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2010 FAA Worldwide Airport Technology Conference Atlantic City, New Jersey April 20 – April 22
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2 Analysis and Design of Airfield Pavements Using Laboratory Tests and Mechanistic – Empirical Methodology Lorina Popescu, P.E., UCPRC Rita Leahy, P.E., APACA Carl Monismith, P.E., UCPRC
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3 Outline Introduction Establish mix design criteria for taxiways using Simple Shear Test Estimate permanent deformation using laboratory tests and M-E methodology Airfield pavement design example using long-life performance concepts Construction considerations & concluding notes
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4 Introduction SHRP developed tests Simple Shear Test (AASHTO T-320, ASTM D- 7312) RSST-CH Flexural Fatigue Test (AASHTO T-321, ASTM D- 7460) SHRP tests and new analysis methods adapted to evaluate HMA performance with large commercial aircraft loading
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5 Establish Mix Design Criteria for Taxiways Using the Simple Shear Test
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6 San Francisco International Airport Project outline Distresses observed shoving and rutting in AC turn areas of taxiway - slow moving and sharp turning rutting distortions (dimpling) under static loading Different trial mixes to mitigate rutting problem Cores extracted from distressed areas
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7 San Francisco International Airport Project outline AC mixes in full compliance with FAA mix design Enhancements to FAA mix design to reduce observed rutting High Stability mix SHRP Simple Shear Test primary tool used to evaluate mix rutting performance
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8 Simple Shear Test (SST) Evaluate the permanent deformation characteristics of FMFC cores;
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9 Simple Shear Test (SST) Sample size: D=6 in, H=2 in; Shear stress: 10 psi (69kPa) Loading time 0.1 sec; 0.6 sec rest period; Test temperature 122F (50C);
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10 RSST-CH Permanent Deformation Analysis Typical permanent shear strain and load cycles relationship: p = a*N b N = number of cycles to 5% shear strain
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11 RSST test results on field extracted cores
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12 Binder content selection
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13 Notes Stiffness alone is not sufficient for mix design Repeated loading used to arrive at design binder content
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14 Estimate Permanent Deformation Using Laboratory Tests and M-E Methodology
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15 Estimate rutting performance - NDIA project outlook New Doha International Airport – due to open July 2011; All HMA TW/RW Built partially on reclaimed land; Two parallel runways; 40 gate terminal;
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16 NDIA project outlook Environment - Desert Avg temperature – > 40C (104F) May - Sep Avg Annual Rainfall – 70mm (2¾ in) Oct - Mar
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17 NDIA Project outlook Typical aircraft loading 51,250 to 56,000 lb/tire Tire pressure 215 to 220 lb/in 2
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18 Rutting Susceptibility Laboratory Tests Hamburg Wheel Tracking Device Captures the combined effects of rutting and moisture damage; Mixture was both moisture and rut resistant
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19 Rutting Susceptibility Laboratory Tests RSST-CH Asphalt content: optimum & optimum “+” for sensitivity analysis 122F (50C) 5000 load cycles;
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20 Rutting Susceptibility Laboratory Tests Shear Frequency Sweep test data Asphalt content:optimum & optimum “+” 3 temperatures (4C, 20C and 46C); 3 frequencies (0.1Hz, 1Hz and 10Hz); Develop master curve to determine shear modulus with temperature and loading rate.
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21 Performance tests results
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22 Rutting Susceptibility Mechanistic Empirical Approach Mechanistic approach to determine the accumulation of plastic strain; Rutting in AC is assumed to be controlled by shear deformation; Time hardening principle applied to calculate cumulative plastic strain due to shear deformation; i = f(, e,N)
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23 Rutting Susceptibility Mechanistic Empirical Approach Shell subgrade strain criterion to estimate contribution to deformation from base and subgrade;
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24 Rutting Susceptibility Mechanistic Empirical Approach Analysis assumptions: Aircraft operations uniformly distributed throughout the year; Plastic strain accumulated during the warmest months; Plastic strain accumulated 8 hrs/day; 50% of aircraft operations at max. weight No aircraft wander;
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26 Notes RSST-CH test helped identify the target binder content and the construction control limits (±0.25%)
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27 Airfield Pavement Design Example Using Long-Life Highway Design Concepts
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28 Pavement Structural Section Design for Wide-Bodied Aircraft Lab test data from I-710, LA County – Long Life Performance concept; Carries traffic into and out of the Port of Long Beach; ADT = 155,000 vehicles/day; 13% trucks;
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29 Pavement Structural Section Design for Wide-Bodied Aircraft Use of ME procedure Multilayer elastic program Laboratory flexural fatigue and stiffness data
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30 Estimate Elastic Modulus and Fatigue Life Elastic Modulus PBA-6a*: E (ln stif) = 9.1116- 0.1137*Temp PG 64-16: E (ln stif) = 14.6459- 0.1708*AV-0.8032*AC-0.0549*Temp Fatigue Life PG 64-16: E (ln nf) = -36.5184-0.6470*AV- 6.5315*lnstn
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31 Analysis – Pavement Structure 4 in PBA-6a*(PG64-40), 4.7% AC, 6% AV, E = f(Temp) 12 inches AB (TBD) PG 64-16, 4.7% AC, 6% AV E=f(AV, AC, Temp) 3 in PG 64-16 RB, 5.2% AC, 3% AV E = f(AV, AC, Temp) SG
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32 Data Analysis Factorial Three wide-bodied aircraft types: Boeing 747-400 Airbus 380-800 Boeing 777-800 Design to strain levels at the bottom of the HMA layer: ~100, 200, 300 s
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33 Data Analysis Factorial Two climate zones: Desert area – Yuma, AZ Coastal region – San Francisco, CA Temperature: Aug (hotter month) Jan (Yuma), Feb (SF) – colder month Temperature at 1 in depth increments – EICM to determine layer stiffness for ME analysis
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34 Yuma: Tensile Strain vs. Asphalt Layer Thickness
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35 Check Fatigue Resistance for 25in Asphalt Thickness 25in asphalt layer thickness: Aug: Avg t = 180 s, Nf=5*10 7 Jan: Avg t = 105 s, Nf=7*10 8 20 years: 5*10 6 operations 1.25*10 6 operations over 4 warmer months 3.75*10 6 operations over 8 cooler months
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36 Check Fatigue Resistance for 25in Asphalt Thickness Apply linear summation of cycle ratio cumulative damage hypothesis – Miner criteria Shell subgrade strain criteria v =2.8*10-2*N-0.25
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37 Construction Considerations
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38 Construction Considerations NDIA project RSST-CH tests suggested tighter binder content tolerances ±0.25% asphalt binder content
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39 Influence of As-Constructed Asphalt Content on Rutting Performance
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40 Construction Considerations Long Life Performance project AV 4% - 6% rut-resistant upper and intermediate HMA layer; Desirable AV <=3% - rich bottom layer Increased fatigue life – key for long life performance Tack coat essential between lifts
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41 Concluding Notes Shear Test was useful for : HMA design Establishing performance criteria under repeated trafficking on taxiways Examine materials response at more than one binder content – more effective use of different quantities of binder (rich bottom concept)
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42 Concluding Notes Potential savings: More effective use of materials Ability to estimate long term performance
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THANK YOU!
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