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Long-Life Pavements Concepts and Lab Testing
Pre-bid Meeting Solano 80 04-4A0104 James M. Signore Oakland, CA 9/14/2012
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Presentation Overview
Long Life Pavement (LLP) What it is? What are the benefits? Recent California Experience I-5 in Red Bluff and Weed What to Anticipate Specimen Preparation & Lab Testing
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Long Life Pavement – What is it?
Design Life 40+ years Bottom-Up Design and Construction Renewable Pavement Surface High Rutting and Cracking Resistance Smooth and Safe Driving Surface The Perpetual Pavement requires that the structure be designed and constructed from the bottom-up and that it have a combination of thickness and HMA characteristics which preclude fatigue cracking and durability problems. The renewable pavement surface must be designed to resist rutting and tailored for specific applications. In the end, the Perpetual Pavement will provide a uniform, smooth and safe driving surface, and it will avoid the huge expense associated with reconstruction. 3
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Long Life Pavement – What is it?
Leads to Fatigue Cracking HMA Repeated Bending Base The two most devastating forms of distress in flexible pavements are bottom-up fatigue cracking and rutting. These usually occur in relatively thin HMA pavements. Fatigue cracking occurs when repeated applied wheel loads (mouse click) cause bending in the HMA layer (mouse click) and a crack forms (mouse click). It’s similar to bending a coat hanger back and forth until it breaks. If the pavement structure is weak, then repeated deformation in the pavement will occur (mouse click) and rutting will eventually appear in the wheel paths of the road (mouse click). Subgrade Repeated Deformation Leads to Rutting 4
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Long Life Pavement What are the Benefits?
Lower Life Cycle Cost Better Use of Resources Low Incremental Costs for Surface Renewal Lower User Delay Cost Fewer or Shorter Work Zone Periods for Future Maintenance
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Long Life Pavements in the US
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Structural Section – SOLANO 80
OGFC HMA w/ 15% Max. RAP (PG 64-28PM) HMA w/ 25% RAP (PG 64-10) Geosynthetic Interlayer Existing Pavement 2 Mix Designs!!! Leveling Course
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Project Considerations
Materials Selection & Testing Structural Design Specs Construction
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Recent Projects Weed I-5 D2 Red Bluff I-5 D2
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Structural Section – Weed
HMA w/ 15% Max. RAP (PG 64-28PM) 2 Mix Designs!!! HMA w/ 25% RAP (PG 64-16) SAMI* HMA w/ 25% RAP (PG 64-16) (leveling course) Existing Cracked & Seated PCC or HMA * Asphalt Rubber Seal Coat NTS
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Structural Section – Red Bluff
OGFC HMA w/ 15% Max. RAP (PG 64-28PM) HMA w/ 25% RAP (PG 64-10) HMA-Rich Bottom (PG 64-10) CTB-Existing Agg Subbase & Subgrade 3 Mix Designs!!! NTS
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What to Anticipate Solano 80
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Mix Design based on “Mechanistic” Lab Testing
Hveem (CT 366) Shear Testing (T-320) Fatigue Testing (T-321) Hamburg WT (T-324) Mix must meet performance requirements in Special Provisions
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Modified (Mechanistic) Mix Design Process
Establish target binder content with Hveem (CT 366) Performance Testing Shear testing at target binder content ± X Select design binder content based on shear test results At design binder content Fatigue Hamburg Wheel Track (HWT)
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Modified Mix Design Flow Chart
HVEEM Mix Design for Target “OBCH” SHEAR Testing to determine “OBCS” 3 specimens prepared and tested at HBC + 3 more +/- X Total of 9 specimens per mix (3 x 3BC) If Fail Testing SELECT OBC based on SHEAR test results FATIGUE OBCS Flexural Fatigue – 20C, 2 levels of strain (bending) – 6 Total (6 x 1BC) Flexural Stiffness - 20C & 30C – 6 Total (6 x 1BC) Spare beams recommended – 14 Total if possible HWTD SOBC – 1 Test, 50C, 4 cores
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Modified Mix Design Materials and Time
Time Per Mix 3 wks 6 wks 1 wk HVEEM to determine target BC SHEAR Cores are prepared first Testing performed to determine “OBCS” Requires 3 x 3BC Cores (6 in. diameter x 2 in. tall) Cores are prepared with Rolling Wheel Compaction (RW) OBC based on SHEAR test results FATIGUE Beams prepared after OBCS determined 6 Flexural Fatigue (2 in. tall x 2.5 in. wide x 15 in. long) 6 Flexural Stiffness (2 in. tall x 2.5 in. wide x 15 in. long) Beams are prepared with Rolling Wheel Compaction (RW) HWTD Testing Cores are 6 in. diameter x 2.5 in. tall 1 Test with 4 cores prepared with Superpave Gyratory (SGC)
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Quantity of Materials Per Mix Design
Caltrans Project Typical Long Life Hveem Mix Design (includes CT 371) 5 gal binder ~500 lb aggregate Performance Testing (includes specimen fabrication) 10 gal binder ~ 1,200 lb aggregate (Plant Mix Equivalent) Shear Fatigue Hamburg
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SPECIMEN FABRICATION Shear & Fatigue
Caltrans LLP – AC2 “Sample Preparation Design and Testing for Long Life Hot Mix Asphalt Pavements” AASHTO PP3-94 Rolling Wheel Compaction
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SPECIMEN FABRICATION Shear & Fatigue
Beams and Cores cut from HMA Ingot (Example)
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SPECIMEN FABRICATION Shear & Fatigue
Beams and Cores cut from HMA Ingot
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SPECIMEN FABRICATION Shear & Fatigue
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SPECIMEN FABRICATION Shear & Fatigue
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SPECIMEN FABRICATION Shear & Fatigue
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FATIGUE BEAMS
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FATIGUE BEAMS Protection of Beams in transit/shipping is essential –
no bending or flexing of packaging
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SPECIMEN FABRICATION Hamburg
Superpave Gyratory Compactor
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SPECIMEN FABRICATION Hamburg
Hamburg Testing Fixture – cut ‘flat’ on cores
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LABORATORY TESTING SHEAR TESTING FATIGUE TESTING HAMBURG TESTING
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SHEAR TESTING
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SHEAR TESTING
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Note Shear or “Slope” of specimen
SHEAR CORE – Post Test Note Shear or “Slope” of specimen
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Permanent Shear Strain (PSS) “Rutting”
SHEAR TESTING 5% PSS Permanent Shear Strain (PSS) “Rutting” Spec Minimum to pass Cycles
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FATIGUE TESTING
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Flexural Stiffness (FS)
FATIGUE TESTING Not to scale 50% FS (typical) Flexural Stiffness (FS) Spec Minimum to pass Cycles (millions)
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HAMBURG WHEEL TRACKING (Moisture Sensitivity)
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HAMBURG WHEEL TRACKING (Moisture Sensitivity)
Theoretical Rut “Rut Resistant” Cycles
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HAMBURG WHEEL TRACKING (Moisture Sensitivity)
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SPECIFICATIONS and Testing Variability
Design Parameters Test Method Sample Air Voids Requirement HMA (15% Max RAP, Long Life) HMA (25% RAP, Long Life) Permanent deformation (min. stress repetitions) AASHTO T-320 Modified 3% +/- 0.3% 360,000 Beam Stiffness (psi) At 20° C and 10 Hz At 30° C and 10 Hz AASHTO T-321 6% +/- 415,000 to 486,000 220,000 (min) 870,000 to 1,000,000 -- Fatigue (min. repetitions) At 400x10-6 in./in. strain At 200x10-6 in./in. strain AASHTO T-321 23,000,000 345,000,000 25,000 950,000 Moisture Sensitivity (min. repetitions) T-324 7% +/- 1% 12,000
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SPECIFICATIONS and Testing Variability
Specifications for Shear and Fatigue are statistically based The specifications are based on the lowest 5 percentile expected from testing Comparable mixes should pass this specification 95 out of 100 times Limits are set low to accommodate large testing variability present in Shear and Fatigue Testing
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Stabilometer Variability
Based on these numbers, the 5th percentile is about 80% of the average (mean)
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Questions? Acknowledgements: Rita Leahy, Professor Monismith, Caltrans Staff
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