for the operator and 6.1 µg/m(3) for the ground worker for the Manufacturer A milling machine. The geometric mean personal breathing zone air sample was 4.2 µg/m(3) for the operator and 9.0 µg/m(3) for the ground worker for the Manufacturer B milling machine. In addition, upper 95% confidence limits for the mean exposure for each occupation were well below 50 µg/m(3) for both studies. The silica content in the bulk asphalt material being milled ranged from 7-23% silica for roads milled by Manufacturer A and from 5-12% silica for roads milled by Manufacturer B. The results indicate that engineering controls consisting of ventilation controls in combination with water-sprays are capable of controlling occupational exposures to respirable crystalline silica generated by asphalt pavement milling machines on highway construction sites.
Influence of hot asphalt mixture using asbuton on road composite pavement
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gaus, Abdul; Darwis, Muhammad; Imran
2017-11-01
Construction and rehabilitation of road infrastructure in Indonesia require about 1.2 million tons of asphalt per year, approximately 100% used of petroleum asphalt. Only a half of asphalt demand can be provided domestically, while about 600 thousand tons have to be imported from abroad. Indonesia has natural asphalt with a quite large deposit but has not been fully utilized. Lack of availability of asphalt and the increasing demand of the domestic market will give effect to an increase in bitumen cost in the domestic market. Somehow, this is not a sufficient condition due to the rising cost of road infrastructure. This study aims to determine the effect of using a layer of asphalt concrete pavement asbuton to rigid pavement (PR-modification). Stressing that occur in rigid pavement, asphalt concrete layer and base course measured by using LVDT and for the subgrade using soil pressure transducer. Using asbuton on asphalt concrete will have more benefit on improving the stability of the marshall. The maximum deflection occurring in the PR-modification at 5.19 mm with a maximum stress of 175.10 kN. Vertical and horizontal tension that occur at the base course at -20 cm row by 0.855 MPa and 0.00282 MPa. Addition of layers of asphalt concrete in rigid pavement using asbuton has increased power by 9.5%.
Development of a laser-based sensor to measure true road surface deflection.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-04-01
The high-speed measurement of accurate pavement surface deflections under a moving wheel at a networklevel : still remains a challenge in pavement engineering. This goal cannot be accomplished with stationary deflectionmeasuring : devices. Engineers ...
Effectiveness of asphalt penetrating sealers in extending new asphalt pavement life.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-01-01
Numerous methods are being employed for asphalt pavement preservation, including rejuvenator emulsions, asphalt emulsion fog seals, and a variety of non-structural surface treatments (including slurry and micro surfacing technologies). To make the mo...
Vehicle tire-pavement interfacial surface pressure measurements and assessments.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-05-01
This report examines a method of using Piezoelectric Pressure-Sensitive Ink (Tekscan) Pressure Measurement System to evaluate vehicle tire pressures that are exerted on the surface of pavements. Upgrades to the Tekscan system facilitated refinements ...
Evaluation of Geosynthetic-Reinforced Flexible Pavements using Static Plate Load Tests
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-01-01
This study focuses on the response of full-scale geogrid-reinforced flexible pavements to static surface loading. Specifically, static plate load (SPL) tests were performed on a low-volume, asphalt pavement frontage road in Eastern Arkansas, USA (the...
Systematizing pavement surface information for the highways of Virginia.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1972-01-01
Pavement information consisting of type of pavement, date of construction, methods used in construction, and types and sources of materials have been recorded in Virginia since the 1930's. Because there has been no effective system for filing the inf...
Long-term Metal Performance of Three Permeable Pavements
EPA constructed a 4,000-m2 parking lot surfaced with three permeable pavements (permeable interlocking concrete pavers, pervious concrete, and porous asphalt) on the Edison Environmental Center in Edison, NJ in 2009. Samples from each permeable pavement infiltrate were collected...
Long term validation of an accelerated polishing test procedure for HMA pavements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-04-01
The Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) has set strategic goals to improve driving safety by maintaining : smooth pavement surfaces with high skid resistance. ODOT has taken the initiative to monitor pavement : friction on Ohio roadways and reme...
Nontraditional Fog Seal for Asphalt Pavement : Performance on Shoulder Sections in Minnesota
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2018-05-01
The pavement engineering community has recently been introduced to a number of nontraditional products intended for uses as surface sealers for bituminous pavements. Many new products use agricultural-based components and little is known regarding th...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-10-16
In recent years the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) has reconstructed a number of roadways where asphalt pavements were replaced with concrete pavements which were finished with a random transverse grooved surface texture (ODOT specification...
The impact of rainfall on total gaseous mercury (TGM) flux from pavement and street dirt surfaces was investigated in an effort to determine the influence of wet weather events on mercury transport in urban watersheds. Street dirt and pavement are common urban ground surfaces tha...
Microtexture diagnostics of asphalt pavement surfaces
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Florková, Zuzana; Pepucha, L.'ubomír
2017-09-01
The microtexture of asphalt pavement surface is an essential parameter from the traffic safety point of view and it closely relates to a geometrical, petrological and physical properties of aggregate particle used in asphalt pavement. Microtexture has a significant influence for assurance basic friction values between tire and pavement in relation to a skid resistance properties. Therefore, the microtexture detecting methods are necessary. The British pendulum tester measurements have been carried out on selected sections of roads with different asphalt surfaces. Individual grains of aggregates were taken from the surface of each section from the sliding path and also from the core sample after the extraction. The laboratory profilometry measurements have been practiced on these aggregate samples and subsequently the surface microtexture was investigated based on commonly used texture characteristics and the filtration approach was applied in calculation process. The results have shown the degradation of microtexture values occurs due to polishing of aggregate under loading from traffic in relation to the type of used aggregate. Some correlation between BPN values and texture characteristics was found.
Performance evaluation of thin wearing courses through scaled accelerated trafficking.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-01-01
The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the permanent deformation (rutting) and fatigue performance of : several thin asphalt concrete wearing courses using a scaled-down accelerated pavement testing device. The accelerated testing : was ...
Performance Evaluation of Thin Wearing Courses Through Scaled Accelerated Trafficking.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-01-01
"The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the permanent deformation (rutting) and fatigue performance of : several thin asphalt concrete wearing courses using a scaled-down accelerated pavement testing device. The accelerated testing : was...
Pervious pavements - installation, operations and strength part 3 : permeable paver systems.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-08-01
Pervious pavement systems are now being recognized as a best management practice by the Environmental Protection Agency and the state of Florida. The pervious pavement systems are designed to have enhanced pore sizes in the surface layer compared to ...
Pervious pavements - installation, operations and strength part 2 : porous asphalt systems.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-08-01
Pervious pavement systems are now being recognized as a best management practice by the Environmental Protection Agency and the state of Florida. The pervious pavement systems are designed to have enhanced pore sizes in the surface layer compared to ...
Effect of asphalt rejuvenating agent on aged reclaimed asphalt pavement and binder properties.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-11-01
Hot in-place recycling (HIR) preserves distressed asphalt pavements while minimizing use of virgin binder : and aggregates. The final quality of an HIR mixture depends on the characteristics of the original binder, aging of the : pavement surface dur...
Effectiveness of crack sealing on pavement serviceability and life : executive summary report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-06-01
Sealing of cracks in asphalt surfaced pavements has long been one of the widely practiced pavement maintenance strategies by the highway agencies in including Ohio Department of Transportation. Crack sealing is performed with intent to reduce water i...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2000-01-01
Three nondestructive evaluation (NDE) methods for concrete pavements - surface ultrasonic pulse velocity measurements (UPV), the impact-echo (IE) method, and the use of a seismic pavement analyzer (SPA) - were tested on six sections of two continuous...
Hot in-Place Recycling of Asphalt Pavements.
1987-08-04
WEARING SPECIFIED THICKNESS SURFACE • b. With ’Tew Aggregate, Modifier, And Asphalt ," ..’ . ,,, /f",’"" 4.. Figure 8. Typical Cold In-Place...34. .. .; ’-. , .?-. . ; ,....",.’.". ’. .- +-;-?,..- . .-’. , .. ’.,,..-, . ..- ?.,,,..-N ....-, ..,-. -".,,’." - HOT IN-PLACE RECYCLING OF ASPHALT PAVEMENTS An Engineering Report by0 Michael Lawrence Dowdy Submitted...for asphalt pavements. This type of asphalt pavement recycling process is becoming
2009 NJDOT FWD procedures manual.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-01-01
A falling weight deflectometer (FWD) is a device designed to simulate deflection of a pavement surface caused by a fast-moving truck. The FWD generates a load pulse by dropping a weight onto the pavement surface. This load pulse is transmitted to the...
Extending the life of asphalt pavements (OR09-086A) : part I final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-01-01
The goal of this project was to identify common features of good and poorly performing asphalt pavements. The types of asphalt pavements included in the study were grouped into four categories: new construction, crush & shape with HMA surface, mill &...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-11-01
Hot in-place recycling (HIR) preserves distressed asphalt pavements while minimizing use of virgin binder and aggregates. The final quality of an HIR mixture depends on the characteristics of the original binder, aging of the pavement surface during ...
Karim, Mohamed Rehan; Mahmud, Hilmi; Mashaan, Nuha S.; Katman, Herdayati; Husain, Nadiah Md
2014-01-01
Semi-flexible pavement surfacing is a composite pavement that utilizes the porous pavement structure of the flexible bituminous pavement, which is subsequently grouted with appropriate cementitious materials. This study aims to investigate the compressive strength, flexural strength, and workability performance of cementitious grout. The grout mixtures are designed to achieve high strength and maintain flow properties in order to allow the cement slurries to infiltrate easily through unfilled compacted skeletons. A paired-sample t-test was carried out to find out whether water/cement ratio, SP percentages, and use of silica fume influence the cementitious grout performance. The findings showed that the replacement of 5% silica fume with an adequate amount of superplasticizer and water/cement ratio was beneficial in improving the properties of the cementitious grout. PMID:24526911
Koting, Suhana; Karim, Mohamed Rehan; Mahmud, Hilmi; Mashaan, Nuha S; Ibrahim, Mohd Rasdan; Katman, Herdayati; Husain, Nadiah Md
2014-01-01
Semi-flexible pavement surfacing is a composite pavement that utilizes the porous pavement structure of the flexible bituminous pavement, which is subsequently grouted with appropriate cementitious materials. This study aims to investigate the compressive strength, flexural strength, and workability performance of cementitious grout. The grout mixtures are designed to achieve high strength and maintain flow properties in order to allow the cement slurries to infiltrate easily through unfilled compacted skeletons. A paired-sample t-test was carried out to find out whether water/cement ratio, SP percentages, and use of silica fume influence the cementitious grout performance. The findings showed that the replacement of 5% silica fume with an adequate amount of superplasticizer and water/cement ratio was beneficial in improving the properties of the cementitious grout.
Development of a specification for flexible base construction.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-01-01
The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) currently uses Item 247 Flexible Base to specify a : pavement foundation course. The goal of this project was to evaluate the current method of base course : acceptance and investigate methods to r...
Performance evaluation of JRCP with stabilized open-graded drainage course.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-08-01
From 1990 to 1995 the department used recycled concrete pavement as open-graded drainage course (OGDC) base : aggregate for thirteen concrete reconstruction projects. Overall, the JRCP projects with coated/stabilized OGDC have : performed very well i...
Use of the Digital Surface Roughness Meter in Virginia.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2006-01-01
Pavement surface texture is measured in a variety of ways in Virginia. Two methods commonly used are ASTM E 965, Standard Test Method for Measuring Pavement Macrotexture Depth Using a Volumetric Technique, known as the "sand patch" test, and ASTM E 2...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1999-12-01
The Strategic Highway Research Program (SHRP) H-106 maintenance experiment and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) Long-Term Monitoring (LTM) of Pavement Maintenance Materials Test Sites project studied the repair of potholes in asphalt-surface...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-12-01
The Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) uses a variety of different pavement marking : systems and has experienced a wide range of pavement marking performance. In an effort to : maximize marking performance and to optimize marking selection...
2016-02-01
color images. The Air Force Civil Engineering Center (AFCEC) has been measuring military runway pavement friction and texture conditions around the...world for many years. In recent years, the friction measurements have been collected using seven GripTester (GT) trailers, and pavement texture...with several conclusions and recommendations are given as well as a list of appropriate references. pavement friction, calibration, pavement surface U U
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Anthonissen, Joke, E-mail: joke.anthonissen@uantwerpen.be; Van den bergh, Wim, E-mail: wim.vandenbergh@uantwerpen.be; Braet, Johan, E-mail: johan.braet@uantwerpen.be
This paper provides a critical review of different approaches applied in the Belgian asphalt sector in order to reduce the environmental impact of bituminous road construction works. The focus is on (1) reusing reclaimed asphalt pavement, (2) reducing the asphalt production temperature, and (3) prolonging the service life of the pavement. Environmental impact assessment of these methods is necessary to be able to compare these approaches and understand better the ability to reduce the environmental impact during the life cycle of the road pavement. Attention should be drawn to the possible shift in environmental impact between various life cycle stages,more » e.g., raw material production, asphalt production, or waste treatment. Life cycle assessment is necessary to adequately assess the environmental impact of these approaches over the entire service life of the bituminous pavement. The three approaches and their implementation in the road sector in Flanders (region in Belgium) are described and the main findings from life cycle assessment studies on these subjects are discussed. It was found from the review that using reclaimed asphalt pavement in new bituminous mixtures might yield significant environmental gains. The environmental impact of the application of warm mix asphalt technologies, on the other hand, depends on the technique used. - Highlights: • Recycling, lower production temperature and durability of asphalt are investigated. • The use of RAP in new asphalt mixtures yields significant environmental advantages. • It would be beneficial to allow RAP in asphalt mixtures for wearing courses. • The use of particular additives might counteract the environmental gain from WMA. • The service life and the environmental data source influence the LCA results.« less
Mechanistic interpretation of nondestructive pavement testing deflections
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hoffman, M. S.; Thompson, M. R.
1981-06-01
A method for the back calculation of material properties in flexible pavements based on the interpretation of surface deflection measurements is proposed. The ILLI-PAVE, a stress-dependent finite element pavement model, was used to generate data for developing algorithms and nomographs for deflection basin interpretation. Twenty four different flexible pavement sections throughout the State of Illinois were studied. Deflections were measured and loading mode effects on pavement response were investigated. The factors controlling the pavement response to different loading modes are identified and explained. Correlations between different devices are developed. The back calculated parameters derived from the proposed evaluation procedure can be used as inputs for asphalt concrete overlay design.
Continuously reinforced concrete pavement inventory
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Halverson, A. D.; Hagen, M. G.
1982-09-01
A typical concrete pavement has expansion and contraction joints across and along the pavement surface. The joints allow the pavement to change in dimension with changes in temperature. A continuously reinforced concrete pavement (CRCP) does not have expansion or contraction joints. Random, closely spaced cracks are expected to develop naturally and allow for expansion and contraction due to temperature changes. The many random cracks eliminate expensive joint maintenance. This maintenance-free service life feature has not occurred in Minnesota. This CRCP inventory is a physical evaluation of the extent of corrosion on random sections of pavement. It is related to concurrent efforts which will evaluate CRCP rehabilitation techniques.
Evaluation of porous pavements used in Oregon : volume II : appendices.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1994-12-01
Porous pavements or open graded asphalt mixtures have been in use in Oregon since the late 1960s. The use of this pavement type has increased over the years because the pores in the mat provide a better way for water to drain from the surface. This g...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-06-01
Base aggregate is one of the intermediate layers in a pavement system for both flexible and rigid surfaces. Characterization : of base aggregate is necessary for pavement thickness design. Many transportation agencies, including the Virginia Departme...
Evaluation of porous pavements used in Oregon : volume I.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1994-12-01
Porous pavements or open graded asphalt mixtures have been in use in Oregon since the late 1960s. The use of this pavement type has increased over the years because the pores in the mat provide a better way for water to drain from the surface. This g...
Open Graded Asphalt Friction Course: State of the Practice
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1988-05-01
Open Graded Friction Course (OGFC) has been used since 1950 in the United States to improve the frictional resistance of asphalt pavements. However, experience of states with this kind of mix has been widely varied. While many transportation agencies...
Measuring Clogging with Pressure Transducers in Permeable Pavement Strips
Two issues that have a negative affect on the long term hydrologic performance of permeable pavement systems are surface clogging and clogging at the interface with the underlying soil. Surface clogging limits infiltration capacity and results in bypass if runoff rate exceeds in...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-05-01
Chip Seal and Micro Surfacing are important components of ODOTs pavement preventive maintenance program. Thorough understanding of how well these treatments are performing is critical to the nature and extent of their continued use in the future. ...
Monitoring Strategies in Permeable Pavement Systems to Optimize Maintenance Scheduling
As the surface in a permeable pavement system clogs and performance decreases, maintenance is required to preserve the design function. Currently, guidance is limited for scheduling maintenance on an as needed basis. Previous research has shown that surface clogging in a permea...
Monitoring Strategies in Permeable Pavement Systems to Optimize Maintenance Scheduling - abstract
As the surface in a permeable pavement system clogs and performance decreases, maintenance is required to preserve the design function. Currently, guidance is limited for scheduling maintenance on an as needed basis. Previous research has shown that surface clogging in a permea...
As the surface clogs in permeable pavement systems, they lose effectiveness and require maintenance. There is limited direct guidance for determining when maintenance is needed to prevent surface runoff bypass. Research is being conducted using multiple time domain reflectomete...
78 FR 3311 - Safety Enhancements, Certification of Airports
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-01-16
... the airport non-movement area, and (5) Requiring certificate holders to conduct pavement surface... (SMGCS). Non-Movement Area Safety Training... YES NO. Runway Pavement Surface Evaluation.. YES NO. In... 139 to host scheduled passenger carrying operations of an air carrier operating aircraft designed for...
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-08-09
... activities). Environment/fuel use. Pavement conditions (e.g., snow or ice cover, surface roughness, pothole.../destination pair, by time period, weighted by trip volume. System Throughput is intended to quantify the total.... Pavement conditions such as snow or ice cover, slippery conditions, surface roughness, or pothole detection...
Long-term Metal Performance of Three Permeable Pavements ...
EPA constructed a 4,000-m2 parking lot surfaced with three permeable pavements (permeable interlocking concrete pavers, pervious concrete, and porous asphalt) on the Edison Environmental Center in Edison, NJ in 2009. Samples from each permeable pavement infiltrate were collected for six years beginning in January 2010 and analyzed for twenty-two metals. Although the infiltrate metals concentrations varied by surface, metal concentrations in more than 99% of the permeable pavement infiltrate samples met both the groundwater effluent limitations and maximum contaminant levels in national primary drinking water regulations for barium, chromium, copper, manganese, nickel and zinc. Arsenic, cadmium, lead and antimony met those standards in 60% to 98% of the samples with no measurable difference found among pavements. Aluminum and iron in pervious concrete and porous asphalt infiltrates met standards at more than 90%, however permeable interlocking concrete paver infiltrates have 50% and 93% samples exceeds standards, respectively. Concentrations of arsenic, iron, potassium, lithium, magnesium, antimony, tin, manganese, and zinc in all permeable pavement infiltrates decreased with time, whereas, aluminum, barium, calcium, chromium and strontium in porous asphalt infiltrates increased. Most metal concentrations in permeable pavement infiltrates either exhibited no significant difference between snow/no-snow seasons or showed statistically larger concentrations
Asphalt pavement surfaces and asphalt mixtures. Transportation research record
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
NONE
1996-12-31
The papers in this volume, which deal with asphalt pavement surfaces and asphalt mixtures, should be of interest to state and local construction, design, materials, and research engineers as well as contractors and material producers. The papers in Part 1 include discussions of pavement smoothness specifications and skidding characteristics. The first four papers in Part 2 were submitted in response to a call for papers for a session at the 75th Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board on low-temperature properties of hot-mix asphalt. The next eight are on the influence of volumetric and strength properties on the performance ofmore » hot-mix asphalt. In the following three papers, the topics covered are the complex modulus of asphalt concrete, cold in-place asphalt recycling, and polymer modification of asphalt pavements in Ontario. The last two papers were presented in a session on relationship of materials characterization to accelerated pavement performance testing.« less
Review of modern methods for continuous friction measurement on airfield pavements
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Iwanowski, Paweł; Blacha, Krzysztof; Wesołowski, Mariusz
2018-05-01
The safety of traffic, including both road and air traffic on a ground manoeuvre area, depends on many factors. These mainly include the anti-slip properties of a road or airfield pavement on which the traffic takes place. The basic pavement parameter that determines its characteristics in terms of anti-slip properties is the skid resistance, which constitutes the ratio of the wheel downforce and the friction on the contact surface. There are currently many devices for continuous measurement of the skid resistance (Continuous Friction-Measuring Equipment - CFME) around the world. Most of them, in principle, do not vary much from one another. Most of the devices measure the measuring wheel’s downforce on the pavement and the friction on the wheel-pavement contact surface. The skid resistance is the result of this measurement. The devices vary in many aspects, such as the type and size of the used measuring tyre, pavement-wheel slip or tyre pressure. This does not mean that the results obtained from various devices mbe directly compared. On the other hand, each device allows determining the pavement’s anti-slip conditions in terms of the requirements specified for the given type of devices, thereby enabling pavement classification in these terms. The classification allows for comparing the results obtained from various measuring devices. The paper presents an overview of equipment used in Poland and around the world to measure the skid resistance on airfield pavements. The authors draw attention to the requirements for pavements in terms of their roughness, with division into road and airfield pavements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-04-01
Pavement skid resistance is primarily a function of the surface texture, which includes both microtexture and macrotexture. Earlier, under the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) Research Project 0-5627, the researchers developed a method to p...
As the surface in permeable pavement systems clogs, infiltration capacity decreases, so maintenance is required to maintain hydrologic performance. There is limited direct guidance for determining when maintenance is needed to prevent surface runoff bypass. Research is being co...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1990-01-01
This is the second report to result from the subject study. It represents the first major effort to evaluate the available data on "thin pavement surface treatments" in Oregon and to define "cost effectiveness" for this purpose. The 87 projects studi...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1978-01-01
Accumulating evidence that inadequate subsurface drainage of some pavements was related to impervious base courses led to an investigation of the influence of low permeability fine materials on the physical characteristics of typical base courses. It...
Molecular mechanisms controlling pavement cell shape in Arabidopsis leaves.
Qian, Pingping; Hou, Suiwen; Guo, Guangqin
2009-08-01
Pavement cells have an interlocking jigsaw puzzle-shaped leaf surface pattern. Twenty-three genes involved in the pavement cell morphogenesis were discovered until now. The mutations of these genes through various means lead to pavement cell shape defects, such as loss or lack of interdigitation, the reduction of lobing, gaps between lobe and neck regions in pavement cells, and distorted trichomes. These phenotypes are affected by the organization of microtubules and microfilaments. Microtubule bands are considered corresponding with the neck regions of the cell, while lobe formation depends on patches of microfilaments. The pathway of Rho of plant (ROP) GTPase signaling cascades regulates overall activity of the cytoskeleton in pavement cells. Some other proteins, in addition to the ROPs, SCAR/WAVE, and ARP2/3 complexes, are also involved in the pavement cell morphogenesis.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1975-01-01
The determination of the elastic, or Young's, modulus, E, of the materials in each layer in an n-layered pavement system given the number, order, thicknesses, and Poisson's ratios of the layers, and the surface load and deflection data, is not possib...
Currently, there is limited guidance on selecting test sites to measure surface infiltration rates in permeable pavement systems to determine maintenance frequency. The ASTM method (ASTM C1701) for measuring infiltration rate of in-place pervious concrete suggest to either (1) p...
40 CFR 268.45 - Treatment standards for hazardous debris.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... Hazardous Debris 1 Technology description Performance and/or design and operating standard Contaminant..., Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Removal of at least 0.6 cm of the surface layer; treatment...: Treatment to a clean debris surface 3; Brick, Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Debris must be...
40 CFR 268.45 - Treatment standards for hazardous debris.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... Hazardous Debris 1 Technology description Performance and/or design and operating standard Contaminant..., Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Removal of at least 0.6 cm of the surface layer; treatment...: Treatment to a clean debris surface 3; Brick, Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Debris must be...
40 CFR 268.45 - Treatment standards for hazardous debris.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... Hazardous Debris 1 Technology description Performance and/or design and operating standard Contaminant..., Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Removal of at least 0.6 cm of the surface layer; treatment...: Treatment to a clean debris surface 3; Brick, Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Debris must be...
40 CFR 268.45 - Treatment standards for hazardous debris.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... Hazardous Debris 1 Technology description Performance and/or design and operating standard Contaminant..., Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Removal of at least 0.6 cm of the surface layer; treatment...: Treatment to a clean debris surface 3; Brick, Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Debris must be...
40 CFR 268.45 - Treatment standards for hazardous debris.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... Hazardous Debris 1 Technology description Performance and/or design and operating standard Contaminant..., Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Removal of at least 0.6 cm of the surface layer; treatment...: Treatment to a clean debris surface 3; Brick, Cloth, Concrete, Paper, Pavement, Rock, Wood: Debris must be...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-06-01
Asphalt and concrete pavement surface temperatures were compared at a location on U.S. Route 40 in : northern Utah where asphalt and concrete meet end to end at the base of the mountain pass. An environmental : sensor station was installed to facilit...
Structural analyses of a rigid pavement overlaying a sub-surface void
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Adam, Fatih Alperen
Pavement failures are very hazardous for public safety and serviceability. These failures in pavements are mainly caused by subsurface voids, cracks, and undulation at the slab-base interface. On the other hand, current structural analysis procedures for rigid pavement assume that the slab-base interface is perfectly planar and no imperfections exist in the sub-surface soil. This assumption would be violated if severe erosion were to occur due to inadequate drainage, thermal movements, and/or mechanical loading. Until now, the effect of erosion was only considered in the faulting performance model, but not with regards to transverse cracking at the mid-slab edge. In this research, the bottom up fatigue cracking potential, caused by the combined effects of wheel loading and a localized imperfection in the form of a void below the mid-slab edge, is studied. A robust stress and surface deflection analysis was also conducted to evaluate the influence of a sub-surface void on layer moduli back-calculation. Rehabilitative measures were considered, which included a study on overlay and fill remediation. A series regression of equations was proposed that provides a relationship between void size, layer moduli stiffness, and the overlay thickness required to reduce the stress to its original pre-void level. The effect of the void on 3D pavement crack propagation was also studied under a single axle load. The amplifications to the stress intensity was shown to be high but could be mitigated substantially if stiff material is used to fill the void and impede crack growth. The pavement system was modeled using the commercial finite element modeling program Abaqus RTM. More than 10,000 runs were executed to do the following analysis: stress analysis of subsurface voids, E-moduli back-calculation of base layer, pavement damage calculations of Beaumont, TX, overlay thickness estimations, and mode I crack analysis. The results indicate that the stress and stress intensity are, on average, amplified considerably: 80% and 150%, respectively, by the presence of the void and more severe in a bonded pavement system compared to an un-bonded system. The sub-surface void also significantly affects the layer moduli back-calculation. The equivalent moduli of the layers are reduced considerably when a sub-surface void is present. However, the results indicate the back-calculated moduli derived using surface deflection, and longitudinal stress basins did not yield equivalent layer moduli under mechanical loading; the back-calculated deflection-based moduli were larger than the stress-based moduli, leading to stress calculations that were lower than those found in the real system.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Horne, W. B.
1977-01-01
Two runways were evaluated under artificially wetted conditions with the NASA diagonal-braked vehicle (DBV). Results of the evaluation which included a pavement drainage analysis, a pavement skid resistance analysis, and a DBV wet/dry stopping distance ratio analysis indicated that the ungrooved runway surfaces had poor water drainage characteristics and poor skid resistance under wet conditions at high speeds especially in rubbercoated areas of the runways. Grooving runways to a transverse 1-1/4 x 1/4 x 1/4 inch pattern greatly improved both the water drainage and pavement skid resistance capability of these asphaltic concrete surfaces.
Influence of pavement condition on horizontal curve safety.
Buddhavarapu, Prasad; Banerjee, Ambarish; Prozzi, Jorge A
2013-03-01
Crash statistics suggest that horizontal curves are the most vulnerable sites for crash occurrence. These crashes are often severe and many involve at least some level of injury due to the nature of the collisions. Ensuring the desired pavement surface condition is one potentially effective strategy to reduce the occurrence of severe accidents on horizontal curves. This study sought to develop crash injury severity models by integrating crash and pavement surface condition databases. It focuses on developing a causal relationship between pavement condition indices and severity level of crashes occurring on two-lane horizontal curves in Texas. In addition, it examines the suitability of the existing Skid Index for safety maintenance of two-lane curves. Significant correlation is evident between pavement condition and crash injury severity on two-lane undivided horizontal curves in Texas. Probability of a crash becoming fatal is appreciably sensitive to certain pavement indices. Data suggested that road facilities providing a smoother and more comfortable ride are vulnerable to severe crashes on horizontal curves. In addition, the study found that longitudinal skid measurement barely correlates with injury severity of crashes occurring on curved portions. The study recommends exploring the option of incorporating lateral friction measurement into Pavement Management System (PMS) databases specifically at curved road segments. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Indirect diagnosis of pavement structural damages using surface GPR reflection techniques
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Benedetto, A.; Pensa, S.
2007-06-01
The safety and operability of road networks is, in part, dependent on the quality of the pavement. It is known that pavements suffer from many different structural problems which can lead to damage to the pavement surface. To minimize the effect of these problems programmed policies for pavement management are required. Additionally a given local anomaly on the road surface can affect the safety of the road to various degrees according to the category of the road, so it is possible to set up different programmes of repair according to the different standards of road. Programmed policies for pavement management are required because of the wide structural damage which occurs to pavements during their normal operating life. This has consequences for the safety and operability of road networks. During the last decade, road networks suffered from great structural damage. The damage occurs for different reasons, such as the increasing traffic or the lack of means for routine maintenance. Many forms of damage, originating in the bottom layers are invisible until the pavement cracks. They depend on the infiltration of water and the presence of cohesive soil greatly reduces the bearing capacity of the sub-asphalt layers and underlying soils. On the basis of an in-depth literature review, an experimental survey with Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) was carried out to calibrate the geophysical parameters and to validate the reliability of an indirect diagnostic method of pavement damage. The experiments were set on a pavement under which water was injected over a period of several hours. GPR travel time data were used to estimate the dielectric constant and the water content in the unbound aggregate layer, the variations in water content with time and particular areas where rate of infiltration decreases. A new methodology has been proposed to extract the hydraulic permittivity fields in sub-asphalt structural layers and soils from the moisture maps observed with GPR. It is effective at diagnosing the presence of clay or cohesive soil that compromises the bearing capacity of sub-base and induces damage.
1991-05-01
GeoarId Reinforced Agregate Layers over Weak Clay Subgrades. Milligan and Love(Z3) conducted small-scale laboratory model tests under plane strain...34. Based on the very limited literature available on geogrid applications in airfield pavements, the literature review was expanded to cover railroad...thicknesses and clay subgrade strengths. Performance of the reinforced systems was significantly better. The increased performance resulted from the
Flexible pavement overlay design procedures. Volume 2: User manual
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Majidzadeh, K.; Ilves, G. J.
1981-08-01
This user manual outlines a procedure for the design of asphaltic concrete overlays on existing asphaltic concrete pavement surfaces. It is intended as a guide to the user on the type and form of information required as input to the procedure and contains all elements necessary for the user to prepare designs for flexible pavement overlays.
23 CFR 970.208 - Federal lands pavement management system (PMS).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... 23 Highways 1 2011-04-01 2011-04-01 false Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). 970.208... Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). In addition to the requirements provided in § 970.204, the..., surface type, or other criteria the NPS deems appropriate. (c) The PMS shall be designed to fit the NPS...
23 CFR 970.208 - Federal lands pavement management system (PMS).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... 23 Highways 1 2012-04-01 2012-04-01 false Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). 970.208... Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). In addition to the requirements provided in § 970.204, the..., surface type, or other criteria the NPS deems appropriate. (c) The PMS shall be designed to fit the NPS...
23 CFR 970.208 - Federal lands pavement management system (PMS).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... 23 Highways 1 2014-04-01 2014-04-01 false Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). 970.208... Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). In addition to the requirements provided in § 970.204, the..., surface type, or other criteria the NPS deems appropriate. (c) The PMS shall be designed to fit the NPS...
23 CFR 970.208 - Federal lands pavement management system (PMS).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... 23 Highways 1 2013-04-01 2013-04-01 false Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). 970.208... Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). In addition to the requirements provided in § 970.204, the..., surface type, or other criteria the NPS deems appropriate. (c) The PMS shall be designed to fit the NPS...
23 CFR 970.208 - Federal lands pavement management system (PMS).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 23 Highways 1 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). 970.208... Federal lands pavement management system (PMS). In addition to the requirements provided in § 970.204, the..., surface type, or other criteria the NPS deems appropriate. (c) The PMS shall be designed to fit the NPS...
Detection of pavement cracks using tiled fuzzy Hough transform
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mathavan, Senthan; Vaheesan, Kanapathippillai; Kumar, Akash; Chandrakumar, Chanjief; Kamal, Khurram; Rahman, Mujib; Stonecliffe-Jones, Martyn
2017-09-01
Surface cracks can be the bellwether of the failure of a road. Hence, crack detection is indispensable for the condition monitoring and quality control of road surfaces. Pavement images have high levels of intensity variation and texture content; hence, the crack detection is generally difficult. Moreover, shallow cracks are very low contrast, making their detection difficult. Therefore, studies on pavement crack detection are active even after years of research. The fuzzy Hough transform is employed, for the first time, to detect cracks from pavement images. A careful consideration is given to the fact that cracks consist of near straight segments embedded in a surface of considerable texture. In this regard, the fuzzy part of the algorithm tackles the segments that are not perfectly straight. Moreover, tiled detection helps reduce the contribution of texture and noise pixels to the accumulator array. The proposed algorithm is compared against a state-of-the-art algorithm for a number of crack datasets, demonstrating its strengths. Precision and recall values of more than 75% are obtained, on different image sets of varying textures and other effects, captured by industrial pavement imagers. The paper also recommends numerical values for parameters used in the proposed method.
Zakaria, Nur Mustakiza; Yusoff, Nur Izzi Md.; Hardwiyono, Sentot; Mohd Nayan, Khairul Anuar
2014-01-01
Enhanced resonance search (ERS) is a nondestructive testing method that has been created to evaluate the quality of a pavement by means of a special instrument called the pavement integrity scanner (PiScanner). This technique can be used to assess the thickness of the road pavement structure and the profile of shear wave velocity by using the principle of surface wave and body wave propagation. In this study, the ERS technique was used to determine the actual thickness of the asphaltic pavement surface layer, while the shear wave velocities obtained were used to determine its dynamic elastic modulus. A total of fifteen locations were identified and the results were then compared with the specifications of the Malaysian PWD, MDD UKM, and IKRAM. It was found that the value of the elastic modulus of materials is between 3929 MPa and 17726 MPa. A comparison of the average thickness of the samples with the design thickness of MDD UKM showed a difference of 20 to 60%. Thickness of the asphalt surface layer followed the specifications of Malaysian PWD and MDD UKM, while some of the values of stiffness obtained are higher than the standard. PMID:25276854
Zakaria, Nur Mustakiza; Yusoff, Nur Izzi Md; Hardwiyono, Sentot; Nayan, Khairul Anuar Mohd; El-Shafie, Ahmed
2014-01-01
Enhanced resonance search (ERS) is a nondestructive testing method that has been created to evaluate the quality of a pavement by means of a special instrument called the pavement integrity scanner (PiScanner). This technique can be used to assess the thickness of the road pavement structure and the profile of shear wave velocity by using the principle of surface wave and body wave propagation. In this study, the ERS technique was used to determine the actual thickness of the asphaltic pavement surface layer, while the shear wave velocities obtained were used to determine its dynamic elastic modulus. A total of fifteen locations were identified and the results were then compared with the specifications of the Malaysian PWD, MDD UKM, and IKRAM. It was found that the value of the elastic modulus of materials is between 3929 MPa and 17726 MPa. A comparison of the average thickness of the samples with the design thickness of MDD UKM showed a difference of 20 to 60%. Thickness of the asphalt surface layer followed the specifications of Malaysian PWD and MDD UKM, while some of the values of stiffness obtained are higher than the standard.
Evaluation of multilayered pavement structures from measurements of surface waves
Ryden, N.; Lowe, M.J.S.; Cawley, P.; Park, C.B.
2006-01-01
A method is presented for evaluating the thickness and stiffness of multilayered pavement structures from guided waves measured at the surface. Data is collected with a light hammer as the source and an accelerometer as receiver, generating a synthetic receiver array. The top layer properties are evaluated with a Lamb wave analysis. Multiple layers are evaluated by matching a theoretical phase velocity spectrum to the measured spectrum. So far the method has been applied to the testing of pavements, but it may also be applicable in other fields such as ultrasonic testing of coated materials. ?? 2006 American Institute of Physics.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ceylan, Halil; Gopalakrishnan, Kasthurirangan; Birkan Bayrak, Mustafa; Guclu, Alper
2013-09-01
The need to rapidly and cost-effectively evaluate the present condition of pavement infrastructure is a critical issue concerning the deterioration of ageing transportation infrastructure all around the world. Nondestructive testing (NDT) and evaluation methods are well-suited for characterising materials and determining structural integrity of pavement systems. The falling weight deflectometer (FWD) is a NDT equipment used to assess the structural condition of highway and airfield pavement systems and to determine the moduli of pavement layers. This involves static or dynamic inverse analysis (referred to as backcalculation) of FWD deflection profiles in the pavement surface under a simulated truck load. The main objective of this study was to employ biologically inspired computational systems to develop robust pavement layer moduli backcalculation algorithms that can tolerate noise or inaccuracies in the FWD deflection data collected in the field. Artificial neural systems, also known as artificial neural networks (ANNs), are valuable computational intelligence tools that are increasingly being used to solve resource-intensive complex engineering problems. Unlike the linear elastic layered theory commonly used in pavement layer backcalculation, non-linear unbound aggregate base and subgrade soil response models were used in an axisymmetric finite element structural analysis programme to generate synthetic database for training and testing the ANN models. In order to develop more robust networks that can tolerate the noisy or inaccurate pavement deflection patterns in the NDT data, several network architectures were trained with varying levels of noise in them. The trained ANN models were capable of rapidly predicting the pavement layer moduli and critical pavement responses (tensile strains at the bottom of the asphalt concrete layer, compressive strains on top of the subgrade layer and the deviator stresses on top of the subgrade layer), and also pavement surface deflections with very low average errors comparable with those obtained directly from the finite element analyses.
Overview of the Arizona Quiet Pavement Program
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Donavan, Paul; Scofield, Larry
2005-09-01
The Arizona Quiet Pavement Pilot Program (QP3) was initially implemented to reduce highway related traffic noise by overlaying most of the Phoenix metropolitan area Portland cement concrete pavement with a one inch thick asphalt rubber friction coarse. With FHWA support, this program represents the first time that pavement surface type has been allowed as a noise mitigation strategy on federally funded projects. As a condition of using pavement type as a noise mitigation strategy, ADOT developed a ten-year, $3.8 million research program to evaluate the noise reduction performance over time. Historically, pavement surface type was not considered a permanent solution. As a result, the research program was designed to specifically address this issue. Noise performance is being evaluated through three means: (1) conventional roadside testing within the roadway corridor (e.g., far field measurements within the right-of-way) (2) the use of near field measurements, both close proximity (CPX) and sound intensity (SI); and (3) far field measurements obtained beyond the noise barriers within the surrounding neighborhoods. This paper provides an overview of the program development, presents the research conducted to support the decision to overlay the urban freeway, and the status of current research.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-07-01
Pervious Concrete Pavement (PCP), as one of open graded friction courses (OGFCs), has become attractive in roadway and parking lot constructions because of its economic, structural, and environmental advantages. It can facilitate the recharge of grou...
Durable high strength cement concrete topping for asphalt roads
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vyrozhemskyi, Valerii; Krayushkina, Kateryna; Bidnenko, Nataliia
2017-09-01
Work on improving riding qualities of pavements by means of placing a thin cement layer with high roughness and strength properties on the existing asphalt pavement were conducted in Ukraine for the first time. Such pavement is called HPCM (High Performance Cementitious Material). This is a high-strength thin cement-layer pavement of 8-9 mm thickness reinforced with metal or polymer fiber of less than 5 mm length. Increased grip properties are caused by placement of stone material of 3-5 mm fraction on the concrete surface. As a result of the research, the preparation and placement technology of high-strength cement thin-layer pavement reinforced with fiber was developed to improve friction properties of existing asphalt pavements which ensures their roughness and durability. It must be emphasized that HPCM is a fundamentally new type of thin-layer pavement in which a rigid layer of 10 mm thickness is placed on a non-rigid base thereby improving riding qualities of asphalt pavement at any season of a year.
Investigation on dynamical interaction between a heavy vehicle and road pavement
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yang, Shaopu; Li, Shaohua; Lu, Yongjie
2010-08-01
This paper presents a model for three-dimensional, heavy vehicle-pavement-foundation coupled system, which is modelled as a seven-DOF vehicle moving along a simply supported double-layer rectangular thin plate on a linear viscoelastic foundation. The vertical tyre force is described by a single point-contact model, while the pavement-foundation is modelled as a double-layer plate on a linear viscoelastic foundation. Using the Galerkin method and quick direct integral method, the dynamical behaviour of the vehicle-pavement-foundation coupled system is investigated numerically and compared with that of traditional vehicle system and pavement system. The effects of coupling action on vehicle body vertical acceleration, suspension deformations, tyre forces and pavement displacements are also obtained. The investigation shows that the coupling action could not be neglected even on a smooth road surface, such as highway. Thus, it is necessary to investigate the dynamics of vehicle and pavement simultaneously based on the vehicle-pavement-foundation coupled system.
Chip seal performance measures : best practices.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-03-01
The Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) has a long history of designing, constructing, : and maintaining chip seal or bituminous surface treatment pavements. However, to date WSDOT has not : developed pavement performance indicators...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Xuntao; Feng, Jianhu; Wang, Hu; Hong, Shidi; Zheng, Supei
2018-03-01
A three-dimensional finite element box girder bridge and its asphalt concrete deck pavement were established by ANSYS software, and the interlayer bonding condition of asphalt concrete deck pavement was assumed to be contact bonding condition. Orthogonal experimental design is used to arrange the testing plans of material parameters, and an evaluation of the effect of different material parameters in the mechanical response of asphalt concrete surface layer was conducted by multiple linear regression model and using the results from the finite element analysis. Results indicated that stress regression equations can well predict the stress of the asphalt concrete surface layer, and elastic modulus of waterproof layer has a significant influence on stress values of asphalt concrete surface layer.
Mechanistic design concepts for conventional flexible pavements
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Elliott, R. P.; Thompson, M. R.
1985-02-01
Mechanical design concepts for convetional flexible pavement (asphalt concrete (AC) surface plus granular base/subbase) for highways are proposed and validated. The procedure is based on ILLI-PAVE, a stress dependent finite element computer program, coupled with appropriate transfer functions. Two design criteria are considered: AC flexural fatigue cracking and subgrade rutting. Algorithms were developed relating pavement response parameters (stresses, strains, deflections) to AC thickness, AC moduli, granular layer thickness, and subgrade moduli. Extensive analyses of the AASHO Road Test flexible pavement data are presented supporting the validity of the proposed concepts.
Engineering properties of resin modified pavement (RMP) for mechanistic design
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Anderton, Gary Lee
1997-11-01
The research study described in this report focuses on determining the engineering properties of the resin modified pavement (RMP) material relating to pavement performance, and then developing a rational mechanistic design procedure to replace the current empirical design procedure. A detailed description of RMP is provided, including a review of the available literature on this relatively new pavement technology. Field evaluations of four existing and two new RMP project sites were made to assess critical failure modes and to obtain pavement samples for subsequent laboratory testing. Various engineering properties of laboratory-produced and field-recovered samples of RMP were measured and analyzed. The engineering properties evaluated included those relating to the material's stiffness, strength, thermal properties, and traffic-related properties. Comparisons of these data to typical values for asphalt concrete and portland cement concrete were made to relate the physical nature of RMP to more common pavement surfacing materials. A mechanistic design procedure was developed to determine appropriate thickness profiles of RMP, using stiffness and fatigue properties determined by this study. The design procedure is based on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers layered elastic method for airfield flexible pavements. The WESPAVE computer program was used to demonstrate the new design procedure for a hypothetical airfield apron design. The results of the study indicated that RMP is a relatively stiff, viscoelastic pavement surfacing material with many of its strength and stiffness properties falling between those of typical asphalt concrete and portland cement concrete. The RMP's thermal and traffic-related properties indicated favorable field performance. The layered elastic design approach appeared to be a reasonable and practical method for RMP mechanistic pavement design, and this design procedure was recommended for future use and development.
1986-02-27
pavement testing include the use of the falling weight deflectometer and layered -elastic analysis. The falling weight deflectometer has the advantages of...being more transportable, lighter weight, and requires fewer operational personnel. The layer -elastic analysis provides for calculation of the elastic...moduli for pavement layers and sub- grade based on deflection measurements at the pavement surface. This analysis is device independent and will
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Baltazart, Vincent; Moliard, Jean-Marc; Amhaz, Rabih; Wright, Dean; Jethwa, Manish
2015-04-01
Monitoring road surface conditions is an important issue in many countries. Several projects have looked into this issue in recent years, including TRIMM 2011-2014. The objective of such projects has been to detect surface distresses, like cracking, raveling and water ponding, in order to plan effective road maintenance and to afford a better sustainability of the pavement. The monitoring of cracking conventionally focuses on open cracks on the surface of the pavement, as opposed to reflexive cracks embedded in the pavement materials. For monitoring surface condition, in situ human visual inspection has been gradually replaced by automatic image data collection at traffic speed. Off-line image processing techniques have been developed for monitoring surface condition in support of human visual control. Full automation of crack monitoring has been approached with caution, and depends on a proper manual assessment of the performance. This work firstly presents some aspects of the current state of monitoring that have been reported so far in the literature and in previous projects: imaging technology and image processing techniques. Then, the work presents the two image processing techniques that have been developed within the scope of the TRIMM project to automatically detect pavement cracking from images. The first technique is a heuristic approach (HA) based on the search for gradient within the image. It was originally developed to process pavement images from the French imaging device, Aigle-RN. The second technique, the Minimal Path Selection (MPS) method, has been developed within an ongoing PhD work at IFSTTAR. The proposed new technique provides a fine and accurate segmentation of the crack pattern along with the estimation of the crack width. HA has been assessed against the field data collection provided by Yotta and TRL with the imaging device Tempest 2. The performance assessment has been threefold: first it was performed against the reference data set including 130 km of pavement images over UK roads, second over a few selected short sections of contiguous pavement images, and finally over a few sample images as a case study. The performance of MPS has been assessed against an older image data base. Pixel-based PGT was available to provide the most sensitive performance assessment. MPS has shown its ability to provide a very accurate cracking pattern without reducing the image resolution on the segmented images. Thus, it allows measurement of the crack width; it is found to behave more robustly against the image texture and better matched for dealing with low contrast pavement images. The benchmarking of seven automatic segmentation techniques has been provided at both the pixel and the grid levels. The performance assessment includes three minimal path selection algorithms, namely MPS, Free Form Anisotropy (FFA), one geodesic contour with automatic selection of points of interests (GC-POI), HA, and two Markov-based methods. Among others, MPS approach reached the best performance at the pixel level while it is matched to the FFA approach at the grid level. Finally, the project has emphasized the need for a reliable ground truth data collection. Owing to its accuracy, MPS may serve as a reference benchmark for other methods to provide the automatic segmentation of pavement images at the pixel level and beyond. As a counterpart, MPS requires a reduction in the computing time. Keywords: cracking, automatic segmentation, image processing, pavement, surface distress, monitoring, DICE, performance
Asphalt pavement maintenance field handbook
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2001-04-01
This field manual provides guidelines for preventive asphalt pavement maintenance techniques for a variety of distresses and conditions. It covers: 1. crack treatments (clean and seal, rout and seal, full-depth crack repair); 2. surface treatments (f...
Research notes : methods for traffic stripe removal.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2001-11-01
Pavement marking removal due to changed traffic configurations is a continual construction and maintenance problem. Often the removal alters the texture and/or color of the pavement surface. The removed markings become visible under different lightin...
Development of Comprehensive Low-Volume Pavement Design
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2000-07-01
Historically, "low-volume" pavements (less than 500 ADT) in Arkansas were typically constructed using a "standard" section, i.e. a double surface treatment over a specified thickness of granular base. Subsequent analysis indicated these sections were...
Evaluation of reclaimed asphalt pavement for surface mixtures.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-03-01
The Indiana Department of Transportation has successfully used Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement (RAP) for decades because of its economic : and environmental benefits. Because of uncertainties regarding the types of aggregates contained in RAP and their re...
Wear resistant pavement study.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-01-01
This report documents the construction of three special pavement test sections on I-90 east of Spokane, Washington. The test sections included ultra-thin and thin whitetopping, Modified Class D open graded asphalt concrete, and micro/macro surfacing ...
Laser Scanning on Road Pavements: A New Approach for Characterizing Surface Texture
Bitelli, Gabriele; Simone, Andrea; Girardi, Fabrizio; Lantieri, Claudio
2012-01-01
The surface layer of road pavement has a particular importance in relation to the satisfaction of the primary demands of locomotion, such as security and eco-compatibility. Among those pavement surface characteristics, the “texture” appears to be one of the most interesting with regard to the attainment of skid resistance. Specifications and regulations, providing a wide range of functional indicators, act as guidelines to satisfy the performance requirements. This paper describes an experiment on the use of laser scanner techniques on various types of asphalt for texture characterization. The use of high precision laser scanners, such as the triangulation types, is proposed to expand the analysis of road pavement from the commonly and currently used two-dimensional method to a three-dimensional one, with the aim of extending the range of the most important parameters for these kinds of applications. Laser scanners can be used in an innovative way to obtain information on areal surface layer through a single measurement, with data homogeneity and representativeness. The described experience highlights how the laser scanner is used for both laboratory experiments and tests in situ, with a particular attention paid to factors that could potentially affect the survey. PMID:23012535
The development and geometry of shape change in Arabidopsis thaliana cotyledon pavement cells
2011-01-01
Background The leaf epidermis is an important architectural control element that influences the growth properties of underlying tissues and the overall form of the organ. In dicots, interdigitated pavement cells are the building blocks of the tissue, and their morphogenesis includes the assembly of specialized cell walls that surround the apical, basal, and lateral (anticlinal) cell surfaces. The microtubule and actin cytoskeletons are highly polarized along the cortex of the anticlinal wall; however, the relationships between these arrays and cell morphogenesis are unclear. Results We developed new quantitative tools to compare population-level growth statistics with time-lapse imaging of cotyledon pavement cells in an intact tissue. The analysis revealed alternating waves of lobe initiation and a phase of lateral isotropic expansion that persisted for days. During lateral isotropic diffuse growth, microtubule organization varied greatly between cell surfaces. Parallel microtubule bundles were distributed unevenly along the anticlinal surface, with subsets marking stable cortical domains at cell indentations and others clearly populating the cortex within convex cell protrusions. Conclusions Pavement cell morphogenesis is discontinuous, and includes punctuated phases of lobe initiation and lateral isotropic expansion. In the epidermis, lateral isotropic growth is independent of pavement cell size and shape. Cortical microtubules along the upper cell surface and stable cortical patches of anticlinal microtubules may coordinate the growth behaviors of orthogonal cell walls. This work illustrates the importance of directly linking protein localization data to the growth behavior of leaf epidermal cells. PMID:21284861
The development and geometry of shape change in Arabidopsis thaliana cotyledon pavement cells.
Zhang, Chunhua; Halsey, Leah E; Szymanski, Daniel B
2011-02-01
The leaf epidermis is an important architectural control element that influences the growth properties of underlying tissues and the overall form of the organ. In dicots, interdigitated pavement cells are the building blocks of the tissue, and their morphogenesis includes the assembly of specialized cell walls that surround the apical, basal, and lateral (anticlinal) cell surfaces. The microtubule and actin cytoskeletons are highly polarized along the cortex of the anticlinal wall; however, the relationships between these arrays and cell morphogenesis are unclear. We developed new quantitative tools to compare population-level growth statistics with time-lapse imaging of cotyledon pavement cells in an intact tissue. The analysis revealed alternating waves of lobe initiation and a phase of lateral isotropic expansion that persisted for days. During lateral isotropic diffuse growth, microtubule organization varied greatly between cell surfaces. Parallel microtubule bundles were distributed unevenly along the anticlinal surface, with subsets marking stable cortical domains at cell indentations and others clearly populating the cortex within convex cell protrusions. Pavement cell morphogenesis is discontinuous, and includes punctuated phases of lobe initiation and lateral isotropic expansion. In the epidermis, lateral isotropic growth is independent of pavement cell size and shape. Cortical microtubules along the upper cell surface and stable cortical patches of anticlinal microtubules may coordinate the growth behaviors of orthogonal cell walls. This work illustrates the importance of directly linking protein localization data to the growth behavior of leaf epidermal cells.
Surface and microstructural properties of photocatalytic cements for pavement applications.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-10-01
Thin concrete inlays incorporating flowable fibrous concrete (FFC) mix designs as well as titanium dioxide (TiO2)- containing photocatalytic cements are a promising pavement preservation solution. These multi-functional inlays offer enhanced construc...
Special experimental project (SEP-14) alternate surfacing bidding [summary].
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2008-01-01
The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) has a pavement type selection process that includes the comparison of initial and life cycle costs for different pavement types. Those cost differences and secondary factors are considered when selecting...
Potential applications of paving fabrics to reduce reflective cracking.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2005-02-01
Asphalt concrete overlay on the existing pavement is often used as a cost-saving : surface treatment for deteriorating pavements. A major problem encountered with asphalt : resurfacing is the phenomenon termed reflective cracking, the propagation of ...
Relating surface texture of rigid pavement with noise and skid resistance
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2004-01-01
Although pavements are initially designed to be durable for specified traffic loads, they must also satisfy other functional characteristics, primarily safety, smoothness and comfort (noise generation). Frequently, there are necessary trade-offs for ...
Ground penetrating radar evaluation of new pavement density.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-02-01
The objective of this project was to map pavement surface density variations using dielectric : measurements from ground penetrating radar (GPR). The work was carried out as part of an : Asphalt Intelligent Compaction demonstration project on SR 539 ...
Refining the maintenance techniques for Interlocking Concrete Paver GIs
Surface clogging adversely affects the performance of Interlocking Concrete Pavements (ICP) by reducing their ability to infiltrate stormwater runoff. The clogging rate is a function of pavement type, traffic loading, surrounding physical environment and maintenance treatments. ...
Best practices for full-depth reclamation using asphalt emulsions.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-07-01
Full depth reclamation of asphalt pavements using asphalt emulsions (AEFDR) is a process that recycles and rejuvenates the existing : asphalt pavement surface, base, and, sometimes, the subgrade, providing an improved underlying structure for the new...
HMAC layer adhesion through tack coat.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-02-01
Tack coats are the asphaltic emulsions applied between pavement lifts to provide adequate bond between the two surfaces. The adhesive bond between the two layers helps the pavement system to behave as a monolithic structure and improves the structura...
Evaluation of Reclaimed Rubber in Bituminous Pavements
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1995-06-01
Section 1038 of the 1991 Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA) mandated use of crumb rubber from scrap tires in asphalt pavement starting in FY 94. To gain some experience, the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) construct...
Pavement temperature and burns: streets of fire.
Harrington, W Z; Strohschein, B L; Reedy, D; Harrington, J E; Schiller, W R
1995-11-01
To measure pavement temperatures over a 24-hour period to determine when patients are at risk for burns and to report cases of pavement burns with predisposing factors. Descriptive study of pavement temperatures and retrospective case series of 23 patients with pavement burns admitted to the Maricopa Medical Center during the years 1986 to 1992. Twenty-three patients with pavement burns serious enough for them to be admitted to the burn center. We measured the temperatures of asphalt, cement, and other outdoor materials hourly for one 24-hour period using a thermocouple thermometer. Asphalt pavement was hot enough to cause burns from 9 AM to 7 PM during the summer months. It was hot enough to cause a second-degree burn within 35 seconds from 10 AM to 5 PM. The group of burned patients could be divided into three categories: incapacitated, restrained, and sensory deficient. All burns involved less than 13% of the total body surface area. During summer days in the desert, pavement is often hot enough to cause burns and does so with regularity in the southwestern United States. No one should be allowed to remain in contact with hot pavement, even transiently.
Rapid modification of urban land surface temperature during rainfall
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Omidvar, H.; Bou-Zeid, E.; Song, J.; Yang, J.; Arwatz, G.; Wang, Z.; Hultmark, M.; Kaloush, K.
2017-12-01
We study the runoff dynamics and heat transfer over urban pavements during rainfall. A kinematic wave approach is combined with heat storage and transfer schemes to develop a model for impervious (with runoff) and pervious (without runoff) pavements. The resulting framework is a numerical prognostic model that can simulate the temperature fields in the subsurface and runoff layers to capture the rapid cooling of the surface, as well as the thermal pollution advected in the runoff. Extensive field measurements were then conducted over experimental pavements in Arizona to probe the physics and better represent the relevant processes in the model, and then to validate the model. The experimental data and the model results were in very good agreements, and their joint analysis elucidated the physics of the rapid heat transfer from the subsurface to the runoff layer. Finally, we apply the developed model to investigate how the various hydrological and thermal properties of the pavements, as well as ambient environmental conditions, modulate the surface and runoff thermal dynamics, what is the relative importance of each of them, and how we can apply the model mitigate the adverse impacts of urbanization.
Optimal Maintenance Works for the Aborshada Road in the Western Region of Libya
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Youssef, Medhat Abdelrahman; Elbasher, Abdelbary Altayb
2014-09-01
In this research, the condition of a road pavement was investigated for the Aborshada Road in the Gharian region of Libya to determine the optimal maintenance works. Previously, a simple engineering judgment was the only procedure followed by the Gharian municipal engineers for evaluating pavements and prioritizing maintenance. The surface condition of the Aborshada Road pavement was investigated using "the Pavement Condition Index (PCI)" visual technique. The pavement was inspected to survey the different distresses in each sample unit. Ninteen pavement distresses were classified according to the PCI standards (PCI for roads and parking lots became an ASTM standard in 2007 (D6433-07)). It was necessary to know the most common distresses of the Aborshada Road to provide assistance for the decision maker in his evaluation of the pavement and the optimum repair method to be selected. This study reveals the actual performance of the pavements and suggests the research required for dealing with the pavement maintenance problem in Libya, especially in the western region. The best maintenance alternative for Aborshada Road was Case No. 3 (Potholes, Long. & Trans. Cracking and Alligator Crack Maintenance). Also, the most common pavement distresses on the Aborshada Road were Distress Nos. 1, 3, 6, 7, 10 and 13 according to the ASTM - D6433-07 classification
Singularity detection in FOG-based pavement data by wavelet transform
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yang, Dandan; Wang, Lixin; Hu, Wenbin; Zhang, Zhen; Fu, Jinghua; Gan, Weibing
2017-04-01
The angular velocity data of Fiber-Optic Gyro (FOG) has been analyzed to locate the singularity by the wavelet transform (WT) method. By using WT analysis method to decompose and reconstruct the signal of pavement data collecting by the FOG, the different types of pavement singularities can be extracted. The experiments are conducted on different road surfaces. The experimental results show that the locations of bumps and expansion joints have been obtained, with a relative precision of 0.5 m and an absolute precision of 2 m over 2.4 km. The characteristic of the pavement roughness can also be identified.
Urban permeable pavement system design based on “sponge city” concept
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yu, M. M.; Zhu, J. W.; Gao, W. F.; Xu, D. P.; Zhao, M.
2017-08-01
Based on the “sponge city” concept, to implement the goal of building a city within the city to solve the sponge waterlogging, rational utilization of water resources, reduce water pollution this paper, combined with the city planning level in China, establishes the design system of city road flooding from the macro, medium and micro level, explore the design method of city water permeable pavement system, and has a practical significance the lower flood risk water ecological problems. On the macro level, we established an urban pavement sponge system under the regional ecological pattern by “spot permeable open space - low impact developing rain water road system - catchment area and catchment wetland”. On a medium level, this paper proposed the permeable suitability of pavement and the planning control indicators when combined with urban functional districts to conduct permeable pavement roads plans and controls. On micro level, the paper studied sponge technology design of permeable pavement from road structure, surface material, and other aspects aimed at the pavement permeability requirements.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Horne, W. B.; Griswold, G. D.
1975-01-01
A high pressure water blast with rotating spray bar treatment for removing paint and rubber deposits from airport runways is studied. The results of the evaluation suggest that the treatment is very effective in removing above surface paint and rubber deposits to the point that pavement skid resistance is restored to trafficked but uncontaminated runway surface skid resistance levels. Aircraft operating problems created by runway slipperiness are reviewed along with an assessment of the contributions that pavement surface treatments, surface weathering, traffic polishing, and rubber deposits make in creating or alleviating runway slipperiness. The results suggest that conventional surface treatments for both portland cement and asphaltic concrete runways are extremely vulnerable to rubber deposit accretions which can produce runway slipperiness conditions for aircraft operations as or more slippery than many snow and ice-covered runway conditions. Pavement grooving surface treatments are shown to be the least vulnerable to rubber deposits accretion and traffic polishing of the surface treatments examined.
Cloud Impacts on Pavement Temperature in Energy Balance Models
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Walker, C. L.
2013-12-01
Forecast systems provide decision support for end-users ranging from the solar energy industry to municipalities concerned with road safety. Pavement temperature is an important variable when considering vehicle response to various weather conditions. A complex, yet direct relationship exists between tire and pavement temperatures. Literature has shown that as tire temperature increases, friction decreases which affects vehicle performance. Many forecast systems suffer from inaccurate radiation forecasts resulting in part from the inability to model different types of clouds and their influence on radiation. This research focused on forecast improvement by determining how cloud type impacts the amount of shortwave radiation reaching the surface and subsequent pavement temperatures. The study region was the Great Plains where surface solar radiation data were obtained from the High Plains Regional Climate Center's Automated Weather Data Network stations. Road pavement temperature data were obtained from the Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System. Cloud properties and radiative transfer quantities were obtained from the Clouds and Earth's Radiant Energy System mission via Aqua and Terra Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer satellite products. An additional cloud data set was incorporated from the Naval Research Laboratory Cloud Classification algorithm. Statistical analyses using a modified nearest neighbor approach were first performed relating shortwave radiation variability with road pavement temperature fluctuations. Then statistical associations were determined between the shortwave radiation and cloud property data sets. Preliminary results suggest that substantial pavement forecasting improvement is possible with the inclusion of cloud-specific information. Future model sensitivity testing seeks to quantify the magnitude of forecast improvement.
Investigation of Accelerated Life Prediction Techniques
1975-10-01
26, No. 1, 1974, ;). 13. 116. Krukar, M., et al, STUDDED TIRE PAVEMENT WEAR REDUCTION AND REPAIR, Washington State Dept. of Highways, Highway...167. Okushlma, K., and Kakino, Y., STUD * ON INFLUENCE OF GROOVE WEAR OF A TOOL TO SURFACE ROUGHNESS DURING FINISHING TURNING OF CARBON STEEL, Journal...MODIFICATION OF ASPHALT CEMENTS FOR IMPROVE- MENT OF WEAR RESISTANCE OF PAVEMENT SURFACES, Materials Research «nd Development, Inc., Oakland
Newman, Alan Paul; Aitken, Douglas; Antizar-Ladislao, Blanca
2013-12-15
This paper reports the results of a two year field monitoring exercise intended to investigate the pollution abatement capabilities of a novel system which offers an alternative to the, now well established, pervious pavement system as a source control device for stormwater management. The aim of this study was to determine the effectiveness of a live installation of a macro-pervious pavement system (MPPS) (operated as a visitors' car park at a prison in Central Scotland) in retaining and treating a range of pollutants which originate from automobile use or become concentrated on the parking surface from the wider environment. The MPPS is a sub-class of pervious pavement system where the vast majority of the surface is impermeable. It directs stormwater into a pervious sub surface storage/attenuation zone through a series of distinct infiltration points fast enough to prevent flooding during the design storm. In the particular system studied here the infiltration points consist of a network of oil/silt separation devices with extensive further pollutant retention/degradation provided during the passage of stormwater through the sub surface zone. Approximately 12 months after the car park was completed a sampling regime was instigated in which grab samples were collected at intervals from each of the three sub catchments whilst, simultaneously, samples were collected directly from the, pollutant retaining, infiltration devices. Through investigation of samples collected at the upstream end of the system, the retention of significant amounts of hydrocarbons and heavy metals in the initial collection devices has been illustrated and the analysis of effluent samples collected at the outlet points indicate that the system is capable of producing effluent which is of a standard comparable to that expected from a traditional pervious pavement system and is acceptable for direct release into a surface water receptor. The system offers the opportunity to accrue the benefits of a pervious pavement when the use of traditional paving surfaces is the preferred option. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Evaluation of asphalt pavement interface conditions for enhanced bond performance.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-05-01
This project describes a comprehensive modeling effort aimed at examining the potential impact of interface debonding on near-surface longitudinal cracking in the wheelpath of asphalt pavements. A critical zone defined by high shear stress coupled wi...
Evaluation of asphalt pavement interface conditions for enhanced bond performance : [summary].
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-05-01
In this project, University of Florida researchers conducted a comprehensive program of modeling to understand interface debonding and near-surface longitudinal cracking in the wheel path of asphalt pavements. : To understand the interaction of debon...
Permeable Pavement Research - Edison, New Jersey
This presentation provides the background and summary of results collected at the permeable pavement parking lot monitored at the EPA facility in Edison, NJ. This parking lot is surfaced with permeable interlocking concrete pavers (PICP), pervious concrete, and porous asphalt. ...
An evaluation of the effects of tread depth.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1975-01-01
Thirty-one sites representing the types of pavement surfaces on the highways of Virginia were tested by the Virginia Highway and Transportation Research Council skid trailer in an effort: (1) to determine the influence that tire tread depth, pavement...
A multi-scale approach for near-surface pavement cracking and failure mechanisms
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-10-31
Nearsurface cracking is one of the predominant distress types in flexible pavements. The occurrence of : nearsurface cracking, also sometimes referred to as topdown cracking, has increased in recent years : with the increased construction of...
The rideability of a deflected bridge approach slab : research project capsule.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-08-01
The Localized Roughness Index (LRI) is a parameter that was developed at the Louisiana : Transportation Research Center (LTRC) to quantify localized pavement distresses, such as : pavement surface dips and bumps, concrete slab joint faulting, bridge-...
1984-05-01
materials, traffic, and climate, were used to develop PCI and key distress prediction models for both asphalt-concrete- and jointed-concrete- surfaced...Predicted PCI for PCC and AC/PCC Pavements Using Model Presented in Section III ...... 35 31 Effect of PCC Thickness on the PCI as a Function of Age...of Corner Breaking Observed vs Predicted Percent of Corner Breaking Using Model Presented in Section III
Performances of metal concentrations from three permeable pavement infiltrates.
Liu, Jiayu; Borst, Michael
2018-06-01
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency constructed a 4000-m 2 parking lot in Edison, New Jersey in 2009. The parking lot is surfaced with three permeable pavements [permeable interlocking concrete pavers (PICP), pervious concrete (PC), and porous asphalt (PA)]. Samples of each permeable pavement infiltrate, surface runoff from traditional asphalt, and rainwater were analyzed in duplicate for 22 metals (total and dissolved) for 6 years. In more than 99% of the samples, the concentration of barium, chromium, copper, manganese, nickel and zinc, and in 60%-90% of the samples, the concentration of arsenic, cadmium, lead, and antimony in infiltrates from all three permeable pavements met both the groundwater effluent limitations (GEL) and maximum contaminant levels (MCL). The concentration of aluminum (50%) and iron (93%) in PICP infiltrates samples exceed the GELs; however, the concentration in more than 90% samples PA and PC infiltrates met the GELs. No measurable difference in metal concentrations was found from the five sources for arsenic, cadmium, lead, antimony, and tin. Large concentrations of eleven metals, including manganese, copper, aluminum, iron, calcium, magnesium, sodium, potassium, silica, strontium and vanadium, were detected in surface runoff than the rainwater. Chromium, copper, manganese, nickel, aluminum, zinc, iron and magnesium concentrations in PICP infiltrates; calcium, barium, and strontium concentrations in PA infiltrates; sodium, potassium and vanadium concentrations in PC infiltrates were statistically larger than the other two permeable pavement infiltrates. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Mohajerani, Abbas; Bakaric, Jason; Jeffrey-Bailey, Tristan
2017-07-15
The Urban Heat Island (UHI) is a phenomenon that affects many millions of people worldwide. The higher temperatures experienced in urban areas compared to the surrounding countryside has enormous consequences for the health and wellbeing of people living in cities. The increased use of manmade materials and increased anthropogenic heat production are the main causes of the UHI. This has led to the understanding that increased urbanisation is the primary cause of the urban heat island. The UHI effect also leads to increased energy needs that further contribute to the heating of our urban landscape, and the associated environmental and public health consequences. Pavements and roofs dominate the urban surface exposed to solar irradiation. This review article outlines the contribution that pavements make to the UHI effect and analyses localized and citywide mitigation strategies against the UHI. Asphalt Concrete (AC) is one of the most common pavement surfacing materials and is a significant contributor to the UHI. Densely graded AC has low albedo and high volumetric heat capacity, which results in surface temperatures reaching upwards of 60 °C on hot summer days. Cooling the surface of a pavement by utilizing cool pavements has been a consistent theme in recent literature. Cool pavements can be reflective or evaporative. However, the urban geometry and local atmospheric conditions should dictate whether or not these mitigation strategies should be used. Otherwise both of these pavements can actually increase the UHI effect. Increasing the prevalence of green spaces through the installation of street trees, city parks and rooftop gardens has consistently demonstrated a reduction in the UHI effect. Green spaces also increase the cooling effect derived from water and wind sources. This literature review demonstrates that UHI mitigation techniques are best used in combination with each other. As a result of the study, it was concluded that the current mitigation measures need development to make them relevant to various climates and throughout the year. There are also many possible sources of future study, and alternative measures for mitigation have been described, thereby providing scope for future research and development following this review. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Countryman, Gene L.
This Rate Training Manual (Textbook) and Nonresident Career Course form a correspondence, self-study package to provide information related to tasks assigned to Builders Third and Second Class. Focus is on constructing, maintaining, and repairing wooden, concrete, and masonry structures, concrete pavement, and waterfront and underwater structures;…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Scofield, Larry A.
2005-09-01
Roadways have been constructed out of concrete pavements in the United States since the late 1800s. Numerous surface textures have been produced including burlap drag, astroturf, uniformly and random transverse tined, longitudinally tined, and both profile and whisper diamond grinding processes. Each surface evolved for specific reasons during the historical development of Portland Cement Concrete Pavements (PCCP).This paper reviews the development of these various surface texture types and the reasons for their evolution. In addition, results from both far field and near field acoustic testing are presented to evaluate the ``acoustic'' performance of these surfaces over time.For five surface types, 1/24 octave analysis were conducted on CPX data obtained with a single tire. The spectrum of each of these surface types is presented for comparison. For three of the surfaces, speed gradient testing, ranging between 25-75 MPH was conducted. 1/24 octave analysis of each of these runs was conducted so that that any speed induced spectrum shifts could be observed.The results to date indicate that the adverse tonal properties of some PCCP surfaces can be eliminated through diamond grinding and prevented by not constructing transverse tined PCCP.
Quantifying Asphalt Emulsion-Based Chip Seal Curing Times Using Electrical Resistance Measurements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-04-15
Chip sealing typically consists of covering a pavement surface with asphalt emulsion into which aggregate chips are embedded. The asphalt emulsion cures through the evaporation of water, thus providing mechanical strength to adhere to the pavement wh...
Internally cured concrete for pavement and bridge deck applications : [summary].
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-08-01
High-strength-high-performance concrete (HSHPC) is used for rapid repair of concrete : bridge decks and pavement. However, HSHPC has very high early shrinkage, often leading to : cracking, made worse by high ambient temperatures and a large surface a...
Impact of a smoothness incentive.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2006-01-01
Smoothness, the absence of bumps and dips in the riding surface of a pavement, improves the quality of the ride and is believed to prolong the life of the pavement. This research addressed the impact of potential pay adjustments for smoothness on mai...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-01-01
The Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) currently uses the results of automated surface distress surveys to assist in developing pavement maintenance strategies for its interstate and primary roadways. Totaling nearly 27,000 lane-miles, thes...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2008-01-01
The Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) currently uses the results of automated surface distress surveys to assist in developing pavement maintenance strategies for its interstate and primary roadways. Totaling nearly 27,000 lane-miles, thes...
Using high-speed texture measurements to improve the uniformity of hot-mix asphalt.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2003-01-01
This study introduces Virginia's efforts to apply high-speed texture measurement as a tool to improve the uniformity of hot-mix asphalt (HMA) pavements. Three approaches for detecting and quantifying HMA segregation through measuring pavement surface...
Kansas Department of Transportation 2014 chip seal manual : [technical summary].
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-03-01
A chip seal is a very effective thin surface treatment process used by maintenance managers to preserve existing asphalt pavements. Two of the major asphalt pavement distresses, cracking and loss of friction are effectively addressed with the use of ...
O'Neill, Tanya A; Balks, Megan R; López-Martínez, Jerónimo; McWhirter, Judi L
2012-12-15
With increasing visitor numbers an understanding of the impacts of human activities in Antarctic terrestrial environments has become important. The objective of this study was to develop a means for assessing recovery of the ground surface desert pavement following physical disturbance. A set of 11 criteria were identified to assess desert pavement recovery. Assessed criteria were: embeddedness of surface clasts; impressions of removed clasts; degree of clast surface weathering; % overturned clasts; salt on underside of clasts; development of salt coatings; armouring per m(2); colour contrast; evidence of subsidence/melt out; accumulation of salt on cut surfaces; and evidence of patterned ground development. Recovery criteria were assigned a severity/extent rating on a scale from zero to four, zero being highly disturbed, and four being undisturbed. A relative % recovery for each criteria was calculated for each site by comparison with a nearby undisturbed control area, and an overall Mean Recovery Index (MRI) was assigned to each pavement surface. To test the method, 54 sites in the Ross Sea region of Antarctica were investigated including areas disturbed by: bulldozer scraping for road-fill, contouring for infrastructure, geotechnical investigations, and experimental treading trial sites. Disturbances had occurred at timescales ranging from one week to 50 years prior to assessment. The extent of desert pavement recovery at the sites investigated in this study was higher than anticipated. Fifty of the 54 sites investigated were in an intermediate, or higher, stage of desert pavement recovery, 30 sites were in an advanced stage of recovery, and four sites were indistinguishable from adjacent control sites (MRI = 100%). It was found that active surfaces, such as the gravel beach deposits at the Greenpeace World Park Base site at Cape Evans, the aeolian sand deposits at Bull Pass, and the alluvial fan deposits of the Loop Moraine field campsite, recovered relatively quickly, whereas less active sites, such as the bulldozed tracks at Marble Point, and Williams Field to McMurdo Station pipeline site on Ross Island, showed only intermediate recovery 20-30 years after disturbance. The slabby grano-diorite surface material at the former Vanda Station site, meant that the impacts that had occurred were hard to detect following decommissioning of the station and site remediation. Desert pavements disturbed by randomly dispersed footprints, temporary field campsites at the Loop Moraine and VXE6 Pond in the Wright Valley, recovered to be undetectable (MRI = 100%) within five years, whereas track formation from repeated trampling, particularly the concentration of larger clasts along the margin of a confined track, persisted for over 15 years (MRI = 82%). The recovery assessment method developed in this study has environmental management applications and potential to advance our ability to predict the recovery of desert pavement following human impacts from activities in Antarctica. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ghanta, Sindhu; Shahini Shamsabadi, Salar; Dy, Jennifer; Wang, Ming; Birken, Ralf
2015-04-01
Around 3,000,000 million vehicle miles are annually traveled utilizing the US transportation systems alone. In addition to the road traffic safety, maintaining the road infrastructure in a sound condition promotes a more productive and competitive economy. Due to the significant amounts of financial and human resources required to detect surface cracks by visual inspection, detection of these surface defects are often delayed resulting in deferred maintenance operations. This paper introduces an automatic system for acquisition, detection, classification, and evaluation of pavement surface cracks by unsupervised analysis of images collected from a camera mounted on the rear of a moving vehicle. A Hessian-based multi-scale filter has been utilized to detect ridges in these images at various scales. Post-processing on the extracted features has been implemented to produce statistics of length, width, and area covered by cracks, which are crucial for roadway agencies to assess pavement quality. This process has been realized on three sets of roads with different pavement conditions in the city of Brockton, MA. A ground truth dataset labeled manually is made available to evaluate this algorithm and results rendered more than 90% segmentation accuracy demonstrating the feasibility of employing this approach at a larger scale.
Crack identification for rigid pavements using unmanned aerial vehicles
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bahaddin Ersoz, Ahmet; Pekcan, Onur; Teke, Turker
2017-09-01
Pavement condition assessment is an essential piece of modern pavement management systems as rehabilitation strategies are planned based upon its outcomes. For proper evaluation of existing pavements, they must be continuously and effectively monitored using practical means. Conventionally, truck-based pavement monitoring systems have been in-use in assessing the remaining life of in-service pavements. Although such systems produce accurate results, their use can be expensive and data processing can be time consuming, which make them infeasible considering the demand for quick pavement evaluation. To overcome such problems, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) can be used as an alternative as they are relatively cheaper and easier-to-use. In this study, we propose a UAV based pavement crack identification system for monitoring rigid pavements’ existing conditions. The system consists of recently introduced image processing algorithms used together with conventional machine learning techniques, both of which are used to perform detection of cracks on rigid pavements’ surface and their classification. Through image processing, the distinct features of labelled crack bodies are first obtained from the UAV based images and then used for training of a Support Vector Machine (SVM) model. The performance of the developed SVM model was assessed with a field study performed along a rigid pavement exposed to low traffic and serious temperature changes. Available cracks were classified using the UAV based system and obtained results indicate it ensures a good alternative solution for pavement monitoring applications.
Pervious pavements - installation, operations and strength part 1 : pervious concrete.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-08-01
Pervious pavement systems are now being recognized as a best management practice by the Environmental Protection Agency and the state of Florida. The pervious concrete system is designed to have enhanced pore sizes in the surface layer compared to co...
Enhanced treatment selection for reflective joint cracking in composite pavements : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-09-01
This research developed a decisionmaking process that can be used by INDOT to enhance identification of the condition of the : underlying concrete joints or cracks by looking at the surface distresses of the asphalt overlay in composite pavements....
Automated survey of pavement distress based on 2D and 3D laser images.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-11-01
Despite numerous efforts in recent decades, currently most information on pavement surface distresses cannot be obtained automatically, at high-speed, and at acceptable precision and bias levels. This research provided seed funding to produce a funct...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1999-06-01
The Strategic Highway Research Program (SHRP) H-106 maintenance experiment and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) Long-Term Monitoring (LTM) of Pavement Maintenance Materials Test Sites project studied the treatment (sealing and filling) of cr...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-01-01
The overall value of using thin surfacing maintenance treatments to extend and preserve the : performance of existing pavements has been widely recognized. This study has focused on : evaluating the cost effectiveness of commonly used individual trea...
Evaluation of high performance pavement and bridge deck wearing surface repair materials.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-08-01
This project provided for a laboratory and field testing of several high performance repair materials for : pavements and concrete bridge decks. The main purpose was to provide ODOT with materials and procedures : to shorten road and bridge closures....
Characterization of permeability of pavement bases in Missouri Department of Transportation's System
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2003-02-01
The results of field (in-situ) and laboratory permeability testing showed MoDOT's predominant pavement base "Type 5" (and the upper "working" surface of the 2-foot rock fill alternative) has hydraulic conductivities that are several orders of magnitu...
MoDOT pavement preservation research program volume V, site-specific pavement condition assessment.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-11-01
The overall objective of Task 4 was to thoroughly assess the cost-effectiveness and utility of selected non-invasive technologies as : applicable to MoDOT roadways. Non-invasive imaging technologies investigated in this project were Ultrasonic Surfac...
Impact of pavements on the urban heat island : final project report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-10-01
Increasing urbanization has led to the development of Urban Heat Islands (UHIs), with serious implications for the environment. Pavements play a role in this by absorbing and storing more heat than the natural surfaces that they replace. To quantify ...
Development of the MASW method for pavement evaluation.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-07-31
The purpose of this research is to establish a recommended procedure for performing multichannel analysis of surface waves (MASW) on pavements as well as evaluating the ability of MASW to detect a change in shear wave velocity as damage in concrete i...
2018-01-01
work, the prevailing methods used to predict the performance of AM2 were based on the CBR design procedure for flexible pavements using a small number...suitable for design and evaluation frameworks currently used for airfield pavements and matting systems. DISCLAIMER: The contents of this report...methods used to develop the equivalency curves equated the mat-surfaced area to an equivalent thickness of flexible pavement using the CBR design
Li, Hui; Kayhanian, Masoud; Harvey, John T
2013-03-30
Fully permeable pavement is gradually gaining support as an alternative best management practice (BMP) for stormwater runoff management. As the use of these pavements increases, a definitive test method is needed to measure hydraulic performance and to evaluate clogging, both for performance studies and for assessment of permeability for construction quality assurance and maintenance needs assessment. Two of the most commonly used permeability measurement tests for porous asphalt and pervious concrete are the National Center for Asphalt Technology (NCAT) permeameter and ASTM C1701, respectively. This study was undertaken to compare measured values for both methods in the field on a variety of permeable pavements used in current practice. The field measurements were performed using six experimental section designs with different permeable pavement surface types including pervious concrete, porous asphalt and permeable interlocking concrete pavers. Multiple measurements were performed at five locations on each pavement test section. The results showed that: (i) silicone gel is a superior sealing material to prevent water leakage compared with conventional plumbing putty; (ii) both methods (NCAT and ASTM) can effectively be used to measure the permeability of all pavement types and the surface material type will not impact the measurement precision; (iii) the permeability values measured with the ASTM method were 50-90% (75% on average) lower than those measured with the NCAT method; (iv) the larger permeameter cylinder diameter used in the ASTM method improved the reliability and reduced the variability of the measured permeability. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Airport manager's guide for the maintenance of asphalt pavements of general aviation airports.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-01-01
Hot asphalt pavement (HAP) is used as a surface material on many General Aviation : (GA) airports in California. Currently there are 251 public use airports in California. An : understanding of the proper design, construction and maintenance of the h...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1997-02-01
This report focuses on the Clean Air Act (CAAA) and the State Air Quality Implementation Plan (SIP) and the need for conformity with transportation measures and policies. The Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA) has reinforced Fed...
Performances of Metal Concentrations from Three Permeable Pavement Infiltrates
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency designed and constructed a 4000-m2 parking lot in Edison, New Jersey in 2009. The parking lot is surfaced with three permeable pavements: permeable interlocking concrete pavers, pervious concrete, and porous asphalt. Water sampling was con...
Development of a method to remove raised-pavement markers (RPMs) from road surfaces : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-06-01
The Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) uses raised pavement markers (RPMs) widely on roads : throughout the State to increase road safety. Each of the approximate 3 million RPMs in Georgia was placed : manually. Unfortunately, RPMs do not la...
A multi\\0x2010scale approach for near\\0x2010surface pavement cracking and failure mechanisms.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-11-30
Nearsurface cracking is one of the predominant distress types in flexible pavements. The occurrence of : nearsurface cracking, also sometimes referred to as topdown cracking, has increased in recent years : with the increased construction of...
Performances of Metal Concentrations from Three Permeable Pavement Infiltrates
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency constructed a 4000-m2 parking lot in Edison, New Jersey in 2009. The parking lot is surfaced with three permeable pavements [permeable interlocking concrete pavers (PICP), pervious concrete (PC), and porous asphalt (PA)]. Samples of each p...
Durability of certain configurations for providing skid resistance on concrete pavements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1974-01-01
The main objective of this study was to establish the factors that influence the durability of the surface configurations that are used or can be used to provide high and long lasting skid resistance for portland cement concrete pavements. In the dev...
Permeable pavement surfaces are infiltration based stormwater control measures (SCM) commonly applied in parking lots to decrease impervious area and reduce runoff volume. Many are not optimally designed however, as little attention is given to draining a large enough contributin...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-07-01
On-Board Sound Intensity (OBSI) measurements are reported for various concrete pavement textures including transverse and longitudinal tining, carpet drag, conventional diamond grinding and Next Generation Concrete Surface. The noise levels increased...
Advanced road scene image segmentation and pavement evaluation using neural networks.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-01-01
The current project, funded by MIOH-UTC for the period 9/1/2009-8/31/2010, continues our : efforts in designing an image processing based pavement inspection system for the : assessment of highway surface conditions. One of the most important tasks i...
GPR used in combination with other NDT methods for assessing pavements in PPP projects
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Loizos, Andreas; Plati, Christina
2014-05-01
In the recent decades, Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) has been adopted for highway infrastructure procurement in many countries. PPP projects typically take the form of a section of highway and connecting roadways which are to be construction and managed for a given concession period. Over the course of the highway concession period, the private agency takes over the pavement maintenance and rehabilitation duties. On this purpose, it is critical to find the most cost effective way to maintain the infrastructure in compliance with the agreed upon performance measures and a Pavement Management Systems (PMS) is critical to the success of this process. For the prosperous operation of a PMS it is necessary to have appropriate procedures for pavement monitoring and evaluation, which is important in many areas of pavement engineering. Non Destructive Testing (NDT) has played a major role in pavement condition monitoring, assessments and evaluation accomplishing continuous and quick collection of pavement data. The analysis of this data can lead to indicators related to trigger values (criteria) that define the pavement condition based on which the pavement "health" is perceived helping decide whether there is the need or not to intervene in the pavement. The accomplished perception appoints required management activities for preserving pavements in favor not only of the involved highway/road agencies but also of users' service. Amongst NDT methods Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) seems to be a very powerful toll, as it provides a range of condition and construction pavement information. It can support effectively the implementation of PMS activities in the framework of pavement monitoring and evaluation. Given that, the present work aims to the development and adaptation of a protocol for the use of GPR in combination with other NDT methods, such as Falling Weight Deflectometer (FWD), for assessing pavements in PPP projects. It is based on the experience of Laboratory of Pavement Engineering of National Technical University of Athens (NTUA) gained through its research activities in various Greek PPP projects as well its involvement in several related European and International scientific actions. It is suggested that the implementation of such protocol could support the pavement management activities with respect to the needs of a PPP project. This is accomplished through the resulted advantages that include simplicity in application, economic benefits and familiarity that are very important factors towards the optimization of the resources and the utilization of the available information; both of them are required for the orderly operation of a PPP project. Acknowledgments: This work benefited from networking activities carried out within the EU funded COST Action TU1208 "Civil Engineering Applications of Ground Penetrating Radar."
2015-11-03
author(s) and should not contrued as an official Department of the Army position, policy or decision, unless so designated by other documentation. 9...Grass; 6 Undeveloped-Open Land (generally gravel or bare soil); Pavement ; Buildings and Concrete; and Residential Buildings (TG-ECT site only...pervious surfaces, while pavement , buildings and concrete, and residential buildings represent impervious surfaces. 2.3. Mobile Eddy Covariance Tower
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Georgiou, Panos; Loizos, Fokion
2015-04-01
Field compaction of asphalt pavements is ultimately conducted to achieve layer(s) with suitable mechanical stability. However, the achieved degree of compaction has a significant influence on the performance of asphalt pavements. Providing all desirable mixture design characteristics without adequate compaction could lead to premature permanent deformation, excessive aging, and moisture damage; these distresses reduce the useful life of asphalt pavements. Hence, proper construction of an asphalt pavement is necessary to develop a long lasting roadway that will help minimize future maintenance. This goal is achieved by verifying and confirming that design specifications, in this case density specifications are met through the use of Quality Assurance (QA) practices. With respect to in-situ compaction degree of hot mix asphalt (HMA) pavement surface layers, nearly all agencies specify either cored samples or nuclear/ non nuclear density gauges to provide density measurement of the constructed pavement. Typically, a small number of spot tests (with either cores or nuclear gauges) are run and a judgment about the density level of the entire roadway is made based on the results of this spot testing. Unfortunately, density measurement from a small number of spots may not be representative of the density of the pavement mat. Hence, full coverage evaluation of compaction quality of the pavement mat is needed. The Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR), as a Non Destructive Testing (NDT) technique, is an example of a non-intrusive technique that favors over the methods mentioned above for assessing compaction quality of asphalt pavements, since it allows measurement of all mat areas. Further, research studies in recent years have shown promising results with respect to its capability, coupled with the use of novel algorithms based on the dielectric properties of HMA, to predict the in-situ field density. In view of the above, field experimental surveys were conducted to assess the effectiveness of GPR methodology to estimate the in-situ compaction degree of several test sections. Moreover, considering also the field density results as obtained with traditional methods, comparative evaluation was conducted to assess the potential of using the GPR technique as a surrogate tool for pavement compaction quality purposes. Acknowledgements: This work has been inspired from publications of the COST action TU-1208 funded from EU.
The contribution of micro- and macro-texture to the skid resistance of flexible pavement.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-02-01
Skid resistance is an important characteristic of the pavement surface to reduce the number of road accidents. The : mechanisms involved in the activation of the frictional force required for a safe braking of the vehicle depend on both : the macro- ...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-04-15
Wet pavement friction is known to be one of the most important roadway safety parameters. In this : research, frictional properties of flexible (asphalt) pavements were investigated. : As a part of this study, a laboratory device to polish asphalt sp...
Communities are increasingly installing structural low impact development (LID) practices to mange stormwater and reduce pollutant loads associated with stormwater runoff. Permeable pavement is a LID practice that has limited research on working-scale, side-by-side performance o...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-04-30
"The work presented in this report is a summary of a series of research projects, whose central purpose is to support the Caltrans Quieter : Pavement Research Program, which has as its goals and objectives the identification of quieter, smoother, saf...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-03-01
Low temperature cracking is one of the major : distress modes in asphalt pavement and is : disastrous to pavement performance and service : life. A poor riding surface leads to an increase in : maintenance and eventual early replacement of : the pave...
Effect of aggregate graining compositions on skid resistance of Exposed Aggregate Concrete pavement
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wasilewska, Marta; Gardziejczyk, Wladysław; Gierasimiuk, Pawel
2018-05-01
The paper presents the evaluation of skid resistance of EAC (Exposed Aggregate Concrete) pavements which differ in aggregate graining compositions. The tests were carried out on concrete mixes with a maximum aggregate size of 8 mm. Three types of coarse aggregates were selected depending on their resistance to polishing which was determined on the basis of the PSV (Polished Stone Value). Basalt (PSV 48), gabbro (PSV 50) and trachybasalt (PSV 52) aggregates were chosen. For each type of aggregate three graining compositions were designed, which differed in the content of coarse aggregate > 4mm. Their content for each series was as follows: A - 38%, B - 50% and C - 68%. Evaluation of the skid resistance has been performed using the FAP (Friction After Polishing) test equipment also known as the Wehner/Schulze machine. Laboratory method enables to compare the skid resistance of different types of wearing course under specified conditions simulating polishing processes. In addition, macrotexture measurements were made on the surface of each specimen using the Elatexure laser profile. Analysis of variance showed that at significance level α = 0.05, aggregate graining compositions as well as the PSV have a significant influence on the obtained values of the friction coefficient μm of the tested EAC pavements. The highest values of the μm have been obtained for EAC with the lowest amount of coarse aggregates (compositions A). In these cases the resistance to polishing of the aggregate does not significantly affect the friction coefficients. This is related to the large areas of cement mortar between the exposed coarse grains. Based on the analysis of microscope images, it was observed that the coarse aggregates were not sufficiently exposed. It has been proved that PSV significantly affected the coefficient of friction in the case of compositions B and C. This is caused by large areas of exposed coarse aggregate. The best parameters were achieved for the EAC pavements with graining composition B and C and trachybasalt aggregate.
Update to permeable pavement research at the Edison ...
Abstract: The EPA’s Urban Watershed Management Branch (UWMB) has been monitoring the permeable pavement demonstration site at the Edison Environmental Center, NJ since 2010. This site has three different types of permeable pavement including: interlocking concrete permeable pavers; porous concrete; and permeable asphalt. The parking lot is instrumented with water content reflectometers and thermistors for continuous monitoring and has four lined sections for each surface to capture permeable pavement infiltrate for water quality analyses.Previous technical releases concerning the demonstration site focused on monitoring techniques, observed chloride and nutrient concentrations, and infiltration and evaporation rates. Thispresentation summarizes past findings and addresses current water quality efforts. This presentation summarizes past findings and addresses current water quality efforts.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Adamu, Musa; Mohammed, Bashar S.; Shafiq, Nasir
2018-04-01
Roller compacted concrete (RCC) when used for pavement is subjected to skidding/rubbing by wheels of moving vehicles, this causes pavement surface to wear out and abrade. Therefore, abrasion resistance is one of the most important properties of concern for RCC pavement. In this study, response surface methodology was used to design, evaluate and analyze the effect of partial replacement of fine aggregate with crumb rubber, and addition of nano silica on the abrasion resistance of roller compacted rubbercrete (RCR). RCR is the terminology used for RCC pavement where crumb rubber was used as partial replacement to fine aggregate. The Box-Behnken design method was used to develop the mixtures combinations using 10%, 20%, and 30% crumb rubber with 0%, 1%, and 2% nano silica. The Cantabro loss method was used to measure the abrasion resistance. The results showed that the abrasion resistance of RCR decreases with increase in crumb rubber content, and increases with increase in addition of nano silica. The analysis of variance shows that the model developed using response surface methodology (RSM) has a very good degree of correlation, and can be used to predict the abrasion resistance of RCR with a percentage error of 5.44%. The combination of 10.76% crumb rubber and 1.59% nano silica yielded the best combinations of RCR in terms of abrasion resistance of RCR.
Vehicle Detection of Aerial Image Using TV-L1 Texture Decomposition
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Y.; Wang, G.; Li, Y.; Huang, Y.
2016-06-01
Vehicle detection from high-resolution aerial image facilitates the study of the public traveling behavior on a large scale. In the context of road, a simple and effective algorithm is proposed to extract the texture-salient vehicle among the pavement surface. Texturally speaking, the majority of pavement surface changes a little except for the neighborhood of vehicles and edges. Within a certain distance away from the given vector of the road network, the aerial image is decomposed into a smoothly-varying cartoon part and an oscillatory details of textural part. The variational model of Total Variation regularization term and L1 fidelity term (TV-L1) is adopted to obtain the salient texture of vehicles and the cartoon surface of pavement. To eliminate the noise of texture decomposition, regions of pavement surface are refined by seed growing and morphological operation. Based on the shape saliency analysis of the central objects in those regions, vehicles are detected as the objects of rectangular shape saliency. The proposed algorithm is tested with a diverse set of aerial images that are acquired at various resolution and scenarios around China. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed algorithm can detect vehicles at the rate of 71.5% and the false alarm rate of 21.5%, and that the speed is 39.13 seconds for a 4656 x 3496 aerial image. It is promising for large-scale transportation management and planning.
Validation of TxDOT flexible pavement skid prediction model : workshop : student guide.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-05-01
Course Materials: : Background summary of Research Project 0-5627. : Short presentation of research tasks and findings from Research Project 0-6746. : Aggregate characterization with Aggregate Imaging Measurement System (AIMS) and Micro-D...
Evaluation of stone/RAP interlayers under accelerated loading : tech summary.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2008-08-01
The first Louisiana accelerated loading experiment, Evaluation of Louisianas Conventional and Alternative Base Courses, showed that pavement performance could be enhanced signifi cantly if a layer of stone was placed over the cement stabilized sub...
Evaluation of stone/RAP interlayers under accelerated loading : tech summary.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2008-08-01
The fi rst Louisiana accelerated loading experiment, Evaluation of Louisianas Conventional and Alternative Base Courses, : showed that pavement performance could be enhanced signifi cantly if a layer of stone was placed over the cement : stabilize...
Louisiana experimental base project : interim report No. 1.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1979-11-01
The Louisiana Experimental Base Project is a research study evaluating the design/performance characteristics of three types of base courses as incorporated into comparable flexible pavement systems on a full-scale test road. Fourteen different test ...
Resilient Modulus Characterization of Alaskan Granular Base Materials
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-08-01
Resilient modulus (MR) of base course material is an important material input for : pavement design. In Alaska, due to distinctiveness of local climate, material source, : fines content and groundwater level, resilient properties of D-1 granular base...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-04-01
Videolog and pavement imaging data is a valuable asset that has supported the Georgia Department of : Transportation (GDOT) and enable it to fulfill the requirements of its Highway Performance Monitoring : System (HPMS). To maximize the return on inv...
40 CFR 449.2 - General definitions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... aircraft. This includes deicing and anti-icing fluids. Airfield pavement means all paved surfaces on the... defrosting or deicing for safe taxiing. Centralized deicing pad means a facility on an airfield designed for... remove or prevent any accumulation of snow or ice on: (1) An aircraft; or (2) Airfield pavement. Deicing...
40 CFR 449.2 - General definitions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... aircraft. This includes deicing and anti-icing fluids. Airfield pavement means all paved surfaces on the... defrosting or deicing for safe taxiing. Centralized deicing pad means a facility on an airfield designed for... remove or prevent any accumulation of snow or ice on: (1) An aircraft; or (2) Airfield pavement. Deicing...
40 CFR 449.2 - General definitions.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... aircraft. This includes deicing and anti-icing fluids. Airfield pavement means all paved surfaces on the... defrosting or deicing for safe taxiing. Centralized deicing pad means a facility on an airfield designed for... remove or prevent any accumulation of snow or ice on: (1) An aircraft; or (2) Airfield pavement. Deicing...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-06-01
The objective of this research was to examine the effects that different methods of RAP stockpile fractionation had on : the volumetric mix design properties for high-RAP content surface mixes. The processing of RAP materials resulted in : the degrad...
Evaluation of Liquid Detergents and Methods Used for Airfield Rubber Removal
2012-07-31
friction. Each detergent is applied to the pavement surface in controlled 50’ x 30’ patches. There were three patches placed for each detergent with...Measurements ..........................................................................................................16 6.3. Periodic Pavement Wetting...19 Figure 14. Pre-Cleaning Micro -Texture Data Graph (GT View Data
Skid resistance performance of asphalt wearing courses with electric arc furnace slag aggregates.
Kehagia, Fotini
2009-05-01
Metallurgical slags are by-products of the iron and steel industry and are subdivided into blast furnace slag and steel slag according to the different steel-producing processes. In Greece, slags are mostly produced from steelmaking using the electric arc furnace process, and subsequently are either disposed in a random way or utilized by the cement industry. Steel slag has been recently used, worldwide, as hard aggregates in wearing courses in order to improve the skidding resistance of asphalt pavements. At the Highway Laboratory, Department of Civil Engineering of Aristotle University of Thessaloniki research has been carried out in the field of steel slags, and especially in electric arc furnace (EAF) slag, to evaluate their possible use in highway engineering. In this paper, the recent results of anti-skidding performance of steel slag aggregates in highway pavements are presented.
Volatilization of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from coal-tar-sealed pavement
Van Metre, Peter C.; Majewski, Michael S.; Mahler, Barbara J.; Foreman, William T.; Braun, Christopher L.; Wilson, Jennifer T.; Burbank, Teresa L.
2012-01-01
Coal-tar-based pavement sealants, a major source of PAHs to urban water bodies, are a potential source of volatile PAHs to the atmosphere. An initial assessment of volatilization of PAHs from coal-tar-sealed pavement is presented here in which we measured summertime gas-phase PAH concentrations 0.03 m and 1.28 m above the pavement surface of seven sealed (six with coal-tar-based sealant and one with asphalt-based sealant) and three unsealed (two asphalt and one concrete) parking lots in central Texas. PAHs also were measured in parking lot dust. The geometric mean concentration of the sum of eight frequently detected PAHs (ΣPAH8) in the 0.03-m samples above sealed lots (1320 ng m-3) during the hottest part of the day was 20 times greater than that above unsealed lots (66.5 ng m-3). The geometric mean concentration in the 1.28-m samples above sealed lots (138 ng m-3) was five times greater than above unsealed lots (26.0 ng m-3). Estimated PAH flux from the sealed lots was 60 times greater than that from unsealed lots (geometric means of 88 and 1.4 μg m-2 h-1, respectively). Although the data set presented here is small, the much higher estimated fluxes from sealed pavement than from unsealed pavement indicate that coal-tar-based sealants are emitting PAHs to urban air at high rates compared to other paved surfaces.
Volatilization of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from coal-tar-sealed pavement.
Van Metre, Peter C; Majewski, Michael S; Mahler, Barbara J; Foreman, William T; Braun, Christopher L; Wilson, Jennifer T; Burbank, Teresa L
2012-06-01
Coal-tar-based pavement sealants, a major source of PAHs to urban water bodies, are a potential source of volatile PAHs to the atmosphere. An initial assessment of volatilization of PAHs from coal-tar-sealed pavement is presented here in which we measured summertime gas-phase PAH concentrations 0.03 m and 1.28 m above the pavement surface of seven sealed (six with coal-tar-based sealant and one with asphalt-based sealant) and three unsealed (two asphalt and one concrete) parking lots in central Texas. PAHs also were measured in parking lot dust. The geometric mean concentration of the sum of eight frequently detected PAHs (ΣPAH(8)) in the 0.03-m samples above sealed lots (1320 ng m(-3)) during the hottest part of the day was 20 times greater than that above unsealed lots (66.5 ng m(-3)). The geometric mean concentration in the 1.28-m samples above sealed lots (138 ng m(-3)) was five times greater than above unsealed lots (26.0 ng m(-3)). Estimated PAH flux from the sealed lots was 60 times greater than that from unsealed lots (geometric means of 88 and 1.4 μg m(-2) h(-1), respectively). Although the data set presented here is small, the much higher estimated fluxes from sealed pavement than from unsealed pavement indicate that coal-tar-based sealants are emitting PAHs to urban air at high rates compared to other paved surfaces. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Arianto, T.; Suprapto, M.; Syafi’i
2018-03-01
The pavement condition will decrease due to the influence of traffic and environment, so that the maintenance effort is needed to maintain the road condition during the service period. In order to carry out road maintenance activities right on target, there needs to be a plan based on accurate pavement condition data. Road roughness is the most commonly used condition parameter in evaluating pavement conditions objectively because road roughness data is relatively easy to obtain, well correlated with vehicle operating costs and the most relevant parameter in road functional performance measurement. The Roadroid is an Android-based application that measures road roughness by using vibration sensors on a smartphone so it is possible to get an International Roughness Index (IRI) value as an indicator of pavement conditions more easily and efficiently. Besides based on road roughness, pavement condition evaluation can also be done visually by using Surface Distress Index (SDI) method that uses the total crack area parameters, average crack width, total number of potholes and the average depth of rutting. This study attempts to assess the condition of Jenderal Sudirman-Kalianget road by combining IRI Roadroid value and SDI value which will be used as the basis to determine the required road maintenance. This road segment is one of the national strategic road connecting the center of Sumenep regency with the Kalianget harbor. Based on IRI measurement and SDI calculation, the pavement condition of Jenderal Sudirman-Kalianget road can be described 4.2 kilometers (37.17%) were good and 2.3 kilometers (20.35%) were fair that need routine maintenance. While 2.1 kilometers (18.58%) were bad and 2.7 kilometers (23.89%) were poor that need periodical maintenance and reconstruction.
Effect of Fractal Dimension on the Strain Behavior of Particulate Media
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Altun, Selim; Sezer, Alper; Goktepe, A. Burak
2016-12-01
In this study, the influence of several fractal identifiers of granular materials on dynamic behavior of a flexible pavement structure as a particulate stratum is considered. Using experimental results and numerical methods as well, 15 different grain-shaped sands obtained from 5 different sources were analyzed as pavement base course materials. Image analyses were carried out by use of a stereomicroscope on 15 different samples to obtain quantitative particle shape information. Furthermore, triaxial compression tests were conducted to determine stress-strain and shear strength parameters of sands. Additionally, the dynamic response of the particulate media to standard traffic loads was computed using finite element modeling (FEM) technique. Using area-perimeter, line divider and box counting methods, over a hundred grains for each sand type were subjected to fractal analysis. Relationships among fractal dimension descriptors and dynamic strain levels were established for assessment of importance of shape descriptors of sands at various scales on the dynamic behavior. In this context, the advantage of fractal geometry concept to describe irregular and fractured shapes was used to characterize the sands used as base course materials. Results indicated that fractal identifiers can be preferred to analyze the effect of shape properties of sands on dynamic behavior of pavement base layers.
Modeling the Hydrologic Processes of a Permeable Pavement ...
A permeable pavement system can capture stormwater to reduce runoff volume and flow rate, improve onsite groundwater recharge, and enhance pollutant controls within the site. A new unit process model for evaluating the hydrologic performance of a permeable pavement system has been developed in this study. The developed model can continuously simulate infiltration through the permeable pavement surface, exfiltration from the storage to the surrounding in situ soils, and clogging impacts on infiltration/exfiltration capacity at the pavement surface and the bottom of the subsurface storage unit. The exfiltration modeling component simulates vertical and horizontal exfiltration independently based on Darcy’s formula with the Green-Ampt approximation. The developed model can be arranged with physically-based modeling parameters, such as hydraulic conductivity, Manning’s friction flow parameters, saturated and field capacity volumetric water contents, porosity, density, etc. The developed model was calibrated using high-frequency observed data. The modeled water depths are well matched with the observed values (R2 = 0.90). The modeling results show that horizontal exfiltration through the side walls of the subsurface storage unit is a prevailing factor in determining the hydrologic performance of the system, especially where the storage unit is developed in a long, narrow shape; or with a high risk of bottom compaction and clogging. This paper presents unit
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dortch, J.; Schoenbohm, L. M.
2011-12-01
Wind erosion of bedrock has been suggested to be responsible for the removal of more than 800 m of strata in the Qaidam Basin while wind deposition creates large-scale landforms such as the loess plateau. Wind eroded landforms, such as desert pavements in the Namibian Desert, Africa, form relic landscapes that are stable for more than 5 Ma. Desert pavements are of particular importance because of their widespread occurrence on terraces and fans, in mountains and coastal areas, and in hot and cold deserts including: Southwestern Africa, Antartic Dry valleys, Southwest USA, Denmark, Ireland, Israel, Sweden, and Central Tibet. Moreover, greater than 95 % of ventifacts on desert pavements are suspected to be late Quaternary to Holocene in age and are located on surfaces suitable for cosmogenic radionuclide dating. In spite of this, glacial, fluvial, and mass wasting systems have received far more attention than wind as an important geomorphic agent of erosion, deposition, and rock mass redistribution. Our goal is to: 1) quantify bedrock wind erosion rates; 2) quantify the ages of old, stable desert pavements; 3) and to identify which lithology-isotope pair provides the most accurate exposure ages for desert pavements in arid landscapes. The Puna Plateau, Argentina, is an ideal area to undertake this study because numerous wind eroded/deposited landforms are present, rates of fluvial erosion are low, and glaciation is limited. Mapping using remote sensed images shows that a significant portion of the Puna Plateau surface is covered by wind eroded or wind deposited landforms. These landforms align with the dominant wind direction (southeast) determined from ~450 ventifact measurements from 9 locations on the plateau. Twelve amalgamated samples sets that span six lithologies (granite, gneiss, quartzite, rhyolite, diabase, and basalt) using four cosmogenic isotopes (10Be, 26Al, 36Cl, 3He) on ventifacted clasts were collected from two surfaces to identify the most appropriate lithologies and cosmogenic isotopes for obtaining an accurate chronology of desert pavements. Moreover, 3He dating of six in situ samples from basalt flows with independent 39Ar/40Ar ages will begin to address long-term time-averaged wind erosion rates of bedrock while enabling wind-erosion rate corrections for pavement ventifacts. Our results and methodology can be applied worldwide and will aid future research in the many environments where ventifacts and/or high wind erosion rates are found.
Liu, Chung-Ming; Chen, Jui-Wen; Tsai, Jen-Hui; Lin, Wei-Shian; Yen, M-T; Chen, Ting-Hao
2012-01-01
This study determines whether environment-protecting pervious pavement can dilute pollutants immediately after emissions from vehicle. The turbulence-driven dry-deposition process is too slow to be considered in this aspect. The pavement used is the JW pavement (according to its inventors name), a high-load-bearing water-permeable pavement with patents in over 100 countries, which has already been used for more than 8 years in Taiwan and is well suited to replacing conventional road pavement, making the potential implementation of the study results feasible. The design of this study included two sets of experiments. Variation of the air pollutant concentrations within a fenced area over the JW pavement with one vehicle discharging emissions into was monitored and compared with results over a non-JW pavement. The ambient wind speed was low during the first experiment, and the results obtained were highly credible. It was found that the JW pavement diluted vehicle pollutant emissions near the ground surface by 40%-87% within 5 min of emission; whereas the data at 2 m height suggested that about 58%-97% of pollutants were trapped underneath the pavement 20 min after emission. Those quantitative estimations may be off by +/- 10%, if errors in emissions and measurements were considered. SO2 and CO2 underwent the most significant reduction. Very likely, pollutants were forced to move underneath due to the special design of the pavement. During the second experiment, ambient wind speeds were high and the results obtained had less credibility, but they did not disprove the pollutant dilution capacity of the JW pavement. In order to track the fate of pollutants, parts of the pavement were removed to reveal a micro version of wetland underneath, which could possibly hold the responsibility of absorbing and decomposing pollutants to forms harmless to the environment and human health.
Tire Footprint Affects Hydroplaning On Wet Pavement
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Yager, Thomas J.
1989-01-01
Recent investigations of tire hydroplaning at highway speeds reveal, in addition to inflation pressure, tire-footprint aspect ratio (FAR), defined as width divided by length of tire surface in contact with pavement, significantly influences speed at which dynamic hydroplaning begins. Tire speeds and forces developed during tests of up to 65 mi/h (105 km/h) were monitored on flooded test surface to identify development of hydroplaning. Study focused on automotive tires because FAR's of automotive tires vary more than those of aircraft tires.
Open graded friction courses for HMA pavements.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-12-01
A laboratory study was conducted to evaluate OGFC mixtures meeting current Mississippi specifications. In addition, materials included a second 12.5 mm gradation and an asphalt rubber binder. The additional 12.5mm gradation was selected to evaluate a...
Characterization of asphalt treated base course material
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-06-01
Asphalt-treated bases are often used in new pavements; the materials are available and low-cost, but there is little data on how these materials perform in cold regions. : This study investigated four ATB types (hot asphalt, emulsion, foamed asphalt,...
Sato, T; Niioka, T; Kurasaki, M; Kojima, Y
1996-07-01
Increased use of motor vehicles has produced various risks to human health due to air pollution by noxious gases, heavy metals and roadside dust. Since the late 1970s, the wide spread use of studded tires for cars has caused pavement wear, resulting in not only economic losses, but also roadside air pollution in cold and snowy regions in Japan. The most serious environmental problem in Sapporo, a city with heavy snowfall, in the 1980s, was roadside dust derived from studded tires. The inhabitants suffered from this dust in the early winter and in the early spring when the streets were not covered with snow. To investigate the influence of such roadside dust upon human health, particle numbers in classified sizes of roadside dust were counted after the roadside dust in the air was collected with a device we constructed at 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, and 180 cm above the pavement surface. The results indicated that the concentration of roadside dust in the air did not greatly vary according to the height from the pavement surface. The results also suggested that xenogranuloma, reported in lungs of stray dogs, under roadside dust-pollution conditions such as those examined here, may occur in humans in the future.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency constructed a 4000-m2 parking lot in Edison, New Jersey in 2009. The parking lot is surfaced with three permeable pavements [permeable interlocking concrete pavers (PICP), pervious concrete (PC), and porous asphalt (PA)]. Samples of each p...
Pavement cells and the topology puzzle.
Carter, Ross; Sánchez-Corrales, Yara E; Hartley, Matthew; Grieneisen, Verônica A; Marée, Athanasius F M
2017-12-01
D'Arcy Thompson emphasised the importance of surface tension as a potential driving force in establishing cell shape and topology within tissues. Leaf epidermal pavement cells grow into jigsaw-piece shapes, highly deviating from such classical forms. We investigate the topology of developing Arabidopsis leaves composed solely of pavement cells. Image analysis of around 50,000 cells reveals a clear and unique topological signature, deviating from previously studied epidermal tissues. This topological distribution is established early during leaf development, already before the typical pavement cell shapes emerge, with topological homeostasis maintained throughout growth and unaltered between division and maturation zones. Simulating graph models, we identify a heuristic cellular division rule that reproduces the observed topology. Our parsimonious model predicts how and when cells effectively place their division plane with respect to their neighbours. We verify the predicted dynamics through in vivo tracking of 800 mitotic events, and conclude that the distinct topology is not a direct consequence of the jigsaw piece-like shape of the cells, but rather owes itself to a strongly life history-driven process, with limited impact from cell-surface mechanics. © 2017. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.
Multimodal approach to seismic pavement testing
Ryden, N.; Park, C.B.; Ulriksen, P.; Miller, R.D.
2004-01-01
A multimodal approach to nondestructive seismic pavement testing is described. The presented approach is based on multichannel analysis of all types of seismic waves propagating along the surface of the pavement. The multichannel data acquisition method is replaced by multichannel simulation with one receiver. This method uses only one accelerometer-receiver and a light hammer-source, to generate a synthetic receiver array. This data acquisition technique is made possible through careful triggering of the source and results in such simplification of the technique that it is made generally available. Multiple dispersion curves are automatically and objectively extracted using the multichannel analysis of surface waves processing scheme, which is described. Resulting dispersion curves in the high frequency range match with theoretical Lamb waves in a free plate. At lower frequencies there are several branches of dispersion curves corresponding to the lower layers of different stiffness in the pavement system. The observed behavior of multimodal dispersion curves is in agreement with theory, which has been validated through both numerical modeling and the transfer matrix method, by solving for complex wave numbers. ?? ASCE / JUNE 2004.
Pavement cells and the topology puzzle
2017-01-01
D'Arcy Thompson emphasised the importance of surface tension as a potential driving force in establishing cell shape and topology within tissues. Leaf epidermal pavement cells grow into jigsaw-piece shapes, highly deviating from such classical forms. We investigate the topology of developing Arabidopsis leaves composed solely of pavement cells. Image analysis of around 50,000 cells reveals a clear and unique topological signature, deviating from previously studied epidermal tissues. This topological distribution is established early during leaf development, already before the typical pavement cell shapes emerge, with topological homeostasis maintained throughout growth and unaltered between division and maturation zones. Simulating graph models, we identify a heuristic cellular division rule that reproduces the observed topology. Our parsimonious model predicts how and when cells effectively place their division plane with respect to their neighbours. We verify the predicted dynamics through in vivo tracking of 800 mitotic events, and conclude that the distinct topology is not a direct consequence of the jigsaw piece-like shape of the cells, but rather owes itself to a strongly life history-driven process, with limited impact from cell-surface mechanics. PMID:29084800
Assessment of technical condition of concrete pavement by the example of district road
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Linek, M.; Nita, P.; Żebrowski, W.; Wolka, P.
2018-05-01
The article presents the comprehensive assessment of concrete pavement condition. Analyses included the district road located in the swietokrzyskie province, used for 11 years. Comparative analyses were conducted twice. The first analysis was carried out after 9 years of pavement operation, in 2015. In order to assess the extent of pavement degradation, the tests were repeated in 2017. Within the scope of field research, the traffic intensity within the analysed road section was determined. Visual assessment of pavement condition was conducted, according to the guidelines included in SOSN-B. Visual assessment can be extended by ground-penetrating radar measurements which allow to provide comprehensive assessment of the occurred structure changes within its entire thickness and length. The assessment included also performance parameters, i.e. pavement regularity, surface roughness and texture. Extension of test results by the assessment of changes in internal structure of concrete composite and structure observations by means of Scanning Electron Microscope allow for the assessment of parameters of internal structure of hardened concrete. Supplementing the observations of internal structure by means of computed tomography scan provides comprehensive information of possible discontinuities and composite structure. According to the analysis of the obtained results, conclusions concerning the analysed pavement condition were reached. It was determined that the pavement is distinguished by high performance parameters, its condition is good and it does not require any repairs. Maintenance treatment was suggested in order to extend the period of proper operation of the analysed pavement.
Kinoshita, Isao; Sanbe, Akiko; Yokomura, E-iti
2008-01-01
Changes in nuclear DNA content and cell size of adaxial and abaxial epidermal pavement cells were investigated using bright light-induced leaf expansion of Phaseolus vulgaris plants. In primary leaves of bean plants grown under high (sunlight) or moderate (ML; photon flux density, 163 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) light, most adaxial epidermal pavement cells had a nucleus with the 4C amount of DNA, whereas most abaxial pavement cells had a 2C nucleus. In contrast, plants grown under low intensity white light (LL; 15 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) for 13 d, when cell proliferation of epidermal pavement cells had already finished, had a 2C nuclear DNA content in most adaxial pavement cells. When these LL-grown plants were transferred to ML, the increase in irradiance raised the frequency of 4C nuclei in adaxial but not in abaxial pavement cells within 4 d. On the other hand, the size of abaxial pavement cells increased by 53% within 4 d of transfer to ML and remained unchanged thereafter, whereas adaxial pavement cells continuously enlarged for 12 d. This suggests that the increase in adaxial cell size after 4 d is supported by the nuclear DNA doubling. The different responses between adaxial and abaxial epidermal cells were not induced by the different light intensity at both surfaces. It was shown that adaxial epidermal cells have a different property than abaxial ones.
Pavement noise measurements in Poland
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zofka, Ewa; Zofka, Adam; Mechowski, Tomasz
2017-09-01
The objective of this study is to investigate the feasibility of the On-Board Sound Intensity (OBSI) system to measure tire-pavement noise in Poland. In general, sources of noise emitted by the modern vehicles are the propulsion noise, aerodynamic resistance and noise generated at the tire-pavement interface. In order to capture tire-pavement noise, the OBSI system uses a noise intensity probe installed in the close proximity of that interface. In this study, OBSI measurements were performed at different types of pavement surfaces such as stone mastic asphalt (SMA), regular asphalt concrete (HMA) as well as Portland cement concrete (PCC). The influence of several necessary OBSI measurement conditions were recognized as: testing speed, air temperature, tire pressure and tire type. The results of this study demonstrate that the OBSI system is a viable and robust tool that can be used for the quality evaluation of newly built asphalt pavements in Poland. It can be also applied to generate reliable input parameters for the noise propagation models that are used to assess the environmental impact of new and existing highway corridors.
Effects on evaporation rates from different water-permeable pavement designs.
Starke, P; Göbel, P; Coldewey, W G
2011-01-01
The urban water balance can be attenuated to the natural by water-permeable pavements (WPPs). Furthermore, WPPs have a 16% higher evaporation rate than impermeable pavements, which can lead to a better urban climate. Evaporation rates from pavements are influenced by the pavement surface and by the deeper layers. By a compared evaporation measurement between different WPP designs, the grain size distribution of the sub-base shows no influence on the evaporation rates in a significant way. On the contrary, a sub-base made of a twin-layer decreases the evaporation by 16% compared to a homogeneous sub-base. By a change in the colour of the paving stone, 19% higher evaporation rates could be achieved. A further comparison shows that the transpiration-effect of the grass in grass pavers increases the evaporation rates more than threefold to pervious concrete pavements. These high evapotranspiration rates can not be achieved with a pervious concrete paving stone. In spite of this, the broad field of application of the pervious concrete paving stone increases the importance in regard to the urban climate.
Grip Analysis of Road Surface and Tire Footprint Using FEM
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sabri, M.; Abda, S.
2018-02-01
Road grip involve a touch between road pavement and the tire tread pattern. The load bearing surface, which depends on pavement roughness and local pressures in the contact patch. This research conducted to develop a Finite element model for simulating the experimentally testing of asphalt in Jl. AH Nasution Medan, North Sumatera Indonesia base on the value of grip coefficient from various tire loads and the various speed of the vehicle during contact to the road. A tire model and road pavement are developed for the analyses the geometry of tire footprint. The results showed that the greater the mass of car will increase grip coefficient. The coefficient of grip on the road surface contact trough the tire footprint strongly influence the kinetic coefficient of friction at certain speeds. Experimentally show that Concrete road grip coefficient of more than 34% compared to the asphalt road at the same IRI parameters (6-8). Kinetic friction coefficient more than 0.33 was obtained in a asphalt path at a speed of 30-40 Km/hour.
The effect of different surface materials on runoff quality in permeable pavement systems.
Li, Haiyan; Li, Zhifei; Zhang, Xiaoran; Li, Zhuorong; Liu, Dongqing; Li, Tanghu; Zhang, Ziyang
2017-09-01
To investigate the effect of different permeable pavement surface materials on the removal of pollutants from urban storm-runoff, six commonly surface materials (porous asphalt, porous concrete, cement brick, ceramic brick, sand base brick, and shale brick) were selected in this study and the research was carried out by column experiments. Except the concentrations of total suspended solids (TSS), chemical oxygen demand (COD), ammonia nitrogen (NH 4 -N), nitrate nitrogen (NO 3 -N), total nitrogen (TN), and total phosphorus (TP) in the influent and effluent that were measured, the removal mechanism of pollutants was discussed further. The results indicate that the surface materials influence the removal efficiency of pollutants greatly and have different effects on certain pollutant. Furthermore, the physical interception and adsorption would be the main mechanism for the removal of pollutants from runoff. For example, for all surface materials, the average removal efficiency of TSS is nearly about 90.0% because of physical interception. Due to the amount of iron oxide, the removal efficiency of COD, NO 3 -N, and TN of shale brick was 88.2, 35.1, and 17.5%, respectively. NH 4 -N and TN can be easily removed by porous asphalt due to the high content of organic matter. By lacking of useful adsorption sites, all the surface materials had little effect on the removal of TP from runoff. This research could offer useful guidelines for the better design of permeable pavement system and promote the insight into the removal mechanism of pollutants in permeable pavement system. Graphical abstract Different types of materials for the different types of pollutants in the runoff purification capacity were significantly different, overall, shale brick and porous asphalt Shale bricks and porous asphalt have a better purification effect according to the six kinds of materials.
Evaluating Use of Sub-Grade Drains with PFC for Stormwater Drainage : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-08-01
The overarching objective of this project is to evaluate the effectiveness of incorporated subgrade drain (usually called underdrain) in the permeable friction course (PFC) pavement to facilitate drainage of stormwater within and on the pavemen...
Change orders and lessons learned : KYSPR-09-384.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-01-01
Concrete pavement performance depends greatly on the support that it receives from the base course and underlying soil layers as well as other support-related factors such as slab curling and warping and slab-base friction. The National Cooperative H...
0-6621 : developing a mixture-based specification for flexible base.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-08-01
The Texas Department of Transportation : (TxDOT) currently utilizes Item 247, Flexible : Base, to specify a foundation course of flexible : base utilized in a pavement. Base materials are : not allowed to be used by the contractors until : the ...
Field evaluation of porous asphalt pavement
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2004-05-01
This report summarizes the construction and early performance of a field trial of a Porous Friction Course (PFC) in Indiana. The PFC is compared to an adjacent section of Stone Matrix Asphalt (SMA) constructed at the same time using the same binder, ...
NovaChip pilot project : Route 5, Waterboro, Brownfield, & Fryeburg.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-02-01
In July & August, 2010, MaineDOT conducted experimental applications of NovaChip on 16 miles : of highway in western Maine. Novachip is a proprietary pavement process that applies an ultrathin, : gap-graded, hot mix wearing course over a polymer rich...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1999-01-01
Geogrids can be used successfully for subgrade stabilization under permanent pavements. To be successful, proper designs incorporating existing soil conditions and anticipated loading need to be performed. subgrade soil strength should be determined ...
Quantifying Evaporation in a Permeable Pavement System ...
Studies quantifying evaporation from permeable pavement systems are limited to a few laboratory studies and one field application. This research quantifies evaporation for a larger-scale field application by measuring the water balance from lined permeable pavement sections. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) constructed a 0.4-ha parking lot in Edison, NJ, that incorporated three different permeable pavement types in the parking lanes – permeable interlocking concrete pavers (PICP), pervious concrete (PC), and porous asphalt (PA). An impermeable liner installed 0.4 m below the driving surface in four 11.6-m by 4.74-m sections per each pavement type captures all infiltrating water and routes it to collection tanks that can contain events up to 38 mm. Each section has a design impervious area to permeable pavement area ratio of 0.66:1. Pressure transducers installed in the underdrain collection tanks measured water level for 24 months. Level was converted to volume using depth-to-volume ratios for individual collection tanks. Using a water balance approach, the measured infiltrate volume was compared to rainfall volume on an event-basis to determine the rainfall retained in the pavement strata and underlying aggregate. Evaporation since the previous event created additional storage in the pavement and aggregate layers. Events were divided into three groups based on antecedent dry period (ADP) and three, four-month categories of potential e
Benoit, Gaëlle; Heinkélé, Christophe; Gourdon, Emmanuel
2013-12-01
This paper deals with a numerical procedure to identify the acoustical parameters of road pavement from surface impedance measurements. This procedure comprises three steps. First, a suitable equivalent fluid model for the acoustical properties porous media is chosen, the variation ranges for the model parameters are set, and a sensitivity analysis for this model is performed. Second, this model is used in the parameter inversion process, which is performed with simulated annealing in a selected frequency range. Third, the sensitivity analysis and inversion process are repeated to estimate each parameter in turn. This approach is tested on data obtained for porous bituminous concrete and using the Zwikker and Kosten equivalent fluid model. This work provides a good foundation for the development of non-destructive in situ methods for the acoustical characterization of road pavements.
Effects of Interlocking and Supporting Conditions on Concrete Block Pavements
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mahapatra, Geetimukta; Kalita, Kuldeep
2018-02-01
Concrete Block Paving (CBP) is widely used as wearing course in flexible pavements, preferably under light and medium vehicular loadings. Construction of CBP at site is quick and easy in quality control. Usually, flexible pavement design philosophy is followed in CBP construction, though it is structurally different in terms of small block elements with high strength concrete and their interlocking aspects, frequent joints and discontinuity, restrained edge etc. Analytical solution for such group action of concrete blocks under loading in a three dimensional multilayer structure is complex and thus, the need of conducting experimental studies is necessitated for extensive understanding of the load—deformation characteristics and behavior of concrete blocks in pavement. The present paper focuses on the experimental studies for load transfer characteristics of CBP under different interlocking and supporting conditions. It is observed that both interlocking and supporting conditions affect significantly on the load transfer behavior in CBP structures. Coro-lock block exhibits better performance in terms of load carrying capacity and distortion behavior under static loads. Plate load tests are performed over subgrade, granular sub-base (GSB), CBP with and without GSB using different block shapes. For an example case, the comparison of CBP with conventional flexible pavement section is also presented and it is found that CBP provides considerable benefit in terms of construction cost of the road structure.
Charlesworth, Susanne M; Beddow, Jamie; Nnadi, Ernest O
2017-06-21
Pervious Paving Systems (PPS) are part of a sustainable approach to drainage in which excess surface water is encouraged to infiltrate through their structure, during which potentially toxic elements, such as metals and hydrocarbons are treated by biodegradation and physical entrapment and storage. However, it is not known where in the PPS structure these contaminants accumulate, which has implications for environmental health, particularly during maintenance, as well as consequences for the recycling of material from the PPS at the end-of-life. A 1 m³ porous asphalt (PA) PPS test rig was monitored for 38 months after monthly additions of road sediment (RS) (367.5 g in total) and unused oil (430 mL in total), characteristic of urban loadings, were applied. Using a rainfall simulator, a typical UK rainfall rate of 15 mm/h was used to investigate its efficiency in dealing with contamination. Water quality of the effluent discharged from the rig was found to be suitable for discharge to most environments. On completion of the monitoring, a core was taken down through its surface, and samples of sediment and aggregate were taken. Analysis showed that most of the sediment remained in the surface course, with metal levels lower than the original RS, but higher than clean, unused aggregate or PA. However, even extrapolating these concentrations to 20 years' worth of in-service use (the projected life of PPS) did not suggest their accumulation would present an environmental pollution risk when carrying out maintenance of the pavement and also indicates that the material could be recycled at end-of-life.
Charlesworth, Susanne M.; Beddow, Jamie; Nnadi, Ernest O.
2017-01-01
Pervious Paving Systems (PPS) are part of a sustainable approach to drainage in which excess surface water is encouraged to infiltrate through their structure, during which potentially toxic elements, such as metals and hydrocarbons are treated by biodegradation and physical entrapment and storage. However, it is not known where in the PPS structure these contaminants accumulate, which has implications for environmental health, particularly during maintenance, as well as consequences for the recycling of material from the PPS at the end-of-life. A 1 m3 porous asphalt (PA) PPS test rig was monitored for 38 months after monthly additions of road sediment (RS) (367.5 g in total) and unused oil (430 mL in total), characteristic of urban loadings, were applied. Using a rainfall simulator, a typical UK rainfall rate of 15 mm/h was used to investigate its efficiency in dealing with contamination. Water quality of the effluent discharged from the rig was found to be suitable for discharge to most environments. On completion of the monitoring, a core was taken down through its surface, and samples of sediment and aggregate were taken. Analysis showed that most of the sediment remained in the surface course, with metal levels lower than the original RS, but higher than clean, unused aggregate or PA. However, even extrapolating these concentrations to 20 years’ worth of in-service use (the projected life of PPS) did not suggest their accumulation would present an environmental pollution risk when carrying out maintenance of the pavement and also indicates that the material could be recycled at end-of-life. PMID:28635641
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency constructed a 4000-m2 parking lot in Edison, New Jersey in 2009. The parking lot is surfaced with three permeable pavements [permeable interlocking concrete pavers (PICP), pervious concrete (PC), and porous asphalt (PA)]. Samples of each p...
Sotiriou, P; Giannoutsou, E; Panteris, E; Galatis, B; Apostolakos, P
2018-03-01
The distribution of homogalacturonans (HGAs) displaying different degrees of esterification as well as of callose was examined in cell walls of mature pavement cells in two angiosperm and two fern species. We investigated whether local cell wall matrix differentiation may enable pavement cells to respond to mechanical tension forces by transiently altering their shape. HGA epitopes, identified with 2F4, JIM5 and JIM7 antibodies, and callose were immunolocalised in hand-made or semithin leaf sections. Callose was also stained with aniline blue. The structure of pavement cells was studied with light and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). In all species examined, pavement cells displayed wavy anticlinal cell walls, but the waviness pattern differed between angiosperms and ferns. The angiosperm pavement cells were tightly interconnected throughout their whole depth, while in ferns they were interconnected only close to the external periclinal cell wall and intercellular spaces were developed between them close to the mesophyll. Although the HGA epitopes examined were located along the whole cell wall surface, the 2F4- and JIM5- epitopes were especially localised at cell lobe tips. In fern pavement cells, the contact sites were impregnated with callose and JIM5-HGA epitopes. When tension forces were applied on leaf regions, the pavement cells elongated along the stretching axis, due to a decrease in waviness of anticlinal cell walls. After removal of tension forces, the original cell shape was resumed. The presented data support that HGA epitopes make the anticlinal pavement cell walls flexible, in order to reversibly alter their shape. Furthermore, callose seems to offer stability to cell contacts between pavement cells, as already suggested in photosynthetic mesophyll cells. © 2017 German Society for Plant Sciences and The Royal Botanical Society of the Netherlands.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Le Touz, N.; Toullier, T.; Dumoulin, J.
2017-05-01
The present study addresses the thermal behaviour of a modified pavement structure to prevent icing at its surface in adverse winter time conditions or overheating in hot summer conditions. First a multi-physic model based on infinite elements method was built to predict the evolution of the surface temperature. In a second time, laboratory experiments on small specimen were carried out and the surface temperature was monitored by infrared thermography. Results obtained are analyzed and performances of the numerical model for real scale outdoor application are discussed. Finally conclusion and perspectives are proposed.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2005-10-01
Trenchless technology offers methods by which underground utilities may be installed without damage to overlying pavement, if proper precautions are observed. In the past ten years, repeated improvements in technology, materials, and methods have adv...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1998-08-01
The report describes the first testing series, Phase, of the first project, Experiment 1, with the Louisiana Transportation Research Center Accelerated Loading Facility. The background to the project is described and details of the trial pavements si...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2001-11-01
This report describes the test results of the first project at the Louisiana Transportation Research Center's Accelerated Loading Facility (ALF). In 1995, 9 test lanes were constructed at the Louisiana Pavement Research Facility in Port Allen. These ...
Financial impact of fines in the unbound pavement layers.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-10-01
This study continued the research effort on evaluating the resilient behavior of D-1 base course materials when there is limited water : access during freezing. D-1 material from the Northern region of Alaska was used, and a closed system was adopted...
Experimental pavement delineation treatments
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bryden, J. E.; Lorini, R. A.
1981-06-01
Visibility and durability of materials used to delineate shoulders and medians adjacent to asphalt pavements were evaluated. Materials evaluated were polysulfide and coal tar epoxies, one and two component polyesters, portland cement, acrylic paints, modified-alkyd traffic paint, preformed plastic tape, and thermoplastic markings. Neat applications, sand mortars, and surface treatments were installed in several geometric patterns including cross hatches, solid median treatments, and various widths of edge lines. Thermoplastic pavement markings generally performed very well, providing good visibility under adverse viewing conditions for at least 4 years. Thermoplastic 4 in. wide edge lines appear to provide adequate visibility for most conditions.
Thermal conductance of and heat generation in tire-pavement interface and effect on aircraft braking
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Miller, C. D.
1976-01-01
A finite-difference analysis was performed on temperature records obtained from a free rolling automotive tire and from pavement surface. A high thermal contact conductance between tire and asphalt was found on a statistical basis. Average slip due to squirming between tire and asphalt was about 1.5 mm. Consequent friction heat was estimated as 64 percent of total power absorbed by bias-ply, belted tire. Extrapolation of results to aircraft tire indicates potential braking improvement by even moderate increase of heat absorbing capacity of runway surface.
Analysis of fatigue on surface course using dissipated energy approach
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Michael; Setyawan, A.; Pramesti, F. P.
2018-03-01
As an important transportation infrastructure, pavement is subjected to repeated vehicle loads that may cause fatigue, which often leads to cracking. The point when this cracking initiates can be determined from the energy dissipated during the loading. This research investigates fatigue in Adi Soemarmo Airport mix-design using bitumen Pen 60/70 + EVA (Ethyl Vinyl Acetate) polymer. An Indirect Tensile Fatigue Test (ITFT) was conducted using stress-controlled loading mode to determine its fatigue life. The stress levels were 500, 600, and 700 kPa, while the loading frequency and the temperature were 10 Hz and 20°C, respectively. The test exhibits strain levels for each loading cycle, which were used to determine the dissipated energy (DE). The result indicates that the DE increases when the number of loading cycles increases, due to progress of the strain levels. The values of DE are 7122.8, 8614.3, and 2654.9 J/m3 for loading levels of 500, 600, and 700 kPa, respectively, whereas the failure points for stress levels of 500, 600, and 700 kPa are 8171, 5161, and 841 cycles, respectively. Thus, the longer the time until the pavement failure point is reached (fatigue life), the greater the amount of energy that is dissipated.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-07-01
This study aimed to evaluate the long term performance of the selected surface friction treatments, including high friction surface treatment (HFST) using calcined bauxite and steel slag, and conventional friction surfacing, in particular pavement pr...
Assessment of highway condition using combined geophysical surveys
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dera, Abdallah Alhadi
Four pavement sections were investigated using ground penetrating radar (GPR) and Ultrasonic Surface Wave (USW). The objective of this research was to compare the effectiveness of two non-destructive geophysical tools, GPR and the PSPA, in assessing the condition of the pavements, composed of different construction materials. The GPR data were acquired using a 1.5 GHz antenna along five traverses spaced at two ft. intervals approximately 1000 ft. long. On the other hand, the PSPA data were acquired at the stations spaced at 1000 ft. along the five GPR traverses. Core samples were collected at each site to constrain the interpretation of the acquired geophysical data. The sites include section US 63 about three miles north of Rolla, US 54 in Camdenton County, MO 179 in Jefferson City, and HWY U in Dent County. The types of pavement in these sites were, asphalt concrete overlaying portland cement concrete (AC/PCC), and full-depth asphalt concrete (AC) pavements or full depth bituminous mix (BM). Based on the acquired and analyzed data of the GPR and PSPA, the data of both tools correlated reasonably well. The PSPA technique successfully measured the elastic modulus and the thickness of pavement and detected horizontal flaws (e.g. debonding and delaminations). Similarly, the GPR technique successfully measured the thickness of pavement and detected horizontal flaws (e.g. debonding and delaminations) within the pavement. The research demonstrated that both non-destructive geophysical tools (GPR and PSPA) are effective in assessing the condition of different types of pavement.
Friction evaluation of concrete paver blocks for airport pavement applications
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Yager, Thomas J.
1992-01-01
The development and use of concrete paver blocks is reviewed and some general specifications for application of this type of pavement surface at airport facilities are given. Two different shapes of interlocking concrete paver blocks installed in the track surface at NASA Langley's Aircraft Landing Dynamics Facility (ALDF) are described. Preliminary cornering performance results from testing of 40 x 14 radial-belted and bias-ply aircraft tires are reviewed. These tire tests are part of a larger, ongoing joint NASA/FAA/Industry Surface Traction and Radial Tire (START) Program involving several different tire sizes. Both dry and wet surface conditions were evaluated on the two concrete paver block test surfaces and a conventional, nongrooved Portland cement concrete surface. Future test plans involving evaluation of other concrete paver block designs at the ALDF are indicated.
Assessment of in-situ test technology for construction control of base courses and embankments.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2004-05-01
With the coming move from an empirical to mechanistic-empirical pavement design, it is essential to improve the quality control/quality assurance (QC/QA) procedures of compacted materials from a density-based criterion to a stiffness/strength-based c...
Reclaimed manufacturer asphalt roofing shingles in asphalt mixtures. Final research report
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Reed, A.B.
1999-04-23
The purpose of this project was to pave a test section using hot mix asphalt with roofing shingle pieces in the wearing and binder courses and to evaluate. The test project near Allentown, PA plus two other test projects in 1998 provide evidence of very good pavement performance. The bituminous concrete mix was modified with shredded shingles with a maximum size of 1/2 inch which added 1% of the asphalt content. The Department issued a statewide Provisional Specification titled Reclaimed Manufacturer Asphalt Roofing Shingles in Plant-Mixed Bituminous Concrete Courses'' on March 15, 1999. New manufacturer asphalt roofing shingle scrap includingmore » tab punch-outs can be successfully incorporated in bituminous concrete pavements if the shingles are shredded to 100% passing the 3/4 inch sieve. To take full advantage of the potential to replace a portion of the asphalt and therefore, reduce mix costs, shingles should be shredded to 100% passing minus 1/2 inch sieve.« less
In 2009, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency constructed a 0.4-ha (1-ac) parking lot surfaced with three different permeable pavement types (interlocking concrete pavers, porous concrete, and porous asphalt) and six bioinfiltration areas with three different drainage area to...
Evaluation of Flowable Fill Surface Performance
2016-11-01
Army position unless so designated by other authorized documents. DESTROY THIS REPORT WHEN NO LONGER NEEDED. DO NOT RETURN IT TO THE ORIGINATOR...33 viii Preface This study was conducted for the U.S. Air Force’s (USAF) pavement evaluation teams, contingency readiness groups, base civil...engineers, major command pavement engineers, Rapid Engineer Deployable Heavy Operational Repair Squadron Engineer (RED HORSE) squadrons, and Prime Base
Detection of asphalt pavement cracks using remote sensing techniques
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mettas, Christodoulos; Agapiou, Athos; Themistocleous, Kyriacos; Neocleous, Kyriacos; Hadjimitsis, Diofantos G.
2016-10-01
Deterioration of asphalt road pavements is inevitable throughout its life cycle. There are several types of deterioration that take place on these surfaces, like surface defects and deformations. One of the most common asphalt defects is cracking. Fatigue, transverse, longitudinal, reflective, edge, block and slippage are types of cracking that can be observed anywhere in the world. Monitoring and preventative/periodic maintenance of these types of wears are two very important actions that have to take place to avoid "costly" solutions. This paper aims to introduce the spectral characteristics of uncracked (healthy) and cracked asphalt surfaces which can give a new asphalt crack index. This is performed through remote sensing applications in the area of asphalt pavements. Multispectral images can be elaborated using the index to enhance crack marks on asphalt surfaces. Ground spectral signatures were acquired from both uncracked and cracked asphalted areas of Cyprus (Limassol). Evaluation separability indices can be used to identify the optimum wavelength regions that can distinguish better the uncracked and cracked asphalt surfaces. The results revealed that the spectral sensitivity for the enhancement of cracked asphalt was detected using the Euclidean, Mahalanobis and Cosine Distance Indices in the Vis range (approximately at 450 nm) and in the SWIR 1 range (approximately at 1750 nm).
Automated management for pavement inspection system (AMPIS)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chung, Hung Chi; Girardello, Roberto; Soeller, Tony; Shinozuka, Masanobu
2003-08-01
An automated in-situ road surface distress surveying and management system, AMPIS, has been developed on the basis of video images within the framework of GIS software. Video image processing techniques are introduced to acquire, process and analyze the road surface images obtained from a moving vehicle. ArcGIS platform is used to integrate the routines of image processing and spatial analysis in handling the full-scale metropolitan highway surface distress detection and data fusion/management. This makes it possible to present user-friendly interfaces in GIS and to provide efficient visualizations of surveyed results not only for the use of transportation engineers to manage road surveying documentations, data acquisition, analysis and management, but also for financial officials to plan maintenance and repair programs and further evaluate the socio-economic impacts of highway degradation and deterioration. A review performed in this study on fundamental principle of Pavement Management System (PMS) and its implementation indicates that the proposed approach of using GIS concept and its tools for PMS application will reshape PMS into a new information technology-based system providing a convenient and efficient pavement inspection and management.
Dong, Zehua; Ye, Shengbo; Gao, Yunze; Fang, Guangyou; Zhang, Xiaojuan; Xue, Zhongjun; Zhang, Tao
2016-01-01
The thickness estimation of the top surface layer and surface layer, as well as the detection of road defects, are of great importance to the quality conditions of asphalt pavement. Although ground penetrating radar (GPR) methods have been widely used in non-destructive detection of pavements, the thickness estimation of the thin top surface layer is still a difficult problem due to the limitations of GPR resolution and the similar permittivity of asphalt sub-layers. Besides, the detection of some road defects, including inadequate compaction and delamination at interfaces, require further practical study. In this paper, a newly-developed vehicle-mounted GPR detection system is introduced. We used a horizontal high-pass filter and a modified layer localization method to extract the underground layers. Besides, according to lab experiments and simulation analysis, we proposed theoretical methods for detecting the degree of compaction and delamination at the interface, respectively. Moreover, a field test was carried out and the estimated results showed a satisfactory accuracy of the system and methods. PMID:27929409
Dong, Zehua; Ye, Shengbo; Gao, Yunze; Fang, Guangyou; Zhang, Xiaojuan; Xue, Zhongjun; Zhang, Tao
2016-12-06
The thickness estimation of the top surface layer and surface layer, as well as the detection of road defects, are of great importance to the quality conditions of asphalt pavement. Although ground penetrating radar (GPR) methods have been widely used in non-destructive detection of pavements, the thickness estimation of the thin top surface layer is still a difficult problem due to the limitations of GPR resolution and the similar permittivity of asphalt sub-layers. Besides, the detection of some road defects, including inadequate compaction and delamination at interfaces, require further practical study. In this paper, a newly-developed vehicle-mounted GPR detection system is introduced. We used a horizontal high-pass filter and a modified layer localization method to extract the underground layers. Besides, according to lab experiments and simulation analysis, we proposed theoretical methods for detecting the degree of compaction and delamination at the interface, respectively. Moreover, a field test was carried out and the estimated results showed a satisfactory accuracy of the system and methods.
Winston, Ryan J; Al-Rubaei, Ahmed M; Blecken, Godecke T; Viklander, Maria; Hunt, William F
2016-03-15
The surface infiltration rates (SIR) of permeable pavements decline with time as sediment and debris clog pore spaces. Effective maintenance techniques are needed to ensure the hydraulic functionality and water quality benefits of this stormwater control. Eight different small-scale and full-scale maintenance techniques aimed at recovering pavement permeability were evaluated at ten different permeable pavement sites in the USA and Sweden. Maintenance techniques included manual removal of the upper 2 cm of fill material, mechanical street sweeping, regenerative-air street sweeping, vacuum street sweeping, hand-held vacuuming, high pressure washing, and milling of porous asphalt. The removal of the upper 2 cm of clogging material did not significantly improve the SIR of concrete grid paves (CGP) and permeable interlocking concrete pavers (PICP) due to the inclusion of fines in the joint and bedding stone during construction, suggesting routine maintenance cannot overcome improper construction. For porous asphalt maintenance, industrial hand-held vacuum cleaning, pressure washing, and milling were increasingly successful at recovering the SIR. Milling to a depth of 2.5 cm nearly restored the SIR for a 21-year old porous asphalt pavement to like-new conditions. For PICP, street sweepers employing suction were shown to be preferable to mechanical sweepers; additionally, maintenance efforts may become more intensive over time to maintain a threshold SIR, as maintenance was not 100% effective at removing clogging material. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Comparative Evaluation of 4-Inch and 6-Inch Diameter Specimens for Testing Large Stone Asphalt Mixes
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1990-01-01
Increased incidence of premature rutting of heavy duty asphalt pavements has : been experienced in recent years. There is a general agreement among most : asphalt paving technologists that the use of large size stone in the binder and : base courses ...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2006-05-01
This report describes two related studies intended to address double-lane roundabout accessibility issues for visually impaired pedestrians. The first study was conducted on a closed course to evaluate the feasibility of a pavement treatment to alert...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1996-11-01
The Louisiana Transportation Research Center's (LTRC) Pavement Research Facility (PRF) is a permanent, outdoor, full-scale testing laboratory located on a six site in Port Allen, Louisiana. The purpose of this facility is to test and quantify full-sc...
A pavement Moisture Accelerated Distress (MAD) identification system, volume 2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Carpenter, S. H.; Darter, M. I.; Dempsey, B. J.
1981-09-01
A users manual is designed which provides the engineer with a rational method of examining a pavement and determining rehabilitation needs that are related to the causes of the existing distress, particularly moisture related distress. The key elements in this procedure are the MAD Index developed in Volume 1, the Pavement Condition Index (PCI) and the Moisture Distress Index (MDI). Step by step procedures are presented for calculating each parameter. Complete distress identification manuals are included for asphalt surfaced highways and jointed reinforced concrete highways with pictures and descriptions of all major distress types. Descriptions of the role moisture plays in the development of each distress type are included.
Selbig, William R.; Buer, Nicolas
2018-05-11
Three permeable pavement surfaces - asphalt (PA), concrete (PC), and interlocking pavers (PIP) - were evaluated side-by-side to measure changes to the infiltrative capacity and water quality of stormwater runoff originating from a conventional asphalt parking lot in Madison, Wisconsin. During the 24-month monitoring period (2014-16), all three permeable pavements resulted in statistically significant reductions in the cumulative load of solids (total suspended solids and suspended sediment), total phosphorus, Escherichia coli (E. coli), and Enterococci. Most of the removal occurred through capture and retention in the void spaces of each permeable surface and aggregate base. The largest reduction in total suspended solids was for PC at 80 percent, followed by PIP and PA at 69 and 65 percent, respectively. Reductions (generally less than 50 percent) in total phosphorus also were observed, which might have been tempered by increases in the dissolved fraction observed in PIP and PA. Conversely, PC results indicated a slight reduction in dissolved phosphorus but failed to meet statistical significance. E. coli and Enterococci were reduced by about 80 percent for PC, almost twice the amount observed for PIP and PA.Results for the PIP and PC surfaces initially indicated higher pollutant load reduction than results for the PA surface. The efficiency of PIP and PC surfaces capturing sediment, however, led to a decline in infiltration rates that resulted in more runoff flowing over, not through, the permeable surface. This result led to a decline in treatment until the permeable surface was partially restored through maintenance practices, to which PIP responded more dramatically than PC or PA. Conversely, the PA surface was capable of infiltrating most of the influent runoff volume during the monitoring period and, thus, continued to provide some level of treatment. The combined effect of underdrain and overflow drainage resulted in similar pollutant treatment for all three permeable surfaces.Temperatures below each permeable surface generally followed changes in air temperature with a more gradual response observed in deeper layers. Therefore, permeable pavement may do little to mitigate heated runoff during summer. During winter, deeper layers remained above freezing even when air temperature was below freezing. Although temperatures were not high enough to melt snow or ice accumulated on the surface, temperatures below each permeable pavement did allow void spaces to remain open, which promoted infiltration of melted ice and snow as air temperatures rose above freezing. These open void spaces could potentially reduce the need for application of deicing agents in winter because melted snow and ice would infiltrate, thereby preventing refreezing of pooled water in what is known as the “black ice” effect.
Disappearance and Compressibility of Buried Pine Wood in a Warm Temperate Soil Environment.
Gholz, H L; Krazynski, L M; Volk, B G
1991-02-01
The rate of disappearance of buried pine wood in Florida was found to be 15%/yr.As consumption by microorganisms and termites proceeded, the wood also became more compressible. After only 5 yr, consumption and compression could account for 60-70% loss of original volume of wood under pavement near the surface of an embankment. This large volume loss occurring in a relatively short time period may be responsible for many surface deformations in pavements and weaknesses in other embankments where wood may occur as a contaminant. © 1991 by the Ecological Society of America.
Response of Iowa pavements to heavy agricultural loads.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1999-12-01
Iowa's county road system includes several thousands of miles of paved roads which : consist of portland cement concrete (PCC) surfaces, asphalt cement concrete (ACC) surfaces, : and combinations of thin surface treatments such as seal coats and slur...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Scullion, T.; Saarenketo, T.
2002-07-01
This report will present several case studies describing the use of ground penetrating radar (GPR) technology for site investigations. Two types of GPR will be described-the air-launched and ground-coupled systems. The use of air-launched radar is well established within the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT). The limitation of this technology is its depth of penetration. While providing very useful information on the surface and base layers, it provides little information on the sub-grade soils. The use of low-frequency ground-coupled radar systems will provide little useful near-surface information but it can provide data on sub-grade properties and how they vary along a project. Combining both radar types can potentially provide a comprehensive subsurface investigative tool for both new pavement construction and for major pavement rehabilitation projects. In this report a brief description will be provided of the different systems together with the software used to process the GPR signals. Air-launched data are processed with the COLORMAP system developed by the Texas Transportation Institute. The ground-coupled data are processed using the Road Doctor system developed by Roadscanners, Inc. of Finland. The case studies presented were collected on actual TxDOT evaluation projects mainly in the Bryan District. They range from near-surface applications where the goal was to identify changes in pavement structure which were not available in construction records to identifying the areas beneath the pavement subsidence associated with strip mining activities.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1997-09-01
This study evaluates the performance of lime/fly ash stabilized base as an alternative to soil cement stabilized base for flexible pavement systems on reconstructed highways in Louisiana. Louisiana has historically used soil cement for most flexible ...
Development of a 3/4-inch minus base course type a specification for Montana : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-12-01
Gravel bases are a critical component of roads, providing drainage, structural support, and load distribution within the pavement structure. Montana specifications currently exist for a 2-inch minus (Grade 5A) and 1- inch minus (Grade 6A) crushed b...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-10-01
This report documents the results of a study that was conducted to characterize the behavior of geogrid reinforced base : course materials. The research was conducted through an experimental testing and numerical modeling programs. The : experimental...
Gomez-Ullate, E; Novo, A V; Bayon, J R; Hernandez, Jorge R; Castro-Fresno, Daniel
2011-01-01
Pervious pavements are sustainable urban drainage systems already known as rainwater infiltration techniques which reduce runoff formation and diffuse pollution in cities. The present research is focused on the design and construction of an experimental parking area, composed of 45 pervious pavement parking bays. Every pervious pavement was experimentally designed to store rainwater and measure the levels of the stored water and its quality over time. Six different pervious surfaces are combined with four different geotextiles in order to test which materials respond better to the good quality of rainwater storage over time and under the specific weather conditions of the north of Spain. The aim of this research was to obtain a good performance of pervious pavements that offered simultaneously a positive urban service and helped to harvest rainwater with a good quality to be used for non potable demands.
Development of surface friction guidelines for LADOTD.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-04-01
The main objective of this study was to develop a Louisiana pavement surface friction guideline that considers polished stone value (PSV) and mixture : type alike in terms of both micro- and macro- surface textures. The polishing and texture properti...
Asphalt surface aging prediction (ASAP) system : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-09-01
The Asphalt Surface Aging Prediction (ASAP) project has been a 2.5 year effort to predict agerelated : embrittlement in asphalt pavement surfaces and to develop ground-based and airborne : systems to measure key spectral indicators needed for predict...
Surface preparation of pavements prior to application of pavement markings
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dale, J. M.
1980-01-01
A brush assembly was designed, fabricated and installed on a Texas Department of Highways and Public Transportation striping truck and run over a variety of roads. It was found that brushing did not significantly extend the service life of the traffic marking paint. There was not sufficient improvement to consider mounting brush assemblies ahead of the spray guns on striping trucks for use on a daily basis.
Total vertical sediment flux and PM10 emissions from disturbed Chihuahuan Desert Surfaces
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Desert surfaces are typically stable and represent some of the oldest landforms on Earth. For surfaces without vegetation, the evolution of a desert pavements of gravel protects the surface from erosive forces and vegetation further protects the surface in arid and semi-arid rangelands. The suscep...
Kinect, a Novel Cutting Edge Tool in Pavement Data Collection
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mahmoudzadeh, A.; Firoozi Yeganeh, S.; Golroo, A.
2015-12-01
Pavement roughness and surface distress detection is of interest of decision makers due to vehicle safety, user satisfaction, and cost saving. Data collection, as a core of pavement management systems, is required for these detections. There are two major types of data collection: traditional/manual data collection and automated/semi-automated data collection. This paper study different non-destructive tools in detecting cracks and potholes. For this purpose, automated data collection tools, which have been utilized recently are discussed and their applications are criticized. The main issue is the significant amount of money as a capital investment needed to buy the vehicle. The main scope of this paper is to study the approach and related tools that not only are cost-effective but also precise and accurate. The new sensor called Kinect has all of these specifications. It can capture both RGB images and depth which are of significant use in measuring cracks and potholes. This sensor is able to take image of surfaces with adequate resolution to detect cracks along with measurement of distance between sensor and obstacles in front of it which results in depth of defects. This technology has been very recently studied by few researchers in different fields of studies such as project management, biomedical engineering, etc. Pavement management has not paid enough attention to use of Kinect in monitoring and detecting distresses. This paper is aimed at providing a thorough literature review on usage of Kinect in pavement management and finally proposing the best approach which is cost-effective and precise.
Investigation clogging dynamic of permeable pavement systems using embedded sensors
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Razzaghmanesh, Mostafa; Borst, Michael
2018-02-01
Permeable pavement is a stormwater control measure commonly selected in both new and retrofit applications. However, there is limited information about the clogging mechanism of these systems that effects the infiltration. A permeable pavement site located at the Seitz Elementary School, on Fort Riley, Kansas was selected for this study. An 80-space parking lot was built behind the school as part of an EPA collaboration with the U.S. Army. The parking lot design includes a permeable interlocking concrete pavement section along the downgradient edge. This study monitored the clogging progress of the pavement section using twelve water content reflectometers and three buried tipping bucket rain gauges. This clogging dynamic investigation was divided into three stages namely pre-clogged, transitional, and clogged. Recorded initial relative water content of all three stages were significantly and negatively correlated to antecedent dry weather periods with stronger correlations during clogged conditions. The peak relative water content correlation with peak rainfall 10-min intensity was significant for the water content reflectometers located on the western edge away from the eastern edge; this correlation was strongest during transition stage. Once clogged, rainfall measurements no longer correlated with the buried tipping bucket rain gauges. Both water content reflectometers and buried tipping bucket rain gauges showed the progress of surface clogging. For every 6 mm of rain, clogging advanced 1 mm across the surface. The results generally support the hypothesis that the clogging progresses from the upgradient to the downgradient edge. The magnitude of the contributing drainage area and rainfall characteristics are effective factors on rate and progression of clogging.
Evaluation of Louisiana's maintenance chip seal and micro-surfacing program.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2002-07-01
This report focuses valuation of Louisiana DOTD's chip seal and micro-surfacing treatments. The report discusses the performance in terms of Pavement Condition Index (PCI) of 40 chip seal and 24 micro-surface projects after approximately 52 months of...
Effective prime coats for compacted pavement bases.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-08-01
Prime coats have long been used to seal the surface pores in the base, thus reducing the migration of moisture : and absorption of the first application of surface treatment binder, strengthen the granular base near its : surface by binding the finer...
High Friction Surface Treatments, Transportation Research Synthesis
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2018-03-01
MnDOT and local transportation agencies in Minnesota are considering the use of a high friction surface treatment (HFST) as a safety strategy. HFST is used as a spot pavement surfacing treatment in locations with high friction demand (for example, cr...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mieczkowski, P.; Budziński, B.
2018-05-01
When well performed, pavement renewal or alteration shall ensure the desired properties of the road during the assumed period of operation. Presence of water in the subgrade can be one of the main factors affecting the structural capacity of pavement and can result in cracking of the bituminous layers, even after a very short period of trafficking. Reconstruction of one of regional roads in Poland has been chosen to serve as an example of inappropriate approach to the problem of the presence of water in the road structure. The project included construction of new layers of pavement and increasing the design life of the whole pavement structure to 4.06 million ESAL of 100 kN (as per the Standard Catalogue of Typical Flexible and Semi-rigid Road Pavement Structures, issue of 1997). After a relatively short period of trafficking (3-5 years) localised alligator cracking appeared on the surface along with structural deformations. The pavement condition assessment including FWD tests was carried out to reveal excessive deflections (over 500 μm) which classify the road for renewal. The analysis of data showed that the main cause of distress was softening of the subgrade caused by an ingress of precipitation water under the pavement layers through the roadway and shoulder edges. The deficiencies of the performed reconstruction occurred both in the roadway (including small step-outs in the cement-treated layer) and partly in the shoulders where the existing soil was in places replaced with impervious material, with the existing (cohesive) material left in place on a major part of the overall length.
Cuticular Waxes of Arabidopsis thaliana Shoots: Cell-Type-Specific Composition and Biosynthesis
Hegebarth, Daniela; Jetter, Reinhard
2017-01-01
It is generally assumed that all plant epidermis cells are covered with cuticles, and the distinct surface geometries of pavement cells, guard cells, and trichomes imply functional differences and possibly different wax compositions. However, experiments probing cell-type-specific wax compositions and biosynthesis have been lacking until recently. This review summarizes new evidence showing that Arabidopsis trichomes have fewer wax compound classes than pavement cells, and higher amounts of especially long-chain hydrocarbons. The biosynthesis machinery generating this characteristic surface coating is discussed. Interestingly, wax compounds with similar, long hydrocarbon chains had been identified previously in some unrelated species, not all of them bearing trichomes. PMID:28686187
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ilias, Mohammad
Pavement preservation is a rapidly growing strategy for prolonging pavement service life. Pavement preservation consists of applying a thin layer of asphalt binder or emulsion with or without aggregate to the surface of an existing pavement. Preservation treatments do not provide any structural strength to the pavement but restores skid resistance, seals existing cracks, protects the underlying pavement from intrusion of water, and reduces further oxidative aging of the underlying pavement. In recent years, significant research has been dedicated to improving design of pavement preservation treatments. In pavement preservation treatments, asphalt emulsion is the predominant binding material used because of its low viscosity compared to asphalt cement which allows for production at greatly reduced temperatures, leading to energy efficiency, and potential cost savings. Currently, specifications for emulsions used in pavement preservation treatments are empirical and lack of direct relationship to performance. This study seeks to improve specifications for emulsions used in preservation treatments by developing performancerelated specifications (PRS) for (a) fresh emulsion properties, (b) microsurfacing emulsion residue, and (c) low-temperature raveling of chip seal emulsion residues. Fresh emulsion properties dictate constructability and stability, and consequently the resultant performance of a preservation treatment once placed. Specification test methods are proposed for chip seals, microsurfacings, and spray seals that reflect storage and construction conditions of the emulsions. Performance is quantified using viscosity measurements. Specification limits are determined based on a prior knowledge of emulsion performance coupled with statistical analyses. Microsurfacings are a preservation treatment consisting of application of a thin layer of asphalt emulsion -- fine aggregate mixture. Presently, mixture design and performances of microsurfacing mixtures are appraised using the procedure specified by the International Slurry Surfacing Association (ISSA) with no provision for quantifying microsurfacing residue performance. In this study, residue performance is quantified using the Multiple Stress Creep and Recovery (MSCR) test for rutting and bleeding, the Bitumen Bond Strength Test (BBS) for raveling, Low Temperature Frequency (LTF) test for low temperature Bending Beam Rheometer (BBR) properties prediction, and Single Edge Notched Bend (SENB) fracture test developed under this work. Microsurfacing mixture performance is quantified using the Wet Track Abrasion Test (WTAT) for raveling, Model Mobile Load Simulator (MMLS3) for rutting and bleeding, and SENB test developed for low-temperature cracking. Microsurfacing mixture performance is correlated to residue properties in order to identify critical emulsion residue properties in determining performance and to derive specification limits. Results indicate rutting and thermal cracking are the distresses most directly related to the emulsion residue performance. Correspondingly, specifications are proposed to address rutting at high temperature and thermal cracking at low temperature based on the relationship between residue and mixture results coupled. In addition, test methods and specification criteria are developed to address lowtemperature raveling resistance of emulsion residues used in chip seals. The SENB test is used to quantify residue resistance to thermal cracking under the assumption that lowtemperature raveling occurs primarily by cohesive fracture of the residue in the chip seal. The Vialit test is modified and employed for quantifying raveling resistance of chip seals mixture for determining if the SENB test captures binder contribution to mixture raveling. The correlation between residue and mixture properties have been used to assess applicability of the residue tests and to derive specification limits.
Prediction of pavement remaining service life based on repetition of load and permanent deformation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Usman, R. S.; Setyawan, A.; Suprapto, M.
2018-03-01
One of the methods which was applied in the assessment of flexible pavement performance was mechanistic method assuming structures of road pavement to become multi-layer structure for flexible pavement, that the vehicle load working on the pavement layer under repetition with power failure worth 1 (one) unit which was assumed as evenly distributed static load, and therefore the pavement material would provide response in the form of stress, strain, and deflection. This is closely related in order to assess the structure of flexible pavement and to predict the remaining service life on the roads of Pulau Indah sta 0 + 000 to sta. 0 + 845 in Kota Kupang, Nusa Tenggara Timur. The performance appraisal indicator which was used was fatigue cracking happening bottom of the asphalt layer and permanent deformation (rutting) on the surface of subgrade. The strain estimate on the flexible pavement layer structure needs carefulness and high accuracy and therefore a software like KENPAVE which produces horizontal tensile strain of 8,802E-05 and vertical compressive strain of 2,642E-04 was used. By applying equation of The Asphalt Instituteit was obtained repetition of permit load when reaching fatigue cracking (Nf) was 16.071.516 ESAL and permanent deformation (rutting) was 14.703.867 ESAL and also it was predicted the remaining service life of pavement applied the equation of AASTHO 1993 by considering Traffic Multiplier factor (TM 1.8, TM 1.9 and TM 2.0) obtained the remaining life service due to fatigue of 5.51% in the year of 13th (TM 1.8), 7.95% in the year of12th (TM 1.9) and 3.11% (TM 2.0) in the year of 12th, also the remaining service life due to rutting of 4.69% in the year of 12th(TM 1.8), 7.79% in the year of 11th (TM 1.9), and 2.94 in the year of 11th (TM 2.0).
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2003-10-01
Fog seals are a method of adding asphalt to an existing pavement surface to improve sealing or waterproofing, prevent further stone loss by holding aggregate in place, or simply improve the surface appearance. However, inappropriate use can result in...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Miraliakbari, A.; Sok, S.; Ouma, Y. O.; Hahn, M.
2016-06-01
With the increasing demand for the digital survey and acquisition of road pavement conditions, there is also the parallel growing need for the development of automated techniques for the analysis and evaluation of the actual road conditions. This is due in part to the resulting large volumes of road pavement data captured through digital surveys, and also to the requirements for rapid data processing and evaluations. In this study, the Canon 5D Mark II RGB camera with a resolution of 21 megapixels is used for the road pavement condition mapping. Even though many imaging and mapping sensors are available, the development of automated pavement distress detection, recognition and extraction systems for pavement condition is still a challenge. In order to detect and extract pavement cracks, a comparative evaluation of kernel-based segmentation methods comprising line filtering (LF), local binary pattern (LBP) and high-pass filtering (HPF) is carried out. While the LF and LBP methods are based on the principle of rotation-invariance for pattern matching, the HPF applies the same principle for filtering, but with a rotational invariant matrix. With respect to the processing speeds, HPF is fastest due to the fact that it is based on a single kernel, as compared to LF and LBP which are based on several kernels. Experiments with 20 sample images which contain linear, block and alligator cracks are carried out. On an average a completeness of distress extraction with values of 81.2%, 76.2% and 81.1% have been found for LF, HPF and LBP respectively.
Beaconing Signalization Substantially Reduces Blind Pedestrians’ Veer on Snow-Covered Pavement
Guth, David A.; Long, Richard G.; Kim, Dae Shik; Robertson, Elizabeth A.; Reesor, Abbie L.; Bacik, Catherine J.; Eckert, Jaclyn M.
2017-01-01
Veering outside of crosswalks is a common problem experienced by individuals who are blind. One technology found to be effective for reducing this veer when other guidance cues are absent is audible beaconing. However, veering in general and veering from crosswalks in particular have been studied primarily on smooth, flat walking surfaces such as clear pavement. This experiment compared veering on clear pavement with veering on snow-covered pavement, with and without audible beaconing. Eleven blind participants traveling with long canes attempted to walk a straight path for 72 ft (21.9 m), a typical length of a six-lane crosswalk. Beaconing substantially reduced veering at 36 ft (11.0 m) and 72 ft from the starting point and enabled participants to remain within a simulated crosswalk. Walking on snow was not found to affect veering but did increase the number of steps taken. The findings suggest that in snowy and clear conditions alike, audible beaconing is an effective wayfinding tool for intersections equipped with accessible pedestrian signals. PMID:29307955
Beaconing Signalization Substantially Reduces Blind Pedestrians' Veer on Snow-Covered Pavement.
Guth, David A; Long, Richard G; Kim, Dae Shik; Robertson, Elizabeth A; Reesor, Abbie L; Bacik, Catherine J; Eckert, Jaclyn M
2017-01-01
Veering outside of crosswalks is a common problem experienced by individuals who are blind. One technology found to be effective for reducing this veer when other guidance cues are absent is audible beaconing. However, veering in general and veering from crosswalks in particular have been studied primarily on smooth, flat walking surfaces such as clear pavement. This experiment compared veering on clear pavement with veering on snow-covered pavement, with and without audible beaconing. Eleven blind participants traveling with long canes attempted to walk a straight path for 72 ft (21.9 m), a typical length of a six-lane crosswalk. Beaconing substantially reduced veering at 36 ft (11.0 m) and 72 ft from the starting point and enabled participants to remain within a simulated crosswalk. Walking on snow was not found to affect veering but did increase the number of steps taken. The findings suggest that in snowy and clear conditions alike, audible beaconing is an effective wayfinding tool for intersections equipped with accessible pedestrian signals.
Experimental studies about the impact of traction sand on urban road dust composition.
Kupiainen, Kaarle; Tervahattu, Heikki; Räisänen, Mika
2003-06-01
Traffic causes enhanced PM(10) resuspension especially during spring in the US, Japan, Norway, Sweden and Finland, among other countries. The springtime PM(10) consists primarily of mineral matter from tyre-induced paved road surface wear and traction sand. In some countries, the majority of vehicles are equipped with studded tyres to enhance traction, which additionally increases road surface wear. Because the traction sand and the mineral matter from the pavement aggregate can have a similar mineralogical composition, it has been difficult to determine the source of the mineral fraction in the PM(10). In this study, homogenous traction sand and pavement aggregate with different mineralogical compositions were chosen to determine the sources of PM(10) particles by single particle analysis (SEM/EDX). This study was conducted in a test facility, which made it possible to rule out dust contributions from other sources. The ambient PM(10) concentrations were higher when traction sand was used, regardless of whether the tyres were studded or not. Surprisingly, the use of traction sand greatly increased the number of the particles originating from the pavement. It was concluded that sand must contribute to pavement wear. This phenomenon is called the sandpaper effect. An understanding of this is important to reduce harmful effects of springtime road dust in practical winter maintenance of urban roads
Jin, Jiao; Lin, Feipeng; Liu, Ruohua; Xiao, Ting; Zheng, Jianlong; Qian, Guoping; Liu, Hongfu; Wen, Pihua
2017-12-05
Three kinds of mineral-supported polyethylene glycol (PEG) as form-stable composite phase change materials (CPCMs) were prepared to choose the most suitable CPCMs in asphalt pavements for the problems of asphalt pavements rutting diseases and urban heat islands. The microstructure and chemical structure of CPCMs were characterized by SEM, FT-IR and XRD. Thermal properties of the CPCMs were determined by TG and DSC. The maximum PEG absorption of diatomite (DI), expanded perlite (EP) and expanded vermiculite (EVM) could reach 72%, 67% and 73.6%, respectively. The melting temperatures and latent heat of CPCMs are in the range of 52-55 °C and 100-115 J/g, respectively. The results show that PEG/EP has the best thermal and chemical stability after 100 times of heating-cooling process. Moreover, crystallization fraction results show that PEG/EP has slightly higher latent heats than that of PEG/DI and PEG/EVM. Temperature-adjusting asphalt mixture was prepared by substituting the fine aggregates with PEG/EP CPCMs. The upper surface maximum temperature difference of temperature-adjusting asphalt mixture reaches about 7.0 °C in laboratory, and the surface peak temperature reduces up to 4.3 °C in the field experiment during a typical summer day, indicating a great potential application for regulating pavement temperature field and alleviating the urban heat islands.
Effectiveness of Chip Sealing and Micro Surfacing on Pavement Serviceability and Life
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-05-01
This report presents the details of an investigation to evaluate the effectiveness of Ohio Department of Transportations prevailing chip seal and micro surfacing practices. The investigation focused primarily on two issues namely, optimal timing o...
Evaluation of a laser road surface tester.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1995-01-01
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the accuracy and usefulness of pavement distress data derived from a laser road surface tester (RST) operating on Virginia's interstate highway system. The evaluation was conducted by comparing rut depth, rou...
Performance-based analysis of polymer-modified emulsions in asphalt surface treatments.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-10-01
Chip seals provide a durable and functional pavement surface and serve as a highly economical highway : maintenance option when constructed properly. Data and literature suggest that chip seal sections constructed with : polymer-modified emulsions (P...
Effects of pavement surface texture on noise and frictional characteristics.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1987-02-01
An experimental modification of the transverse groove : surface texture of a section of an urban interstate highway was : performed by the Iowa Department of Transportation. Transverse : groove texturing is a design feature required by the Federal : ...
Infiltration performance of engineered surfaces commonly used for distributed stormwater management
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Valinski, Nicholas A.
Engineered porous media are commonly used in low impact development (LID) structures to mitigate excess stormwater in urban environments. Differences in infiltrability of these LID systems arise from the wide variety of materials used to create porous surfaces and subsequent maintenance, debris loading, and physical damage. In this study, infiltration capacity of six common materials was tested by multiple replicate experiments with automated mini-disk infiltrometers. The tested materials included porous asphalt, porous concrete, porous brick pavers, flexible porous pavement, engineered soils, and native soils. Porous asphalt, large porous brick pavers, and curb cutout rain gardens showed the greatest infiltration rates. Most engineered porous pavements and soils performed better than the native silt loam soils. Infiltration performance was found to be related more to site design and environmental factors than material choice. Sediment trap zones in both pavements and engineered soil rain gardens were found to be beneficial to the whole site performance. Winter chloride application had a large negative impact on poured in place concrete, making it a poor choice for heavily salted areas.
Infiltration performance of engineered surfaces commonly used for distributed stormwater management.
Valinski, N A; Chandler, D G
2015-09-01
Engineered porous media are commonly used in low impact development (LID) structures to mitigate excess stormwater in urban environments. Differences in infiltrability of these LID systems arise from the wide variety of materials used to create porous surfaces and subsequent maintenance, debris loading, and physical damage. In this study, the infiltration capacity of six common materials was tested by multiple replicate experiments with automated mini-disk infiltrometers. The tested materials included porous asphalt, porous concrete, porous brick pavers, flexible porous pavement, engineered soils, and native soils. Porous asphalt, large porous brick pavers, and curb cutout rain gardens showed the greatest infiltration rates. Most engineered porous pavements and soils performed better than the native silt loam soils. Infiltration performance was found to be related more to site design and environmental factors than material choice. Sediment trap zones in both pavements and engineered soil rain gardens were found to be beneficial to the whole site performance. Winter chloride application had a large negative impact on poured in place concrete, making it a poor choice for heavily salted areas. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Air Purification Pavement Surface Coating by Atmospheric Pressure Cold Plasma
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Westergreen, Joe; Pedrow, Patrick; Shen, Shihui; Jobson, Bertram
2011-10-01
This study develops an atmospheric pressure cold plasma (APCP) reactor to produce activated radicals from precursor molecules, and to immobilize nano titanium dioxide (TiO2) powder to substrate pavement materials. TiO2 has photocatalytic properties and under UV light can be used to oxidize and remove volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) from the atmosphere. Although TiO2 treated paving materials have great potential to improve air quality, current techniques to adhere TiO2 to substrate materials are either not durable or reduce direct contact of TiO2 with UV light, reducing the photocatalytic effect. To solve this technical difficulty, this study introduces APCP techniques to transportation engineering to coat TiO2 to pavement. Preliminary results are promising and show that TiO2 can be incorporated successfully into an APCP environment and can be immobilized at the surface of the asphalt substrate. The TiO2 coated material with APCP shows the ability to reduce nitrogen oxides when exposed to UV light in an environmental chamber. The plasma reactor utilizes high voltage streamers as the plasma source.
Evaluation of performance and cost-effectiveness of thin pavement surface treatments : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1993-05-01
This study describes the findings from the study of 87 closely monitored sites in the State of Oregon which were treated with different types of thin surface materials. All of these surface treatments had a total thickness of two inches or less, and ...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1987-03-01
This is the initial report for a study to determine the long term performance and life cycle costs for thin surface treatments. For this study a thin surface treatment is defined as less than 2 inches. A total of 89 projects constructed during 1984, ...
1978-08-01
Date Not Known Surface Cracks None observed Pavement Condition No Pavement Movement or Settlement of Crest None observed Lateral Movement None...Protection - Riprap Failures No riprapp ap • .• Unusual Movement or Cracking at or None observed near Toes Unusual Embankment or Downstream None...Seepage or Efflorescence None observed Joint Alignment Good Unusual Seepage or Leaks in Gate Chamber Cracks None observed . Rusting or Corrosion of
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Buczyński, P.
2018-05-01
This article presents a new approach to reliability assessment of the road structure in which the base layer will be constructed in the process of cold deep recycling with foamed bitumen. In order to properly assess the reliability of the structure with the recycled base, it is necessary to determine the distribution of stress and strain in typical pavement layer systems. The true stress and strain values were established for particular structural layers using the complex modulus (E*) determined based on the master curves. The complex modulus was determined by the direct tension-compression test on cylindrical specimens (DTC-CY) at five temperatures (-7°C, 5°C, 13°C, 25°C, 40°C) and six loading times (0.1 Hz, 0.3 Hz, 1 Hz, 3 Hz, 10 Hz, 20 Hz) in accordance with EN 12697-26 in the linear viscoelasticity (LVE) range for small strains ranging from 25 to 50 με. The master curves of the complex modulus were constructed using the Richards model for the mixtures typically incorporated in structural layers, i.e., SMA11, AC16W, AC22P and MCAS. The values of the modulus characterizing particular layers were determined with temperature distribution in the structure taken into account, when the surface temperature was 40°C. The stress distribution was established for those calculation models. The stress values were used to evaluate the fatigue life under controlled stress conditions (IT-FT). This evaluation, with the controlled stress corresponding to that in the structure, facilitated the quality assessment of the rehabilitated recycled base course. Results showed that the recycled base mixtures having the indirect tensile strength (ITSDRY) similar to the stress in the structure under analysis needed an additional fatigue life evaluation in the indirect tensile test ITT. This approach to the recycled base quality assessment will allow eliminating the damage induced by overloading.
Surface friction measurements of fine-graded asphalt mixtures : final report, June 2008.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2008-06-01
Skid resistance is generated by the development of friction between the vehicle tire and : roadway surface, and is partially dependent upon the characteristics of the pavement : texture. Microtexture and macrotexture are the critical components of pa...
Concrete Cutting Refinement for Crater Repair
2015-08-01
Identification of damage sustained to the airfield operating surfaces, 2. Selection of minimum pavement surface areas required to support air- craft...also studied to identify the appropriate lineup and stop locations to achieve the desired overcut lengths. Edwards et al. (2015) recommends overcut
Performance oriented guidance for Mississippi chip seals - volume I.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-12-01
A five year laboratory study was conducted to investigate near surface properties of flexible pavements in relation to : how they are affected by bituminous surface treatments. Chip seals and scrub seals (a specialized type of chip seal) : were the f...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mathavan, Senthan; Kumar, Akash; Kamal, Khurram; Nieminen, Michael; Shah, Hitesh; Rahman, Mujib
2016-09-01
Thousands of pavement images are collected by road authorities daily for condition monitoring surveys. These images typically have intensity variations and texture nonuniformities that make their segmentation challenging. The automated segmentation of such pavement images is crucial for accurate, thorough, and expedited health monitoring of roads. In the pavement monitoring area, well-known texture descriptors, such as gray-level co-occurrence matrices and local binary patterns, are often used for surface segmentation and identification. These, despite being the established methods for texture discrimination, are inherently slow. This work evaluates Laws texture energy measures as a viable alternative for pavement images for the first time. k-means clustering is used to partition the feature space, limiting the human subjectivity in the process. Data classification, hence image segmentation, is performed by the k-nearest neighbor method. Laws texture energy masks are shown to perform well with resulting accuracy and precision values of more than 80%. The implementations of the algorithm, in both MATLAB® and OpenCV/C++, are extensively compared against the state of the art for execution speed, clearly showing the advantages of the proposed method. Furthermore, the OpenCV-based segmentation shows a 100% increase in processing speed when compared to the fastest algorithm available in literature.
The effect of cracking on the deflection basin of flexible pavements
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Omar, Hadi Mohamed
Because of the rapid development of hardware and software during the past decade, it is now possible to use an analytical-empirical (or mechanistic) method of structural pavement evaluation on a routine basis. One reason for using this approach is the increased need for pavement maintenance and rehabilitation. To make the right choice from many potentially feasible maintenance and rehabilitation measures, the engineer must base his decision on a rational evaluation of the mechanical properties of the materials in the existing pavement structure. One of the parameters in terms of pavement response are the deflections; these are of interest to this particular study. The Falling Weight Deflectometer (FWD) has been developed specifically for the purpose of obtaining deflection measurements in order to determine the in-situ elastic moduli. The profile of the deflection at the surface of the pavement is known as the deflection basin, because it resembles a bowl-shaped depression. The magnitude of the deflections and the basin shape are functions of the number of layers making up the pavement cross section, their thicknesses, and their moduli values. A variety of multi-layered linear elastic pavement models are available for use at this present time. A general-purpose finite-element program called ANSYS developed by Swanson Analysis System is very powerful and is capable of solving a layered system such as the pavement. A finite element model was developed to study the effect of the crack on the predicted deflection bowls. A general-purpose finite-element program was used in this study due to its ability to solve this problem and because of the availability of the program. A hypothetical crack problem was assumed and modeled in different ways. The crack depth, crack width, and distance of the crack from the loading point were among the many parameters that were investigated. Considering the shape of the deflection basin, it is very important to study the effect of the crack on this bowl, when and where the cracks can be ignored, and when they would not play a significant effect. This study also addresses the importance of the field data and how the observed deflection basins compare with the predicted ones especially in aged pavements. This study has concluded that the location of a crack from the loading point is very significant to the deflection basin.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ghosh, Debaroti
Surface treatment using sealants as a mean of pavement preservation is an important tool for cost-effectively extending service life of pavement. Sealants have become an important tool for cost-effectively extending the service life pavements. Due to the combined negative effects of asphalt aging and thermal cracking, it is always more challenging to choose an appropriate preservation technique for pavements built in cold-regions. Asphalt aging and thermal cracking negatively affect pavements built in cold climates. Therefore, it is important to evaluate the effects of sealants in laboratory conditions before application in the field to ensure effective performance. However, preservation activities cannot effectively address major distresses, such as low-temperature cracking, that can occur when the pavement was built from the very beginning with less durable materials. Therefore, an essential requirement to mitigate low-temperature cracking of pavements for asphalt materials used in the construction of pavement built in cold- regions is ensuring proper fracture properties of the asphalt materials used in construction. This study has two parts. In the first part, a laboratory evaluation of the effects of adding bio-sealants to both asphalt binder and mixture is performed. The goal is to obtain relevant properties of treated asphalt materials to understand the mechanism by which sealants improve pavement performance. For asphalt binders, a dynamic shear rheometer and a bending beam rheometer were used to obtain rheological properties of treated and untreated asphalt binders. For asphalt mixtures, field cores from both untreated and treated sections were collected and thin beam specimens were prepared from the cores to compare the creep and strength properties of the field-treated and laboratory-treated mixture. It is observed that the oil-based sealants have a significant softening effect on the control binder compared to the water-based sealant and traditional emulsion. Oil-based sealants increased rutting and fatigue potential of the binder and helped the low-temperature cracking resistance. For asphalt mixtures, different trends are observed for the field samples compared to the laboratory prepared samples. Similar to binder results, significant differences are observed between the asphalt mixtures treated with oil-based and water-based sealants, respectively. Additional analyses were performed to better understand the sealant effects. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) analysis showed that the sealant products could not be detected in mixture samples collected from the surface of the treated section. Semi-empirical Hirsch model was able to predict asphalt mixture creep stiffness from binder stiffness. The results of a distress survey of the test sections correlated well with the laboratory findings. In the second part, a news binder strength testing method is proposed with the goal to provide an effective tool for selecting asphalt binders that are crack resistant. A modified Bending Beam Rheometer (BBR) is used to perform three-point bending strength tests, at constant loading rate, on asphalt binder beams at low temperature. Based on the results, a protocol for selecting the most crack resistant material from binders with similar rheological properties is proposed.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tapia Gutierrez, Patricio Enrique
Whitetopping (WT) is a rehabilitation method to resurface deteriorated asphalt pavements. While some of these composite pavements have performed very well carrying heavy load, other have shown poor performance with early cracking. With the objective of analyzing the applicability of WT pavements under Florida conditions, a total of nine full-scale WT test sections were constructed and tested using a Heavy Vehicle Simulator (HVS) in the APT facility at the FDOT Material Research Park. The test sections were instrumented to monitor both strain and temperature. A 3-D finite element model was developed to analyze the WT test sections. The model was calibrated and verified using measured FWD deflections and HVS load-induced strains from the test sections. The model was then used to evaluate the potential performance of these test sections under critical temperature-load condition in Florida. Six of the WT pavement test sections had a bonded concrete-asphalt interface by milling, cleaning and spraying with water the asphalt surface. This method produced excellent bonding at the interface, with shear strength of 195 to 220 psi. Three of the test sections were intended to have an unbonded concrete-asphalt interface by applying a debonding agent in the asphalt surface. However, shear strengths between 119 and 135 psi and a careful analysis of the strain and the temperature data indicated a partial bond condition. The computer model was able to satisfactorily model the behavior of the composite pavement by mainly considering material properties from standard laboratory tests and calibrating the spring elements used to model the interface. Reasonable matches between the measured and the calculated strains were achieved when a temperature-dependent AC elastic modulus was included in the analytical model. The expected numbers of repetitions of the 24-kip single axle loads at critical thermal condition were computed for the nine test sections based on maximum tensile stresses and fatigue theory. The results showed that 4" slabs can be used for heavy loads only for low-volume traffic. To withstand the critical load without fear of fatigue failure, 6" slabs and 8" slabs would be needed for joint spacings of 4' and 6', respectively.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Judycki, Józef; Jaczewski, Mariusz; Ryś, Dawid; Pszczoła, Marek; Jaskuła, Piotr; Glinicki, Adam
2017-09-01
High Modulus Asphalt Concrete (HMAC) was introduced in Poland as a one of the solutions to the problem of rutting, type of deterioration common in the 1990s. After first encouraging trials in 2002 HMAC was widely used for heavily loaded national roads and motorways. However some concerns were raised about low-temperature cracking of HMAC. This was the main reason of the studies presented in this article were started. The article presents the comparison of performance of pavements constructed in typical contract conditions with the road bases made of HMAC and conventional asphalt concrete (AC). The field investigation was focused on the number of low-temperature cracks, bearing capacity (based on FWD test) of road sections localized in coldest region of Poland. Also load transfer efficiency of selected low-temperature cracks was assessed. FWD test confirmed lower deflections of pavements with HMAC and two times higher stiffness modulus of asphalt courses in comparison to pavements constructed with conventional AC mixtures. Relation of stiffness of asphalt layers and amount of low-temperature cracks showed that the higher stiffness modulus of asphalt layers could lead to increase of the number of low-temperature cracks. FWD test results showed that the load transfer efficiency of low-temperature cracks on pavements with HMAC presents very low values, very close to lack of load transfer. It was surprising as section with HMAC road base were aged from 2 to 5 years and presented very good bearing capacity.
77 FR 35471 - National Environmental Policy Act Implementation
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-06-13
... designed to promote transportation safety, security, accessibility, communication or operational efficiency... surface treatments or pavement markings, small passenger shelters, railroad warning devices, train control...
Validation of TxDOT flexible pavement skid prediction model : project summary.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2017-01-01
This study had two main objectives: : Investigate and examine surface and friction characteristics of 35 test sections of asphalt mixtures and 35 test sections of surface-treated roads in Texas. The test sections covered a wide range of mixtures ...
Empirical prediction of mechanical properties of flexible pavement through GPR
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bianchini Ciampoli, Luca; Benedetto, Andrea
2017-04-01
To date, it is well known that the frequency of accidental events recorded on a road, is related to the deterioration rate of its pavement. In this sense, the monitoring of the pavement health over a road network is a crucial task for the administrations, to define a priority scale for maintenance works, and accordingly to lower the risk of accidents. Several studies suggest the possibility to employ Ground-penetrating Radar (GPR) to overcome the limits of traditional bearing tests, which due to their low productivity and high costs, can only give a discrete knowledge about the strength of the pavement. This work presents a GPR-based empirical model for the prediction of the bearing capacity of a road pavement, expressed as Young's Modulus. The model exploits the GPR to extract information on the thickness of the base course and the clay content, by referring to the signal velocity and attenuation, respectively. To test the effectiveness of the model, experimental activities have been accounted for. In particular, multi-frequency GPR tests have been performed along road sections of rural roads, composed of a flexible pavement, for a total of 45 Km. As ground-truth, light falling weight deflectometer (LFWD) and Curviameter have been employed. Both the electromagnetic and the mechanical datasets have been properly processed, in order to reduce misinterpretations and to raise the statistical significance of the procedure. Hence, the calibration of the parameters composing the model was run in a subsection, equal to 8% of the total length, randomly selected within the surveyed track. Finally, as validation, the model has been applied to the whole analysed dataset. As a result, the empirical model showed a good effectiveness in predicting the mechanical response of the pavement, with a normalised root mean squared deviation equal to 0.27. Finally, by averaging the measured and predicted mechanical data every 50 m and sorting the results into strength classes, a qualitative approach useful for a visual detection of low-resistance areas has been also proposed. This study demonstrates the efficiency and reliability of GPR in mechanical assessment of flexible pavements. This empirical approach can represent a useful tool for administrations and companies managing road assets, for a non-destructive detection of the areas interested by early stage deterioration processes, and the definition of a priority-based scheduling of maintenance works. Acknowledgements The Authors thank COST, for funding the Action TU1208 "Civil Engineering Applications of Ground Penetrating Radar."
Automatic extraction of road features in urban environments using dense ALS data
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Soilán, Mario; Truong-Hong, Linh; Riveiro, Belén; Laefer, Debra
2018-02-01
This paper describes a methodology that automatically extracts semantic information from urban ALS data for urban parameterization and road network definition. First, building façades are segmented from the ground surface by combining knowledge-based information with both voxel and raster data. Next, heuristic rules and unsupervised learning are applied to the ground surface data to distinguish sidewalk and pavement points as a means for curb detection. Then radiometric information was employed for road marking extraction. Using high-density ALS data from Dublin, Ireland, this fully automatic workflow was able to generate a F-score close to 95% for pavement and sidewalk identification with a resolution of 20 cm and better than 80% for road marking detection.
Tire and runway surface research
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Yager, Thomas J.
1986-01-01
The condition of aircraft tires and runway surfaces can be crucial in meeting the stringent demands of aircraft ground operations, particularly under adverse weather conditions. Gaining a better understanding of the factors influencing the tire/pavement interface is the aim of several ongoing NASA Langley research programs which are described in this paper. Results from several studies conducted at the Langley Aircraft Landing Dynamics Facility, tests with instrumented ground vehicles and aircraft, and some recent aircraft accident investigations are summarized to indicate effects of different tire and runway properties. The Joint FAA/NASA Runway Friction Program is described together with some preliminary test findings. The scope of future NASA Langley research directed towards solving aircraft ground operational problems related to the tire/pavement interface is given.
Accuracy assessment of airborne LIDAR data and automated extraction of features
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cetin, Ali Fuat
Airborne LIDAR technology is becoming more widely used since it provides fast and dense irregularly spaced 3D point clouds. The coordinates produced as a result of calibration of the system are used for surface modeling and information extraction. In this research a new idea of LIDAR detectable targets is introduced. In the second part of this research, a new technique to delineate the edge of road pavements automatically using only LIDAR is presented. The accuracy of LIDAR data should be determined before exploitation for any information extraction to support a Geographic Information System (GIS) database. Until recently there was no definitive research to provide a methodology for common and practical assessment of both horizontal and vertical accuracy of LIDAR data for end users. The idea used in this research was to use targets of such a size and design so that the position of each target can be determined using the Least Squares Image Matching Technique. The technique used in this research can provide end users and data providers an easy way to evaluate the quality of the product, especially when there are accessible hard surfaces to install the targets. The results of the technique are determined to be in a reasonable range when the point spacing of the data is sufficient. To delineate the edge of pavements, trees and buildings are removed from the point cloud, and the road surfaces are segmented from the remaining terrain data. This is accomplished using the homogeneous nature of road surfaces in intensity and height. There are not many studies to delineate the edge of road pavement after the road surfaces are extracted. In this research, template matching techniques are used with criteria computed by Gray Level Co-occurrence Matrix (GLCM) properties, in order to locate seed pixels in the image. The seed pixels are then used for placement of the matched templates along the road. The accuracy of the delineated edge of pavement is determined by comparing the coordinates of reference points collected via photogrammetry with the coordinates of the nearest points along the delineated edge.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chomicz-Kowalska, Anna; Iwański, Mateusz M.; Mrugała, Justyna
2017-10-01
During the reconstruction of road pavements, the reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP), which is obtained through milling of the worn out existing asphalt, is commonly used for producing new base courses in cold recycling processes. Two of these techniques are most popular: one using mineral-cement-emulsion mixes and one utilizing mineral cement mixes with foamed bitumen. Additionally, some amounts of RAP can be incorporated into traditional hot mix asphalt. The demand for energy efficient and environmentally friendly solutions however, results in a need for development of new techniques that would result in cheaper and more reliable solutions with smaller carbon footprint. The reduction of processing temperatures with simultaneous incorporation of reclaimed material is the most efficient way of obtaining these objectives, but it often results in the overall decrease of bituminous mix quality. The paper presents the possibility of using RAP for producing asphalt concrete in warm mix asphalt (WMA) production process by the use of foamed bitumen modified with Fischer-Tropsch synthetic wax and polymer-basalt fibers. Additionally, a series of reference mixtures were produced to investigate the effects of the additives and of the warm process. The carried out analyses and tests shown that the experimental warm mix asphalt produced with RAP and foamed bitumen returned satisfactory performance. The introduction of synthetic F-T wax in the warm foam bitumen mixes resulted in a significantly improved compaction levels and moisture and frost resistance and the addition of polymer-basalt fibers has further improved the permanent deformation resistance of the mixes. All of the designed and tested mixes have fulfilled the requirements for binding course asphalt concrete with medium traffic loads.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Xi, T. Y.; Ding, J. H.; Lv, X. W.; Lei, Y. S.
2018-06-01
In order to create a comfortable building thermal environment, it is important to study the outdoor ground materials performance. In this article, we carried out a constant field experiment in Guangzhou, China, studying on the variations of the surface temperature of three common outdoor building materials: concrete, pavement and grass. We put the equipment on six experiment points respectively to measure the ground surface temperature constantly. The result shows that because of the specific heat capacity, both concrete and pavement have an obvious time delay during their temperature decrease when the grass ground has almost no time delay. And when in the same conditions (exposed to sunlight all day), the material with a low specific heat capacity has a more sensitive variation in temperature. The lower the specific capacity is, the steeper the variation trend of the surface temperature will be. So compared with concrete, the pavement brick ground with a low specific heat capacity has a higher surface temperature in daytime and a lower temperature in the late night time. When in different conditions (different time exposed to sunlight), the temperature value is proportional to the time exposed to the sunlight between the same materials. The concrete exposed to sunlight all day has the highest temperature when the shaded one has the lowest. This experiment reveals that both specific heat capacity and the exposed time to sunlight has a strong influence on the surface temperature of outdoor materials. In subtropical region, the materials with a higher specific heat capacity and a less time exposed to sunlight may be more beneficial to the building thermal environment.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dumoulin, Jean; Ibos, Laurent
2010-05-01
In many countries road network ages while road traffic and maintenance costs increase. Nowadays, thousand and thousand kilometers of roads are each year submitted to surface distress survey. They generally lean on pavement surface imaging measurement techniques, mainly in the visible spectrum, coupled with visual inspection or image processing detection of emergent distresses. Nevertheless, optimisation of maintenance works and costs requires an early detection of defects within the pavement structure when they still are hidden from surface. Accordingly, alternative measurement techniques for pavement monitoring are currently under investigation (seismic methods, step frequency radar). On the other hand, strengthening or retrofitting of reinforced concrete structures by externally bonded Fiber Reinforced Polymer (FRP) systems is now a commonly accepted and widespread technique. However, the use of bonding techniques always implies following rigorous installing procedures. To ensure the durability and long-term performance of the FRP reinforcements, conformance checking through an in situ auscultation of the bonded FRP systems is then highly suitable. The quality-control program should involve a set of adequate inspections and tests. Visual inspection and acoustic sounding (hammer tap) are commonly used to detect delaminations (disbonds) but are unable to provide sufficient information about the depth (in case of multilayered composite) and width of debonded areas. Consequently, rapid and efficient inspection methods are also required. Among the non destructive methods under study, active infrared thermography was investigated both for pavement and civil engineering structures through experiments in laboratory and numerical simulations, because of its ability to be also used on field. Pulse Thermography (PT), Pulse Phase Thermography (PPT) and Principal Component Thermography (PCT) approaches have been tested onto pavement samples and CFRP bonding on concrete samples in laboratory. In parallel numerical simulations have been used to generate a set of time sequence of thermal maps for simulated samples with and without subsurface defect. Using this set of experimental and simulated data different approaches (thermal contrast, FFT analysis, polynomial interpolation, singular value decomposition…) for defect location have been studied and compared. Defect depth retrieval was also studied on such data using different thermal model coupled to a direct or an inverse approach. Trials were conducted both with an uncooled and cooled infrared camera with different measurement performances. Results obtained will be discussed and analysed in the paper we plan to present. Finally, combining numerical simulations and experiments allows us discussing on the sensitivity influence of the infrared camera used to detect subsurface defects.
Richard E. Weyers; Joseph R. Loferski; J. Daniel Dolan; John E. Haramis; Joseph H. Howard; Lola Hislop
2001-01-01
To enhance long-term timber bridge performance, timber material must be protected from moisture. Wearing surfaces made of asphalt pavement with and without a waterproof membrane have been used to provide protection from moisture on timber decks. This type of wearing surface also protects the deck from other damage while providing a smooth, skid-resistant surface....
2011-01-01
kcal/mm s ◦C) Geopolymer paste 2.0x10−7 PCC slab 5.1x10−7 Thermal diffusivity, α (mm2/s) Geopolymer 0.2 PCC slab 1.3 for the surface layer of airfield...concrete pavements. Geopolymer materials have desirable properties for serving as an alternative binder to traditional Portland cement in producing...high thermal stability. Thus it is possible to construct paving concrete made from a geopolymer binder on top of the ordinary concrete slab to limit
Fast simulated annealing inversion of surface waves on pavement using phase-velocity spectra
Ryden, N.; Park, C.B.
2006-01-01
The conventional inversion of surface waves depends on modal identification of measured dispersion curves, which can be ambiguous. It is possible to avoid mode-number identification and extraction by inverting the complete phase-velocity spectrum obtained from a multichannel record. We use the fast simulated annealing (FSA) global search algorithm to minimize the difference between the measured phase-velocity spectrum and that calculated from a theoretical layer model, including the field setup geometry. Results show that this algorithm can help one avoid getting trapped in local minima while searching for the best-matching layer model. The entire procedure is demonstrated on synthetic and field data for asphalt pavement. The viscoelastic properties of the top asphalt layer are taken into account, and the inverted asphalt stiffness as a function of frequency compares well with laboratory tests on core samples. The thickness and shear-wave velocity of the deeper embedded layers are resolved within 10% deviation from those values measured separately during pavement construction. The proposed method may be equally applicable to normal soil site investigation and in the field of ultrasonic testing of materials. ?? 2006 Society of Exploration Geophysicists.
Vázquez, V F; Luong, J; Bueno, M; Terán, F; Paje, S E
2016-01-15
Environmental noise is a worldwide problem that has an adverse effect in the quality of life of urban population. Some work has shown that there is a correlation between environmental noise and health issues as sleep disturbance or annoyance. This study presents the time evolution of a test track fabricated with an asphalt mixture with 20% of crumb rubber by weight of bitumen, added by the wet process. A complete surface characterization has been performed by determining tire/pavement sound levels, road texture profiles, in-situ dynamic stiffness and sound absorption of compacted and extracted sample cores. Two measurement campaigns were performed: just after mixture laying and after 3 years in service. This study confirms that the use of crumb rubber as a modifier of bituminous binders (CRMB) can improve the pavement characteristics: gap-graded mixtures with crumb rubber can be used in the action plans as urban rehabilitation measure to fight noise pollution. However, this noise reduction seems to decrease with age at a rate of approximately 0.15 dB(A) per year. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Neutron Spectrometer Prospecting in the Mojave Volatiles Project Analog Field Test
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Elphic, R. C.; Heldmann, J. L.; Colaprete, A.; Hunt, D. R.; Deans, M. C.; Lim, D. S.; Foil, G.; Fong, T.
2015-01-01
We know that volatiles are sequestered at the poles of the Moon. While we have evidence of water ice and a number of other compounds based on remote sensing, the detailed distribution, and physical and chemical form are largely unknown. Additional orbital studies of lunar polar volatiles may yield further insights, but the most important next step is to use landed assets to fully characterize the volatile composition and distribution at scales of tens to hundreds of meters. To achieve this range of scales, mobility is needed. Because of the proximity of the Moon, near real-time operation of the surface assets is possible, with an associated reduction in risk and cost. This concept of operations is very different from that of rovers on Mars, and new operational approaches are required to carry out such real-time robotic exploration. The Mojave Volatiles Project (MVP) was a Moon-Mars Analog Mission Activities (MMAMA) program project aimed at (1) determining effective approaches to operating a real-time but short-duration lunar surface robotic mission, and (2) performing prospecting science in a natural setting, as a test of these approaches. Here we describe some results from the first such test, carried out in the Mojave Desert between 16 and 24 October, 2014. The test site was an alluvial fan just E of the Soda Mountains, SW of Baker, California. This site contains desert pavements, ranging from the late Pleistocene to early-Holocene in age. These pavements are undergoing dissection by the ongoing development of washes. A principal objective was to determine the hydration state of different types of desert pavement and bare ground features. The mobility element of the test was provided by the KREX-2 rover, designed and operated by the Intelligent Robotics Group at NASA Ames Research Center. The rover-borne neutron spectrometer measured the neutron albedo at both thermal and epithermal energies. Assuming uniform geochemistry and material bulk density, hydrogen as either hydroxyl/water in mineral assemblages or as moisture will significantly enhance the return of thermalized neutrons. However, in the Mojave test setting there is little uniformity, especially in bulk material density. We find that lighter toned materials (immature pavements, bar and swale, and wash materials) have lower thermal neutron flux, while mature, darker pavements with the greatest desert varnish development have higher neutron fluxes. Preliminary analysis of samples from the various terrain types in the test area indicates a prevailing moisture content of 2-3 wt% H2O. However, soil mineralogy suggests that the welldeveloped Av1 soil horizon beneath the topmost dark pavement clast layer contains the highest clay content. Structural water (including hydroxyl) in these clays may explain the enhanced neutron albedo over dark pavements. On the other hand, surface and subsurface bulk density can also play a role in neutron albedo - lower density of materials found in washes, for example, can result in a reduction in neutron flux. Analysis is ongoing.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-10-01
Many contracting agencies currently use permeability specifications in portland cement concrete (PCC) pavements and structures. This project followed the implementation of the surface resistivity test (TR 233) on a field project in Louisiana. Additio...
Evaluation of Surface Infiltration Testing Procedures in Permeable Pavement Systems
The ASTM method (ASTM C1701) for measuring infiltration rate of in-place pervious concrete provides limited guidance on how to select testing locations, so research is needed to evaluate how testing sites should be selected and how results should be interpreted to assess surface ...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-07-01
Many entities currently use permeability specifications in portland cement concrete (PCC) pavements and structures. This project investigated the use of a surface resistivity device as an indication of concretes ability to resist chloride ion pene...
Development of a fiber optic pavement subgrade strain measurement system
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Miller, Craig Emerson
2000-11-01
This dissertation describes the development of a fiber optic sensing system to measure strains within the soil subgrade of highway pavements resulting from traffic loads. The motivation to develop such a device include improvements to: (1)all phases of pavement design, (2)theoretical models used to predict pavement performance, and (3)pavement rehabilitation. The design of the sensing system encompasses selecting an appropriate transducer design as well as the development of optimal optical and demodulation systems. The first is spring based, which attempts to match its spring stiffness to that of the soil-data indicate it is not an optimal transducer design. The second transducer implements anchoring plates attached to two telescoping tubes which allows the soil to be compacted to a desired density between the plates to dictate the transducer's behavior. Both transducers include an extrinsic Fabry- Perot cavity to impose the soil strains onto a phase change of the optical signal propagating through the cavity. The optical system includes a low coherence source and allows phase modulation via path length stretching by adding a second interferometer in series with the transducer, resulting in a path matched differential interferometer. A digitally implemented synthetic heterodyne demodulator based on a four step phase stepping algorithm is used to obtain unambiguous soil strain information from the displacement of the Fabry-Perot cavity. The demodulator is calibrated and characterized by illuminating the transducer with a second long coherence source of different wavelength. The transducer using anchoring plates is embedded within cylindrical soil specimens of varying soil types and soil moisture contents. Loads are applied to the specimen and resulting strains are measured using the embedded fiber optic gage and LVDTs attached to the surface of the specimen. This experimental verification is substantiated using a finite element analysis to predict any differences between interior and surface strains in the specimens. The experimental data indicate 2-inch diameter anchoring plates embedded in soil close to its optimum moisture content allow for very accurate soil strain measurements.
Road icing forecasting and detecting system
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Xu, Hongke; Zheng, Jinnan; Li, Peiqi; Wang, Qiucai
2017-05-01
Regard for the facts that the low accuracy and low real-time of the artificial observation to determine the road icing condition, and it is difficult to forecast icing situation, according to the main factors influencing the road-icing, and the electrical characteristics reflected by the pavement ice layer, this paper presents an innovative system, that is, ice-forecasting of the highway's dangerous section. The system bases on road surface water salinity measurements and pavement temperature measurement to calculate the freezing point of water and temperature change trend, and then predicts the occurrence time of road icing; using capacitance measurements to verdict the road surface is frozen or not; This paper expounds the method of using single chip microcomputer as the core of the control system and described the business process of the system.
At the end of October 2009, EPA opened a parking lot on the Edison Environmental Center that included three parking rows of permeable pavement. The construction was a cooperative effort among EPA’s Office of Administration and Resources Management, National Risk Management Resea...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-10-01
Many contracting agencies currently use permeability specifi cations in Portland cement concrete (PCC) : pavements and structures. This project followed the implementation of the surface resistivity test TR 233 : on a fi eld project in Louisiana. Add...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-01-01
This report documents the performance of the first Next Generation Concrete Surface (NGCS) built by the : Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT). A 1,500 foot test section was installed on the : eastbound lanes of I-82 near Sunnyside, ...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-04-01
This report documents the construction of the first Next Generation Concrete Surface (NGCS) by the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT). A 1,500 foot test section was installed on the eastbound lanes of I-82 near Sunnyside, WA in Oct...
PAVEMENTS, *REINFORCED PLASTICS), LANDING FIELDS, SPRAYS, GLASS TEXTILES, LAMINATED PLASTICS, TEST METHODS, FOUNDATIONS(STRUCTURES), SANDWICH CONSTRUCTION, SOILS, FEASIBILITY STUDIES, LOAD DISTRIBUTION
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1999-11-01
The primary objective of the pothole experiment was to determine which combinations of materials and patching procedures provide the most cost-effective repair of potholes in asphalt concrete-surfaced pavements. This technical summary summarizes the ...
Geogrid reinforced road subgrade influence on the pavement evenness
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Šiukščius, A.; Vorobjovas, V.; Vaitkus, A.
2018-05-01
As a result of increasing geogrid reinforcement applications in the road subgrade, there are number of projects where geogrid reinforcement is used to control road pavement evenness when there are small layers of peat or mud deeper under road construction. For this task geogrid reinforcement application is not documented but widely used in Lithuania for over a decade. This paper evaluates the long term influence of the geogrid reinforced soil influence on the road surface evenness, when the organic soils stratify in the deeper layers of the subgrade. The geological conditions of the investigated sections are reviewed. The experiment methodology and test results are described, which leads to the conclusions and insights how the pavement evenness depend on the geological conditions and its enhancement. The question is raised about the need for including this geogrid application to the normative documentation. Explanation of the problems that are encountered and the need for further research is given.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Van De Water, P. K.
2016-12-01
The size, frequency, and morphology of leaf surface stomata is used to reconstruct past levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide over geologic time. This technique relies on measuring cell and cell-clusters to correlate with changes of known carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere. Unfortunately, not all plants are suitable because the occurrence and placement of stomatal cell-complexes differ significantly between plant families. Monocot and dicot angiosperms exhibit different types of stomata and stomatal complexes that lack order and thus are unsuitable. But, in gymnosperms, the number and distribution of stomata and pavement cells is formalized and can be used to reconstruct past atmospheric carbon dioxide levels. However, characteristic of each plant species must still be considered. For example, conifers are useful but are divided into two-needle to five-needle pines, or have irregular surface morphology (Pseudotsuga sp. and Tsuga sp. needles). This study uses Pinus monophylla an undivided needle morphology, that being a cylinder has no interior surface cells. Pinus monophylla (single needle pinyon) needles were collected along Geiger Grade (Nevada State Highway 341, Reno) in 2005 and 2013 from 1500m to 2195m. Herbarium samples were also collected from 13 historic collections made between 1911 and 1994. The study determined changes with elevation and/or over time using in these populations. Using Pinus monophylla, insured needles represented a single surface with stomata, stomatal complex cells, and co-occurring pavement cell types. Results show decreased stomatal densities (stomata/area), stomatal index (stomata/stomata + epidermal cells) and stable stomata per row (stomata/row) . Epidermal cell density (Epidermal Cells /Area), and Pavement cell density (Pavement cell/area) track stomatal density similarly. Data comparison, using elevation in the 2005 and 2013 collections showed no-significant trends. Individual stomatal complexes show no differences in the size and shape over time or with elevation. Stomata morphology and the stomatal pores appear conservative. However some complex cells show a morphology suggesting they are not fully formed and functional. These characteristics appear often in the modern material suggesting some stomata never fully develop.
Pavement Sealcoat, PAHs, and Water Quality of Urban Water Bodies: An Overview
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mahler, B. J.; Van Metre, P. C.; Ingersoll, C.; Kunz, J. L.; Kienzler, A.; Devaux, A.; Bony, S.
2014-12-01
Coal-tar-based (CT) sealcoat is used to protect and beautify the asphalt pavement of driveways and parking lots primarily in the central, southern, and northeastern U.S. and in Canada. CT sealcoat typically is 20 to 35 percent crude coal tar or coal-tar pitch and contains from 50,000 to 100,000 mg/kg PAHs, about 1,000 times more than asphalt-based (AS) sealcoat or asphalt itself. Tires and snowplows abrade the friable sealcoat surface into fine particles—PAH concentrations in fine particles (dust) from CT-sealcoated pavement are about 1,000 times higher than in dust from AS-sealcoated pavement (median total PAH concentrations 2,200 and 2.1 mg/kg, respectively). Use of CT sealcoat has several implications for urban streams and lakes. Source apportionment modeling has indicated that, in regions where CT sealcoat is prevalent, particles from sealcoated pavement are contributing the majority of the PAHs to recently deposited lake sediment, with implications for ecological health. Acute 2-d toxicity of runoff from CT-sealcoated pavement to stream biota, demonstrated for a cladoceran (Ceriodaphnia dubia) and fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas), continues for samples collected as long as weeks or months following sealcoat application. Using the fish-liver cell line RGL-W1, runoff collected as much as 36 days following CT-sealcoat application has been demonstrated to cause DNA damage and impair DNA repair capacity. These results demonstrate that CT runoff is a potential hazard to aquatic ecosystems for at least several weeks after sealant application, and that exposure to sunlight can enhance toxicity and genetic damage. Recent research has provided direct evidence that restricting use of CT sealcoat in a watershed can lead to a substantial reduction in PAH concentrations in receiving water bodies.
Seidl, M; Da, G; Ausset, P; Haenn, S; Géhin, E; Moulin, L
2016-04-01
Climate change and increasing demography press local authorities to look after affordable water resources and replacement of drinking water for city necessities like street and pavement cleaning by more available raw water. Though, the substitution of drinking by non-drinking resources demands the evaluation of sanitary hazards. This article aims therefore to evaluate the contribution of cleaning water to the overall exposure of city dwellers in case of wet pavement cleaning using crossed physical, chemical and biological approaches. The result of tracer experiments with fluorescein show that liquid water content of the cleaning aerosol produced is about 0.24 g m(-3), rending possible a fast estimation of exposure levels. In situ analysis of the aerosol particles indicates a significant increase in particle number concentration and particle diameter, though without change in particle composition. The conventional bacterial analysis using total coliforms as tracer suggests that an important part of the contamination is issued from the pavement. The qPCR results show a more than 20-fold increase of background genome concentration for Escherichia coli and 10-fold increase for Enterococcus but a negligible contribution of the cleaning water. The fluorescence analysis of the cleaning aerosol confirms the above findings identifying pavement surface as the major contributor to aerosol organic load. The physical, chemical and microbiological approaches used make it possible to describe accurately the cleaning bioaerosol and to identify the existence of significantly higher levels of all parameters studied during the wet pavement cleaning. Though, the low level of contamination and the very short time of passage of pedestrian in the zone do not suggest a significant risk for the city dwellers. As the cleaning workers remain much longer in the impacted area, more attention should be paid to their chronic exposure.
14 CFR 151.97 - Maintenance and repair.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... or improper design; (4) Painting of buildings (inside and outside) and replacement of damaged items... and resealing surface of pavements. (b) Repair includes any work not included in paragraph (a) of this...
14 CFR 151.97 - Maintenance and repair.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... or improper design; (4) Painting of buildings (inside and outside) and replacement of damaged items... and resealing surface of pavements. (b) Repair includes any work not included in paragraph (a) of this...
14 CFR 151.97 - Maintenance and repair.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... or improper design; (4) Painting of buildings (inside and outside) and replacement of damaged items... and resealing surface of pavements. (b) Repair includes any work not included in paragraph (a) of this...
14 CFR 151.97 - Maintenance and repair.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... or improper design; (4) Painting of buildings (inside and outside) and replacement of damaged items... and resealing surface of pavements. (b) Repair includes any work not included in paragraph (a) of this...
14 CFR 151.97 - Maintenance and repair.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... or improper design; (4) Painting of buildings (inside and outside) and replacement of damaged items... and resealing surface of pavements. (b) Repair includes any work not included in paragraph (a) of this...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-12-01
Automated pavement performance data collection is a method that uses advanced technology to collect detailed road surface : distress information at traffic speed. Agencies are driven to use automated survey techniques to enhance or replace their : cu...
Evaluating base widening methods.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-12-01
The surface transportation system forms the biggest infrastructure investment in the United States of which the : roadway pavement forms an integral part. Maintaining the roadways can involve rehabilitation in the form of : widening; which require a ...
A LiDAR application for the study of taxiway surface evenness and slope
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Barbarella, M.; De Blasiis, M. R.; Fiani, M.; Santoni, M.
2014-05-01
Pavement roughness evaluation of airport runways/taxiways and scheduling of maintenance operations should be done according to well-defined procedures. Survey of geometric features of airport pavements is performed to verify the flow of water from the surface and to assure a level of roughness that allows the airplane to maneuver in the safest and most comfortable conditions. In particular the evaluation of longitudinal and transversal evenness of the runway and taxiway is carried out through topographic survey. The tachymetric survey has been carried out according to traditional topographic technique, which allows the evaluation of geometric position of isolated points with very high accuracy, but it is not very productive. Moreover it returns the pavement surface model through only few measured points. An alternative survey method, characterized by a good accuracy, high speed of acquisition and very high surveyed point density, is Terrestrial Laser Scanning (TLS), in static mode. In this paper we describe our experience aimed to validate the use of time-of-flight (TOF) TLS, based on a survey on a 200 m length segment of an international airport taxiway. From the acquired data we extracted the parameters of interest, especially the slope, and compared them with the values obtained from the traditional topographic survey. We also developed a proprietary software package to evaluate the slope and to analyze the statistical data. The software allows users to manage the flow of a semi-automatic calculation.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-08-19
The U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration is sponsoring a Technical Working Group (TWG) to develop guidance for measuring the influence of road surfaces on tire-pavement noise, vehicle noise, and traffic noise in the U.S. T...
49 CFR 571.103 - Standard No. 103; Windshield defrosting and defogging systems.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... concrete pavement (or other surface with equivalent coefficient of surface friction) at a specified speed... defogging system which operates either by applying heat to the windshield or by dehumidifying the air inside... equipped with a heating system other than a heat exchanger type that uses the engine's coolant as a means...
49 CFR 571.103 - Standard No. 103; Windshield defrosting and defogging systems.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... concrete pavement (or other surface with equivalent coefficient of surface friction) at a specified speed... defogging system which operates either by applying heat to the windshield or by dehumidifying the air inside... equipped with a heating system other than a heat exchanger type that uses the engine's coolant as a means...
49 CFR 571.103 - Standard No. 103; Windshield defrosting and defogging systems.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... concrete pavement (or other surface with equivalent coefficient of surface friction) at a specified speed... defogging system which operates either by applying heat to the windshield or by dehumidifying the air inside... equipped with a heating system other than a heat exchanger type that uses the engine's coolant as a means...
GIS-based automated management of highway surface crack inspection system
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chung, Hung-Chi; Shinozuka, Masanobu; Soeller, Tony; Girardello, Roberto
2004-07-01
An automated in-situ road surface distress surveying and management system, AMPIS, has been developed on the basis of video images within the framework of GIS software. Video image processing techniques are introduced to acquire, process and analyze the road surface images obtained from a moving vehicle. ArcGIS platform is used to integrate the routines of image processing and spatial analysis in handling the full-scale metropolitan highway surface distress detection and data fusion/management. This makes it possible to present user-friendly interfaces in GIS and to provide efficient visualizations of surveyed results not only for the use of transportation engineers to manage road surveying documentations, data acquisition, analysis and management, but also for financial officials to plan maintenance and repair programs and further evaluate the socio-economic impacts of highway degradation and deterioration. A review performed in this study on fundamental principle of Pavement Management System (PMS) and its implementation indicates that the proposed approach of using GIS concept and its tools for PMS application will reshape PMS into a new information technology-based system that can provide convenient and efficient pavement inspection and management.
Tiled fuzzy Hough transform for crack detection
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vaheesan, Kanapathippillai; Chandrakumar, Chanjief; Mathavan, Senthan; Kamal, Khurram; Rahman, Mujib; Al-Habaibeh, Amin
2015-04-01
Surface cracks can be the bellwether of the failure of any component under loading as it indicates the component's fracture due to stresses and usage. For this reason, crack detection is indispensable for the condition monitoring and quality control of road surfaces. Pavement images have high levels of intensity variation and texture content, hence the crack detection is difficult. Moreover, shallow cracks result in very low contrast image pixels making their detection difficult. For these reasons, studies on pavement crack detection is active even after years of research. In this paper, the fuzzy Hough transform is employed, for the first time to detect cracks on any surface. The contribution of texture pixels to the accumulator array is reduced by using the tiled version of the Hough transform. Precision values of 78% and a recall of 72% are obtaining for an image set obtained from an industrial imaging system containing very low contrast cracking. When only high contrast crack segments are considered the values move to mid to high 90%.
Evaluating the Rheological Properties of Waste Natural Rubber Latex Modified Binder
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Khatijah Abu Bakar, Siti; Ezree Abdulah, Mohd; Mustafa Kamal, Mazlina; Rahman, Raha Abd; Arifin Hadithon, Kamarul; Buhari, Rosnawati; Tajudin, Saiful Azhar Ahmad
2018-03-01
Road surface is designed to be the durable surface material to sustain the traffic loading. However, due to physical and mechanical stress, pavement deterioration is accelerated. Thus, modifying conventional bitumen by improving its properties is seen as the best method to prolong pavement in-service life. The purpose of this paper is to study the effect of waste natural rubber (NR) latex on rheological properties of bitumen. Conventional bitumen PEN 80/100 was modified with different content of waste NR latex using a high shear mixer at temperature of 150°C. The modified binder properties were characterized by conducting physical test (i.e. softening point, penetration and penetration index) and rheological test (i.e. dynamic shear rheometer, DSR). Results showed that, the addition of waste NR latex improved the rheology properties, which indicates by improving of rutting factor (G*/sin δ). This properties improvement has also shows a potential to resist deformation on road surface despite of high traffic loading.
Savi, Tadeja; Bertuzzi, Stefano; Branca, Salvatore; Tretiach, Mauro; Nardini, Andrea
2015-02-01
Urban trees help towns to cope with climate warming by cooling both air and surfaces. The challenges imposed by the urban environment, with special reference to low water availability due to the presence of extensive pavements, result in high rates of mortality of street trees, that can be increased by climatic extremes. We investigated the water relations and xylem hydraulic safety/efficiency of Quercus ilex trees growing at urban sites with different percentages of surrounding impervious pavements. Seasonal changes of plant water potential and gas exchange, vulnerability to cavitation and embolism level, and morpho-anatomical traits were measured. We found patterns of increasing water stress and vulnerability to drought at increasing percentages of impervious pavement cover, with a consequent reduction in gas exchange rates, decreased safety margins toward embolism development, and increased vulnerability to cavitation, suggesting the occurrence of stress-induced hydraulic deterioration. The amount of impermeable surface and chronic exposure to water stress influence the site-specific risk of drought-induced dieback of urban trees under extreme drought. Besides providing directions for management of green spaces in towns, our data suggest that xylem hydraulics is key to a full understanding of the responses of urban trees to global change. © 2014 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2014 New Phytologist Trust.
Coal-Tar-Based Parking Lot Sealcoat: An Unrecognized Source of PAH to Settled House Dust
2010-01-01
Despite much speculation, the principal factors controlling concentrations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in settled house dust (SHD) have not yet been identified. In response to recent reports that dust from pavement with coal-tar-based sealcoat contains extremely high concentrations of PAH, we measured PAH in SHD from 23 apartments and in dust from their associated parking lots, one-half of which had coal-tar-based sealcoat (CT). The median concentration of total PAH (T-PAH) in dust from CT parking lots (4760 μg/g, n = 11) was 530 times higher than that from parking lots with other pavement surface types (asphalt-based sealcoat, unsealed asphalt, concrete [median 9.0 μg/g, n = 12]). T-PAH in SHD from apartments with CT parking lots (median 129 μg/g) was 25 times higher than that in SHD from apartments with parking lots with other pavement surface types (median 5.1 μg/g). Presence or absence of CT on a parking lot explained 48% of the variance in log-transformed T-PAH in SHD. Urban land-use intensity near the residence also had a significant but weaker relation to T-PAH. No other variables tested, including carpeting, frequency of vacuuming, and indoor burning, were significant. PMID:20063893
Coal-tar-based parking lot sealcoat: An unrecognized source of PAH to settled house dust
Mahler, B.J.; Van Metre, P.C.; Wilson, J.T.; Musgrove, M.; Burbank, T.L.; Ennis, T.E.; Bashara, T.J.
2010-01-01
Despite much speculation, the principal factors controlling concentrations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in settled house dust (SHD) have not yet been identified. In response to recent reports that dust from pavement with coaltar-based sealcoat contains extremely high concentrations of PAH, we measured PAH in SHD from 23 apartments and in dust from their associated parking lots, one-half of which had coal-tar-based sealcoat (CT). The median concentration of total PAH (T-PAH) in dust from CT parking lots (4760 ??g/g, n = 11) was 530 times higher than that from parking lots with other pavement surface types (asphalt-based sealcoat, unsealed asphalt, concrete [median 9.0 ??g/g, n = 12]). T-PAH in SHD from apartments with CT parking lots (median 129 ??g/g) was 25 times higher than that in SHD from apartments with parking lots with other pavement surface types (median 5.1 ??g/g). Presence or absence of CT on a parking lot explained 48% of the variance in log-transformed T-PAH in SHD. Urban land-use intensity near the residence also had a significant but weaker relation to T-PAH. No other variables tested, including carpeting, frequency of vacuuming, and indoor burning, were significant. ?? 2010 American Chemical Society.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chui, T. F. M.; Liu, X.; Zhan, W.
2015-12-01
Green infrastructures (GI) are becoming more important for urban stormwater control worldwide. However, relatively few studies focus on researching the specific designs of GI at household scale. This study assesses the hydrological performance and cost-effectiveness of different GI designs, namely green roofs, bioretention systems and porous pavements. It aims to generate generic insights by comparing the optimal designs of each GI in 2-year and 50-year storms of Hong Kong, China and Seattle, US. EPA SWMM is first used to simulate the hydrologic performance, in particular, the peak runoff reduction of thousands of GI designs. Then, life cycle costs of the designs are computed and their effectiveness, in terms of peak runoff reduction percentage per thousand dollars, is compared. The peak runoff reduction increases almost linearly with costs for green roofs. However, for bioretention systems and porous pavements, peak runoff reduction only increases significantly with costs in the mid values. For achieving the same peak runoff reduction percentage, the optimal soil depth of green roofs increases with the design storm, while surface area does not change significantly. On the other hand, for bioretention systems and porous pavements, the optimal surface area increases with the design storm, while thickness does not change significantly. In general, the cost effectiveness of porous pavements is highest, followed by bioretention systems and then green roofs. The cost effectiveness is higher for a smaller storm, and is thus higher for 2-year storm than 50-year storm, and is also higher for Seattle when compared to Hong Kong. This study allows us to better understand the hydrological performance and cost-effectiveness of different GI designs. It facilitates the implementation of optimal choice and design of each specific GI for stormwater mitigation.
Watson, Margaret; Arlt, Volker M.; White, Paul A.
2016-01-01
Coal tar (CT) is a thick black liquid produced as a by‐product of coal carbonization to produce coke or manufactured gas. It is comprised a complex mixture of polycyclic aromatic compounds, including a wide range of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), many of which are genotoxic and carcinogenic. CT is used in some pavement sealants (also known as sealcoat), which are applied to pavement in order to seal and beautify the surface. Human exposure is known to occur not only during application, but also as a result of the weathering process, as elevated levels of PAHs have been found in settled house dust in residences adjacent to CT‐sealed surfaces. In this study we examined the genotoxicity of an extract of a commercially available CT‐based sealcoat in the transgenic Muta™Mouse model. Mice were orally exposed to 3 doses of sealcoat extract daily for 28 days. We evaluated genotoxicity by examining: (1) stable DNA adducts and (2) lacZ mutations in bone marrow, liver, lung, small intestine, and glandular stomach, as well as (3) micronucleated red blood cells. Significant increases were seen for each endpoint and in all tissues. The potency of the response differed across tissues, with the highest frequency of adducts occurring in liver and lung, and the highest frequency of mutations occurring in small intestine. The results of this study are the first demonstration of mammalian genotoxicity following exposure to CT‐containing pavement sealcoat. This work provides in vivo evidence to support the contention that there may be adverse health effects in mammals, and potentially in humans, from exposure to coal tar. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 57:535–545, 2016. © 2016 Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada PMID:27473530
Long, Alexandra S; Watson, Margaret; Arlt, Volker M; White, Paul A
2016-08-01
Coal tar (CT) is a thick black liquid produced as a by-product of coal carbonization to produce coke or manufactured gas. It is comprised a complex mixture of polycyclic aromatic compounds, including a wide range of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), many of which are genotoxic and carcinogenic. CT is used in some pavement sealants (also known as sealcoat), which are applied to pavement in order to seal and beautify the surface. Human exposure is known to occur not only during application, but also as a result of the weathering process, as elevated levels of PAHs have been found in settled house dust in residences adjacent to CT-sealed surfaces. In this study we examined the genotoxicity of an extract of a commercially available CT-based sealcoat in the transgenic Muta™Mouse model. Mice were orally exposed to 3 doses of sealcoat extract daily for 28 days. We evaluated genotoxicity by examining: (1) stable DNA adducts and (2) lacZ mutations in bone marrow, liver, lung, small intestine, and glandular stomach, as well as (3) micronucleated red blood cells. Significant increases were seen for each endpoint and in all tissues. The potency of the response differed across tissues, with the highest frequency of adducts occurring in liver and lung, and the highest frequency of mutations occurring in small intestine. The results of this study are the first demonstration of mammalian genotoxicity following exposure to CT-containing pavement sealcoat. This work provides in vivo evidence to support the contention that there may be adverse health effects in mammals, and potentially in humans, from exposure to coal tar. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 57:535-545, 2016. © 2016 Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada. © 2016 Reproduced with the permission of the Government of Canada.
Performance Testing of Hot-Mix Asphalt Aggregates
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1999-12-01
Hot mix asphalt (HMA) pavements are subject to thermal cracking, fatigue cracking, rutting, stripping, raveling, and freeze-thaw damage. Some of these distresses are directly affected by the choice of aggregates. Particle shape, surface texture, part...
The use of micro-surfacing for pavement preservation.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2002-03-01
The Maine Department of Transportation (MDOT) is responsible for maintaining approximately 14,000 : kilometers of public highways. Maintenance of these highways consists of rehabilitation or reconstruction : when the road has deteriorated to an unacc...
Evaluating roadway surface rating technologies.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-06-01
The key project objective was to assess and evaluate the feasibility and accuracy of : custom software used in smartphones to measure road roughness from the : accelerometer data collected from smartphones and compare results with PASER : (Pavement S...
Green noise wall construction and evaluation : executive summary report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-09-01
Over the years, considerable research has been : performed towards effective and practical noise : abatement measures. Some of these techniques include : traffic management, use of quieter and noise absorbing : pavement surfaces, improving land use a...
Management of paved secondary roads.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1991-01-01
This report provides the background for the development of a pavement management system for the paved roads of Virginia's secondary highway system. Included are descriptions of a study to develop an acceptable surface-condition rating system for surf...
Structural Improvements of Flexible Pavements Using Geosynthetics for Base Course Reinforcement
2009-10-01
as a function of cumulative ESALs measured in an unloaded condition....................................................................... 71 Figure...74 Figure 71 . Comparison of microstrains predicted by the FE model and measured by the...TR-09-11 71 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 x 10 6 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 190 200 Cumulative ESALs S tr es s (k P a) 100 mm AC 300 mm Base 150 mm AC 300
2013-09-01
ER D C/ G SL T R -1 3 -2 4 Evaluation of Precast Panels for Airfield Pavement Repair Phase II: Results of Accelerated Pavement Testing...default. ERDC/GSL TR-13-24 September 2013 Evaluation of Precast Panels for Airfield Pavement Repair Phase II: Results of Accelerated Pavement ... pavement testing using a C-17 load cart to evaluate the performance of a precast portland cement concrete (PCC) pavement repair system. The system
49 CFR 571.103 - Standard No. 103; Windshield defrosting and defogging systems.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... concrete pavement (or other surface with equivalent coefficient of surface friction) at a specified speed... defogging system which operates either by applying heat to the windshield or by dehumidifying the air inside... system other than a heat exchanger type that uses the engine's coolant as a means to supply the heat to...
49 CFR 571.103 - Standard No. 103; Windshield defrosting and defogging systems.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... concrete pavement (or other surface with equivalent coefficient of surface friction) at a specified speed... defogging system which operates either by applying heat to the windshield or by dehumidifying the air inside... system other than a heat exchanger type that uses the engine's coolant as a means to supply the heat to...
Masino, Johannes; Foitzik, Michael-Jan; Frey, Michael; Gauterin, Frank
2017-06-01
Tire road noise is the major contributor to traffic noise, which leads to general annoyance, speech interference, and sleep disturbances. Standardized methods to measure tire road noise are expensive, sophisticated to use, and they cannot be applied comprehensively. This paper presents a method to automatically classify different types of pavement and the wear condition to identify noisy road surfaces. The methods are based on spectra of time series data of the tire cavity sound, acquired under normal vehicle operation. The classifier, an artificial neural network, correctly predicts three pavement types, whereas there are few bidirectional mis-classifications for two pavements, which have similar physical characteristics. The performance measures of the classifier to predict a new or worn out condition are over 94.6%. One could create a digital map with the output of the presented method. On the basis of these digital maps, road segments with a strong impact on tire road noise could be automatically identified. Furthermore, the method can estimate the road macro-texture, which has an impact on the tire road friction especially on wet conditions. Overall, this digital map would have a great benefit for civil engineering departments, road infrastructure operators, and for advanced driver assistance systems.
Reconstruction of railroads and highways with in-situ reclamation materials.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-03-01
The resilient modulus and plastic deformation of recycled roadway materials with and without fly ash stabilization were characterized using a large-scale model experiment (LSME). Stabilization of recycled pavement materials (RPM) and road surface gra...
Performance monitoring pavements with thermal segregation in Texas.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-04-01
This project conducted work to investigate the performance of asphalt surface mixtures that exhibited : thermal segregation during construction. From 2004 to 2009, a total of 14 construction projects were : identified for monitoring. Five of these pr...
Developing standards and specifications for full depth pavement reclamation.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2012-05-25
The report summarizes the work conducted during the development of procedures for conducting full depth reclamation of existing asphalt surfaced and unsurfaced roads. The report describes full depth reclamation, and includes a summary of available li...
Kansas Department of Transportation 2014 chip seal manual.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-03-01
A chip seal is a very effective thin surface treatment process used by maintenance managers to : preserve existing asphalt pavements. The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) 2014 Chip Seal : Manual is a guide that provides guidelines, backgrou...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1999-11-01
Goal 5 is the comparison of the performance of drained and undrained flexible pavements under 'wet' conditions. Wet conditions intend to simulate approximate surface infiltration rates that would occur along the northwest coast of California during a...
Assessing Pavement Surface Splash and Spray Impact on Road Users
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-10-01
This TechBrief describes the development of an assessment tool to characterize the propensity of highway sections to generate splash and spray during rainfall and the impact of splash and spray on road users.
PAVECHECK : training material updated user's manual including GPS.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-01-01
PAVECHECK is a software package used to integrate nondestructive test data from various testing systems to provide the pavement engineer with a comprehensive evaluation of both surface and subsurface conditions. This User's Manual is intended to demo...
The use of micro-surfacing for pavement preservation : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-04-01
The Maine Department of Transportation (MaineDOT) is responsible for maintaining approximately 8300 : miles of public highways. Maintenance of these highways consists of rehabilitation or reconstruction : when the road has deteriorated to an unaccept...
Field investigation of verglimit.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1986-01-01
Verglimit is a calcium chloride based material that is incorporated into bituminous surface mixes to prevent ice and snow from sticking to the pavement. Two test sections were installed and the effectiveness of the Verglimit was evaluated for two win...
Evaluation of curing compound application time on concrete surface durability : [brief].
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-05-01
Roadways that are both durable and aesthetically pleasing are primary goals of Wisconsin : Department of Transportation (WisDOT) paving projects. Recently, Portland Cement Concrete : (PCC) pavement projects constructed by WisDOT have experienced incr...
Investigation of concrete sealer products to extend concrete pavement life : phase 1.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2011-12-01
Five surface applied concrete sealer treatments were evaluated in the laboratory for water vapor transmission, saltwater absorption, alkali resistance, depth of penetration, UV exposure and cyclic saltwater ponding, chloride content, and freeze-thaw ...
Passive pavement-mounted acoustical linguistic drive alert system and method
Kisner, Roger A.; Anderson, Richard L.; Carnal, Charles L.; Hylton, James O.; Stevens, Samuel S.
2001-01-01
Systems and methods are described for passive pavement-mounted acoustical alert of the occupants of a vehicle. A method of notifying a vehicle occupant includes providing a driving medium upon which a vehicle is to be driven; and texturing a portion of the driving medium such that the textured portion interacts with the vehicle to produce audible signals, the textured portion pattern such that a linguistic message is encoded into the audible signals. The systems and methods provide advantages because information can be conveyed to the occupants of the vehicle based on the location of the vehicle relative to the textured surface.
Work flow of signal processing data of ground penetrating radar case of rigid pavement measurements
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Handayani, Gunawan
The signal processing of Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) requires a certain work flow to obtain good results. Even though the Ground Penetrating Radar data looks similar with seismic reflection data, but the GPR data has particular signatures that the seismic reflection data does not have. This is something to do with coupling between antennae and the ground surface. Because of this, the GPR data should be treated differently from the seismic signal data processing work flow. Even though most of the processing steps still follow the same work flow of seismic reflection data such as: filtering, predictive deconvolution etc. Thismore » paper presents the work flow of GPR processing data on rigid pavement measurements. The processing steps start from raw data, de-Wow process, remove DC and continue with the standard process to get rid of noises i.e. filtering process. Some radargram particular features of rigid pavement along with pile foundations are presented.« less
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Marlin, E. C.; Horne, W. B.
1977-01-01
A wire-comb technique is described for transversely grooving the surface of a freshly laid (plastic state) slip-formed concrete overlay installed at Patrick Henry Airport. This method of surface texturing yields better water drainage and pavement skid resistance than that obtained with an older conventional burlap drag concrete surface treatment installed on an adjacent portion of the runway.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2010-11-01
Previous research on pavement markings from a safety perspective tackled various issues such as pavement marking retroreflectivity : variability, relationship between pavement marking retroreflectivity and driver visibility, or pavement marking impro...
Developpement d'un catalogue de conception des chaussee pour les pays sub-sahariens
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Koubikana Pambou, Claude Hugo
Pavement surface evaluation in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) reveals severe, premature, and costly damages that require extensive maintenance. This is due to the limitations of tools used for pavement structural design as well as and the lack of the available calibration for the materials used. It is necessary to search for solutions for these failures and: * feed the discussion on durable roads for SSA area to meet the expectations of the trans- African highway projects of the new partnership for Africa (NEPAD); * provide simple and effective tools for pavement design and promote low cost for maintenance of road infrastructures; * provide users with functional and safety and durable road system. This catalogue, object and result of this work, was developed through a new tool for structural design (OCS-Chaussee), computed using Microsoft Excel worksheet. It uses iteration through empirical mechanics (ME) methods, applied to multilayer linear analysis using Odemark - Boussinesq method as a theoretical and conceptual basis for design pavement. The verification of obtained results was done with viscoelasticity assumption according Quijano's data (2010) and the pavement analysis software WINJULEA developed by US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) and with the backcalculation's data from Varik and al. (2002) and local's data from South-African. The lifetime of each proposed roadway was estimated by using Asphalt Institute's transfer function and the Miner's law. It's hope that thoughtful use of this catalogue and the OCS- Chaussee will help advance reasonable road engineering solutions approaches, and training and make profitable budgets allocated to the construction and to road rehabilitation in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Development of an evaporation-optimized and water-permeable pavement
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Starke, P.; Göbel, P.; Coldewey, W. G.
2009-04-01
During recent decades, urban areas have been threatened more frequently by flood events. Furthermore, the potential for damage from these events has increased on average. The construction of houses, streets and parking lots has caused this trend by sealing the ground surface, i.e. these water-impermeable areas reduce the natural infiltration and evaporation-rates, and in some cases it is even completely stopped. The consequence is the so called "urban water cycle". Water from precipitation cannot be stored anywhere and so there is an immediate and very high surface run-off effect. Especially after intense rain events, canalisations and sewage-treatment plants are overloaded and this leads to higher costs for water treatment and to environmental damage. A practical solution to this problem is the use of water-permeable pavements. Here higher infiltration rates lead to a groundwater recharge that is greater than that of natural soils. The consequences from using these surfaces are already noticeable in many places through increasing groundwater levels. These increases cause damage to buildings. A second difference from a natural-soil water-balance is a lower evapotranspiration rate. Up to now the evaporation rates for water-permeable pavements has not been established accurately. The aim of the applied research project at the University of Muenster, which is sponsored by the DBU (The German Federal Environmental Foundation), is to gain knowledge of urban evaporation rates and of water-permeable surfaces, especially water-permeable pavements. Water-permeable pavements consist of the paving stone surface and the two sub-base layers below. Pre-investigations show that evaporation can be influenced by the complete sub-base. Therefore, the first step was to investigate which materials are used for sub-base construction. All in all, 27 materials were collected from throughout Germany and these materials were then tested (in terms of physical and hydraulic attributes) in the soil-mechanics laboratory of the University of Muenster. For their street construction useability, and having regard to evaporation, a selection of appropriate materials were built into a test field. The test field consisted of seven hexagonal areas each about 10 m2 large, which are placed in a honeycomb manner. The evaporation measurements are carried out with a WERNER tunnel-evaporation gauge (TUV) which is able to detect the actual evaporation rate. Its functional principle also allows a direct comparison between the middle reference area and one outer area of the test field. Every measuring period lasts one week and after that the TUV is moved to between the next outer area and the reference area. So the TUV rotates over the whole test field and every measuring area is covered by a measurement. In addition, a Hellman rain-gauge near the test field enables the measurement of a direct precipitation-evaporation ratio. Since the start of the measurements in July 2008, the first results collected showed that measureable differences in evaporation rates could be detected after a few measuring periods, i.e. the differences are up to 32% between the reference area and one outer area. In July 2009, the six outer measuring areas of the test field will be replaced and, based on the actual results collected, the sub-base layers will be replaced by an evaporation-optimized sub-base. The new outer measuring areas will only differ in terms of a different paving-stone surface. These paving stones are actually under developement and under laboratory testing (i.e. permeability, porosity, capillary water and evaporationrates), and so they will be evaporation-opimized. The open-air test in the test field is to assure and compare the evaporation rates. As a final result, the evaporation-optimized and water-permeable pavement and the knowledge of its exact drainage ratio will allow city planners or architects to build water-permeable streets with due regard to the respective area-specific conditions. This new developed pavement is an approximation to the water balance of a natural soil. In this way, the danger of flooding can be further reduced in urban areas.
The Energy Under Our Feet: A Study of Solar Radiation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Weiss, I.
2016-12-01
In this experiment I tested if asphalt pavement can produce enough solar heat to produce energy through a system that uses water, solar energy and heat. A setup that can conserve the water and prevent it from evaporating, as well as measuring the energy production is required to run this experiment. I have done a lot of research on this experiment and found that there are several variables that impact the results of this experiment. 1. The surface temperature compared to the air temperature 2. The Geographical location of the pavement 3. The time of the year 4. Cloud coverage for the day Overall there will be many variables I will have to keep out of the experiment such as temperature ranges, season changes and geographical location. My constant will be my location at 33.7086o North and 117.9564o West. Asphalt pavements do not reflect the sunlight and hence heat up faster than a light surface that would reflect the sunlight. This means the Asphalt absorbs the solar radiation, which increases the temperature of the air around the asphalt contributing to what is known as the urban heat island effect. This heating in turn contributes to the formation of smog and ozone products. With the population still growing this would also mean an increase in this temperature and hence an increase in smog and ozone, creating a significant health concern. Cities need to start looking at ways to cool their pavement and find ways to harvest the energy created by their streets. Installing pipes with water can provide that solution and not only reduce the heat reflected from the pavement but also harvest energy from this setup, and decrease the smog production and maintain a balance in ozone levels. As well as the asphalt needed to run the testing, a Stirling engine is required. A Stirling Engine is a highly efficient engine that can run on a variety of heat sources. Because it is highly compatible with alternative energy and renewable energy sources it could become increasingly significant as the cost of fuel keeps rising. One additional item I researched was the Solar Noon. This is the data that provides us with the best angle of the sun onto our pavement and the timeframe that would give us the highest concentration of solar radiation. For the testing location at my home the Solar Noon data was calculated on http://susdesign.com/sunangle.
Chip seal design and specifications : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-12-01
Chip seals or seal coats, are a pavement preservation method constructed using a layer of asphalt binder that is covered by a uniformly graded aggregate. The benefits of chip seal include: sealing surface cracks, keeping water from penetrating the su...
Reference measurements of pavement management system roadway elevations.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-08-01
New, more efficient methods of measuring road surfaces, including using moving vehicles, are being developed and deployed. Testing the veracity of such data presents its own problems. Busy, heavily traveled highways do not lend themselves to easy occ...
Laboratory and field evaluation of concrete paving curing effectiveness.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2009-12-01
Ensuring that sufficient water is available in hydrating concrete is of great importance to produce durable : concrete and achieve both short- and long-term performance of concrete pavement. Excessive early-age : evaporation from the surface of concr...
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-04-01
This report evaluates four different subbase types, two different concrete mix designs (a standard Texas : Department of Transportation gradation and an optimized gradation), three different curing compounds, and : four different surface textures tha...
Refining the maintenance techniques for Interlocking Concrete Paver GIs - abstract
Surface clogging adversely affects the performance of Interlocking Concrete Pavements (ICP) by reducing their ability to infiltrate stormwater runoff. Determining the correct methods for remedial maintenances is crucial to recovering and maintaining efficient ICP performance. T...
Durable superpave mixes in Kansas.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2016-05-01
Approximately 89% of 11,000 miles of Kansas roads are surfaced with asphalt. Hundreds of thousands of tons : of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) are produced annually in the United States, including in Kansas. This bulk : volume of RAP must be econom...
Evaluation of strains in bituminous surfaces : stiffness-fatigue investigation.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1973-01-01
The study was designed to determine if strains in Virginia's thin asphaltic pavements were high enough to cause early fatigue failure. Strains were computed with the Chevron multilayer computer program, and also measured on selected highways using el...
Texturing of concrete pavements : final report.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1979-08-01
During the month of June, 1973, the plastic concrete surface of a section of Interstate 10 in the Baton Rouge area was textured using several different texturing techniques, such as burlap drag, brooms and metal tines. The purpose of this experimenta...
Influence of Three Permeable Pavement Surfaces on Nitrogen Treatment
Nitrogen is a stressor of concern in many nutrient sensitive watersheds often associated with algal blooms and resulting fish kills. Communities are increasingly installing green infrastructure stormwater control measures (SCMs) to reduce pollutant loads associated with stormwat...
Implications of Use of Coal-Tar-Based Pavement Sealcoat on Urban Water Quality
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Van Metre, P. C.
2015-12-01
Coal-tar-based (CT) sealcoat is used to protect and improve the appearance of asphalt pavement of driveways and parking lots primarily in the central and eastern U.S. and in Canada. CT sealcoat typically is 20 to 35% crude coal tar or coal-tar pitch and contains from 50,000 to 100,000 mg/kg polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), about 1,000 times more than asphalt-based (AS) sealcoat or asphalt itself. Tires and snowplows abrade the friable sealcoat surface into fine particles—median total PAH concentrations in dust from CT-sealcoated pavement are 2,200 mg/kg compared to a median concentration of 11 mg/kg for dust from unsealed pavement. Use of CT sealcoat has several implications for urban streams and lakes. Source apportionment modeling has indicated that, in regions where CT sealcoat is prevalent, particles from sealcoated pavement are contributing the majority of the PAHs to recently deposited lake sediment, often resulting in sediment concentrations above toxicity thresholds based on effects-based sediment quality guidelines. Acute 2-day laboratory toxicity testing of simulated runoff from CT-sealcoated pavement to a cladoceran (Ceriodaphnia dubia) and fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) demonstrated that toxicity continues for samples collected for weeks or months following sealcoat application and that toxicity is enhanced by exposure to UV light. Using the fish-liver cell line RTL-W1, runoff collected as much as 36 days following CT-sealcoat application has been demonstrated to cause DNA damage and impair DNA repair capacity. These results demonstrate that CT runoff is a potential hazard to aquatic ecosystems and that exposure to sunlight can enhance toxicity and genetic damage. Recent research has provided direct evidence that restricting use of CT sealcoat in a watershed can lead to a substantial reduction in PAH concentrations in receiving water bodies.
An assessment of the skid resistance effect on traffic safety under wet-pavement conditions.
Pardillo Mayora, José M; Jurado Piña, Rafael
2009-07-01
Pavement-tire friction provides the grip that is required for maintaining vehicle control and for stopping in emergency situations. Statistically significant negative correlations of skid resistance values and wet-pavement accident rates have been found in previous research. Skid resistance measured with SCRIM and crash data from over 1750km of two-lane rural roads in the Spanish National Road System were analyzed to determine the influence of pavement conditions on safety and to assess the effects of improving pavement friction on safety. Both wet- and dry-pavement crash rates presented a decreasing trend as skid resistance values increased. Thresholds in SCRIM coefficient values associated with significant decreases in wet-pavement crash rates were determined. Pavement friction improvement schemes were found to yield significant reductions in wet-pavement crash rates averaging 68%. The results confirm the importance of maintaining adequate levels of pavement friction to safeguard traffic safety as well as the potential of pavement friction improvement schemes to achieve significant crash reductions.
A probabilistic and adaptive approach to modeling performance of pavement infrastructure
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2007-08-01
Accurate prediction of pavement performance is critical to pavement management agencies. Reliable and accurate predictions of pavement infrastructure performance can save significant amounts of money for pavement infrastructure management agencies th...
Road analysis: a tool for cost-effective rehabilitation measures for Finnish roads
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Roimela, Petri; Salmenkaita, Seppo; Maijala, Pekka; Saarenketo, Timo
2000-04-01
Public funding for road network maintenance has decreased 30% during the last few years in Finland. Reduced resources, together with the current rehabilitation strategies, will in the long term result in increasing deterioration of the Finnish road network. For this reason road rehabilitation funding should be focused more specifically on those roads and road sections requiring measures and these measures should be optimized to ensure that only the specific problem structure will be repaired. Roadscanners Oy, in cooperation with the Finnish National Road Administration (Finnra), has developed a new and effective Road Analysis technique to survey the condition of roads and road networks. Road Analysis is based on the integrated analysis of the measured data collected from the road under survey. The basic survey methods used in Road Analysis include Ground Penetrating Data (GPR), falling weight deflectometer (FWD), roughness and rutting measurements, pavement distress mapping and GPS-positioning, as well as reference drilling based on preliminary GPR data analysis. The collected road survey data is processed, interpreted, analyzed and classified using Road Doctor software, specifically developed for this purpose. GPR measurements in road analysis are carried out using a 400 MHz ground-coupled antenna and a 1.0 GHz horn antenna. Horn antenna data is used to measure the thickness of the pavement and base course layers, as well as to evaluate their quality based on their dielectric properties. The 400 MHz ground-coupled data is used to estimate the thickness of the pavement structure and embankment. Ground-coupled antenna data is used for subgrade quality estimations and in evaluating the causes of subgrade- related frost defects. GPR data also provides important location information about special structures, such as steel reinforcements, cables and pipelines. Road Analysis includes a classification of the critical elements affecting the lifetime of the road: (1) overall pavement condition, (2) condition assessment of the unbound pavement structure, (3) road fatigue related to subgrade frost-action, (4) drainage condition and (5) local damages, such as settlements of the surveyed road. The results of Road Analysis provide a better understanding of the causes of defects occurring on the road and allow more precise rehabilitation measures for problem layers.
California state of the pavement report, 1999
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2001-03-01
This report presents the results of the 1999 Pavement Condition Survey for the State of California. It gives an overview of pavement conditions, vehicle miles traveled on rough pavements, needs classification, and pavement performance. For each of th...
Analysis relating to pavement material characterizations and their effects on pavement performance.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1998-01-01
This report presents the analysis conducted on relating pavement performance or response measures and design considerations to specific pavement layers utilizing data contained in the Long-Term Pavement Performance Program National Information Manage...
Mechanistic-empirical pavement design guide calibration for pavement rehabilitation.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-01-01
The Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) is in the process of implementing the recently introduced AASHTO : Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide (MEPDG) for new pavement sections. The majority of pavement work : conducted by ODOT involve...
MX Siting Investigation Geotechnical Siting Status Report. Volume I.
1978-06-21
and have moderate shear strength. GNU. HAl SUNAL, INC ENGINEERING AND GEOPHYSICAL PROPERTIES Int rrniatd.an. ungur . Aluvial Lacustrine /oNan gdotlS t...an unvarnished, active surface of sediment transport gra A53 stream channel and floodplain deposits. A52 - Unconsolidated to poorly consolidated sand...silt, and sandy gravel, with va c.0 A52 surface gravels forming isolated areas of desert pavement. This fan is in vario Cc surface of sediment
The shakeout scenario: Meeting the needs for construction aggregates, asphalt, and concrete
Langer, W.H.
2011-01-01
An Mw 7.8 earthquake as described in the ShakeOut Scenario would cause significantdamage to buildings and infrastructure. Over 6 million tons of newly mined aggregate would be used for emergency repairs and for reconstruction in the five years following the event. This aggregate would be applied mostly in the form of concrete for buildings and bridges, asphalt or concrete for pavement, and unbound gravel for applications such as base course that goes under highway pavement and backfilling for foundations and pipelines. There are over 450 aggregate, concrete, and asphalt plants in the affected area, some of which would be heavily damaged. Meeting the increased demand for construction materials would require readily available permitted reserves, functioning production facilities, a supply of cement and asphalt, a source of water, gas, and electricity, and a trained workforce. Prudent advance preparations would facilitate a timely emergency response and reconstruction following such an earthquake. ?? 2011, Earthquake Engineering Research Institute.
Tire-to-Surface Friction-Coefficient Measurements with a C-123B Airplane on Various Runway Surfaces
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Sawyer, Richard H.; Kolnick, Joseph J.
1959-01-01
An investigation was conducted to obtain information on the tire-to-surface friction coefficients available in aircraft braking during the landing run. The tests were made with a C-123B airplane on both wet and dry concrete and bituminous pavements and on snow-covered and ice surfaces at speeds from 12 to 115 knots. Measurements were made of the maximum (incipient skidding) friction coefficient, the full-skidding (locked wheel) friction coefficient, and the wheel slip ratio during braking.