TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING II

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Traffic Data For Pavement 2012 FHWA Highway Information Seminar, Arlington, VA Tianjia Tang, PE, Ph.D. Chief, Travel Monitoring and Surveys Division 421.
Advertisements

It’s all about… AERODYNAMICS!!
Motion & Forces.
Newton’s Laws of Motion
Pavement Design Session Matakuliah: S0753 – Teknik Jalan Raya Tahun: 2009.
Truck Size and Weight For this Power Point go.
Engr. Ejaz Ahmad Khan Deputy Director Pakhtunkhwa Highways Authority
Pavement Design CE 453 Lecture 28.
Force and Acceleration
By Mr.Surasak Kaewdee Transportation Engineering Dr. Kunnawee Kanitpong (Adviser) Asian Institute of Technology ANALYSIS OF TRAFFIC LOADING CHARACTERISTICS.
Canadian Truck Size & Weight Harmonization New Brunswick Department of Transportation Subcommittee on Highway Transport Portland, Maine June 6-9, 2010.
Minnesota Department of Transportation House Transportation Policy & Finance Committee February 23, 2015.
Newton’s Laws of Motion (and force!!) A force is a push or pull on an object.
Introduction to Pavement Design Concepts
 The material properties of each layer are homogeneous  Each layer has a finite thickness except for the lower  layer, and all are infinite in.
Transportation Engineering II
Vehicle and Traffic Consideration CEE 320 Steve Muench 5/9/ Highways Airports.
Pavement Analysis and Design
Accelerated Pavement Testing on Fayetteville Shale Roads Brady R. Cox, Ph.D. The University of Arkansas.
Using the “Clicker” If you have a clicker now, and did not do this last time, please enter your ID in your clicker. First, turn on your clicker by sliding.
Pavement Design CEE 320 Anne Goodchild.
Lec 28, Ch.20, pp : Flexible pavement design, ESAL (Objectives)
Load Equivalency. Plate theory: solutions limited to a single tire print Prickett & Ray (1951) – provided a graphical extension of Westergaard theory.
Using ESAL method.  Pavement damage depends on weight distribution.  Weight distribution depends on: ◦ Number of axles ◦ Weight on each axle ◦ Spacing.
Friction and the Coefficients of Friction
What is a force? How does friction affect motion?
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Chapter 6 Machine Equipment Power Requirements.
Chapter 6 Energy and Energy Transfer. Introduction to Energy The concept of energy is one of the most important topics in science Every physical process.
Confidence intervals are one of the two most common types of statistical inference. Use a confidence interval when your goal is to estimate a population.
Lesson 13 Mechanical Shock 第 13 课 机械冲击. Contents Introduction The Free Falling Package Mechanical Shock Theory Shock Duration Shock Amplification and.
Traffic Terms and Concepts Whydo we need to concern ourselves with traffic when we design pavements? Why do we need to concern ourselves with traffic when.
Objectives Investigate the relationship between mass, force, and acceleration. State Newton’s second law and give examples to illustrate the law. Solve.
Review Force, Friction, Motion, Power and Work.  In science, a force is a push or a pull.  All forces have two properties:  Direction and Size  A.
Potential Implications of NAFTA Truck Traffic:. for better or for worse? Potential Implications of NAFTA Truck Traffic:
Ch 10.3 Forces Force: action on an object to change state of rest or motion (accelerate) (push or pull on object … “baby”answer) Objects change motion.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Automotive Technology, Fourth Edition James Halderman BRAKING SYSTEM PRINCIPLES 93.
NEWTON’S 2 ND LAW OF MOTION By: Per.7. WHAT IS IT? Newton's second law Of Motion Newton's second law Of Motion can be formally stated as follows: The.
TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING-II
Friction is a force between two surfaces that are sliding, or trying to slide across one another, for example when you try to push a toy car along the.
Sand Mining Road Impacts Committee of the Board February 7, 2012 This presentation is available at the Winona County website under.
GSA Engineering How to Spec a Medium Van Truck Peter Mielke GSA Engineering – Medium and Heavy Vehicles
Foundations of Technology.  Common components (levers, inclined planes, wedges, wheels and axles, pulleys, screws, gears, cams, linkages, shafts, couplings,
Warm Up The coefficient of friction is 0.17, and the object is accelerating at 3m/s2 to the right, what is the force in each direction and what is the.
Introduction.
Speed, Power, Torque & DC Motors
Four-Stage of Engineering Analysis
Objectives Find the arc length of a space curve.
Sampling Distribution Estimation Hypothesis Testing
Fuel cost and road damage: evidence from weigh-in-motion data
Kinetics of Particles: Newton’s Second Law
CE 3500 Transportation Engineering Introduction to Pavement Materials
The force of Friction Chapter 4.4.
Friction There are many forms of friction. This lesson introduces the force laws for static friction, kinetic friction, and rolling friction. Students.
Transportation Engineering-II
TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING II
TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING-II
CE 102 Statics Chapter 1 Introduction.
Introduction.
Pavement Design  A pavement consists of a number of layers of different materials 4 Pavement Design Methods –AASHTO Method –The Asphalt Institute Method.
Flexible Pavement Design (JKR Method)
Flexible pavement design
Introduction.
Flexible Pavement Design (ARAHAN TEKNIK JALAN 5/85 PINDAAN 2013)
Supplement To Chapter 1 on OVERVIEW OF ENGINEERING ANALYSIS With additional information on Four-Stage of Engineering Analysis by Tai-Ran Hsu, Professor.
Introduction.
Factors Affecting Pavement Design
DYNAMICS.
Using the “Clicker” If you have a clicker now, and did not do this last time, please enter your ID in your clicker. First, turn on your clicker by sliding.
TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING II
Introduction.
Presentation transcript:

TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING II AXLE LOAD AND ESAL 1

AXLE LOADS One of the primary functions of a pavement is its load distribution. Therefore, in order to adequately design a pavement something must be known about the expected loads it will carry during its design life. Loads, the vehicle forces exerted on the pavement (e.g., by trucks, heavy machinery, airplanes), can be characterized by the following parameters:   Tire loads Axle and tire configurations Repetition of loads Distribution of traffic across the pavement Vehicle speed 2

Damage caused to the pavements increases sharply with the axle loading Damage caused to the pavements increases sharply with the axle loading. Vehicle loads of private cars and vans contributes very little to structural deterioration. For the purpose of pavement thickness design, only commercial traffic is considered. 3

STANDARD AXLE LOAD Different tests were performed to calculate the thickness of pavement, in relation to the no. of vehicles passing over various portions of roads. Statistical analysis of the data collected showed that relative damaging effect of an axle was approximately proportional to the fourth power of the load which it carries, irrespective of the type or thickness of the pavement. 4

An axle carrying a load of 18,000 lbs (8160 kg) was arbitrarily defined in the AASHO road test as a Standard Axle, with a damaging effect of unity. The damaging effects of lighter and heavier axles were expressed as equivalence factors as shown in Table. The equivalence factor of .0002 for the 910-kg axle load means that 5000 a passes of such an axle would do the same damaging effect as one pass of standard axle. 5

DAMAGING EFFECT OF DIFFERENT AXLE LOADS (AASHO ROAD TEST) EQUIVALENCE FACTOR KG LBS 910 2000 0.0002 9980 22000 2.3 1810 4000 0.0025 10890 24000 3.2 2720 6000 0.01 11790 26000 4.4 3630 8000 0.03 12700 28000 5.8 4540 10000 0.09 13610 30000 7.6 5440 12000 0.19 14520 32000 9.7 6350 14000 0.35 15420 34000 12.1 7260 16000 0.61 16320 36000 15 8160 18000 1* 17230 38000 18.6 9070 20000 1.5 18140 40000 22.8 *Standard axle 6

EQUIVALENT STANDARD AXLE LOAD This approach converts wheel loads of various magnitudes and repetitions ("mixed traffic") to an equivalent number of "standard" or "equivalent" loads based on the amount of damage they do to the pavement. The commonly used standard load is the 18,000 lb. Equivalent Single Axle load. Using the ESAL method, all loads (including multi-axle loads) are converted to an equivalent number of 18,000 lb. single axle loads, which is then used for design. A "load equivalency factor" represents the equivalent number of ESAL’s for the given weight-axle combination. 7

Generalized Fourth Power Law A rule-of-thumb, the damage caused by a particular load is roughly related to the load by a power of four (for reasonably strong pavement surfaces). For example, A 18,000 lb (80 kN) single axle, LEF =1.0 A 30,000 lb (133 kN) single axle, LEF = 7.6 Comparing the two, the ratio is: 7.6/1.0 = 7.6 Using the fourth power rule-of-thumb: Thus, the two estimates are approximately equal 8

9

10

11

Traffic Loads Characterization Pavement Thickness Design Are Developed To Account For The Entire Spectrum Of Traffic Loads Cars Pickups Buses Trucks Trailers 12

Failure = 10,000 Repetitions Failure = 100,000 Repetitions 13.6 Tons Failure = 100,000 Repetitions 11.3 Tons Failure = 1,000,000 Repetitions 4.5 Tons Failure = 10,000,000 Repetitions 2.3 Tons 11.3 Tons Failure = Repetitions ? 13.6 Tons 4.5 Tons 2.3 Tons 13

RELATIVE DAMAGE CONCEPT Equivalent Standard ESAL Axle Load 18000 - Ibs (8.2 tons) Damage per Pass = 1 Axle loads bigger than 8.2 tons cause damage greater than one per pass Axle loads smaller than 8.2 tons cause damage less than one per pass Load Equivalency Factor (L.E.F) = (? Tons/8.2 tons)4 14

Consider two single axles A and B where: EXAMPLE Consider two single axles A and B where: A-Axle = 16.4 tons Damage caused per pass by A -Axle = (16.4/8.2)4 = 16 This means that A-Axle causes same amount of damage per pass as caused by 16 passes of standard 8.2 tons axle i.e, 16.4 Tons Axle = 8.2 Tons Axle 15

Consider two single axles A and B where: EXAMPLE Consider two single axles A and B where: B-Axle = 4.1 tons Damage caused per pass by B-Axle = (4.1/8.2)4 = 0.0625 This means that B-Axle causes only 0.0625 times damage per pass as caused by 1 pass of standard 8.2 tons axle. In other works, 16 passes (1/0.625) of B-Axle cause same amount of damage as caused by 1 pass of standard 8.2 tons axle i.e., = 4.1 Tons Axle 8.2 Tons Axle 16

AXLE LOAD & RELATIVE DAMAGE 17