Bernhard Hofko 1
Bernhard Hofko 1
Ljubljana, 2012
ACRITICALREVIEW
FLEXIBLE
PAVEMENT
DESIGN
RONALD
BLAB &BERNHARD
HOFKOWORKSHOP
Ljubljana,
2012
INSTITUTE
OF TRANSPORTATION
VIENNA UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY
INDEX
PAVEMENT DESIGN
TRAFFIC LOAD CALCULATION
MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS
MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS RECONSTRUCTIONS
REQUIRED LAYER THICKNESS
ADVANTAGES/DISADVANTAGES OF USED METHOD
PROBLEMS WITH/POSSIBLE IMPROVEMENT OF CURRENT
PAVEMENT DESIGN METHOD
1986
1998
2005
new lower load class & addition of block pavements and
updating according to new material standards
(completely revised version published in May 2005)
2008
slabs,
TRAFFIC
either if the annual average daily traffic AADTCV,i of vehicle type i across
the entire cross-section is known at the time the road is opened to traffic:
ACV,i
Vehicleequivalencyfactor
truck
0.70
truckwithtrailer,semitrailer
1.20
bus
0.60
lowfloorbus,inurbanpublictransport
0.80
articulatedbus,inurbanpublictransport
1.40
ESALday AADTcv A cv
where AADTcv is the annual average daily traffic of commercial vehicles
(trucks, etc. and busses within a 24-hour period, all days) across the
entire cross-section at the time the road is opened to traffic
roadcategory
ACV
equivalencyfactor
Motorways
1.0
Other roads
0.9
Shift factor S
taking into account the distribution of vehicle tracks across a lane
widthoflane[m]
3.00
3.25
3.50
3.75
4.00
reductionfactorS
0.90
0.85
0.80
0.75
0.70
Design period n
design period in years is generally assumed
- 30 years for concrete pavements
- 20 year for all other pavement types
Growth factor z
is generally derived from the results of traffic counts or traffic forecasts.
If no counts or forecasts are available, a mean annual growth rate p of
- p = 3% is assumed for motorways
- p = 1% for other roads.
AB/B70
loading time
0,02s = 50 -60 km/h
10 4
[SHELL, 1978]
10 3
10 2
-20
+20 +4 0 +6 0
T [C]
depth [cm]
Temperature profile in
bituminous layers:
twelve representative temperature
profiles (6 periods per year, day &
night) in the bituminous layer are
taken into account for Austria
two climatic regions are considered
(inner alpine region zone I, outer
alpine region zone II)
[WISTUBA, 2001]
Temp.zone I
Temp.zone II
CZ
Wien
SK
HU
CH
I
SLO
100 km
STRENGTH
HYPOTHESIS
STRESS/STRAIN CALCULATION
UNDER STANDARD AXLE (100 kN)
EFFECITVE
STRAIN
HMA FATIGUE
FATIGUE LAW
ALLOWABLE LOAD
REPITITIONS Nallowable
D 72,7749 T
Z 32,8565
N allowable
1
k1 .
v
k2
0,08896 T700,0023817 T 70
2
k1(T) k1(70) 10
10
MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS
REQUIRED
LAYER THICKNESS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS
DESIGN RESULT
MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS
REQUIRED
LAYER THICKNESS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS
DESIGN CATALOGUE
For a correct application of the specified standardised pavements, however,
the following additional conditions must also be considered:
The thicknesses specified for the different pavement types (flexible, semirigid and rigid) apply only in the case of (completely) new construction,
not in the case of stage by stage construction. In the latter case, material
fatigue occurring during the first loading phase must be taken into account in
designing the second construction stage.
The fundamental conditions regarding the required minimum bearing
capacity of the subgrade and the unbound courses must be strictly complied
with.
Special attention must be paid to ensuring full bonding of bituminous
pavement courses in bituminous structures as calculations are based on the
assumption of one fully bound asphalt package.
On sections exposed to slow-moving heavy traffic, e.g. before intersections,
on uphill sections, the material of the asphalt courses must conform to
special requirements (deformation resistance).
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OVERLAY DESIGN
12
di =
ci =
D eff d i .c i
i
D eff d i .c i
i
0,3 to 0,5
0,5 to 0,7
0,7 to 0,9
0,9 to 1,0
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Unloading
load
Measurement
point
Loading
14
d m = c ( d + k s)
d
s
dm
c
Load class
I, II
III
IV, V
2,0
1,6
1,3
min. overlay 4 cm
no overlay
DESAL [-]
15
16
(t)
(t )
(t )
(t)
material fatigue
material stiffness
pavement model
FWD backcalculation
PAVEMENT LIFE
17
Vehicle equivalency factors the ESAL concept are not state of the art
anymore since advanced computing capacities and computing speed
facilitate the consideration of different vehicle classes and axle load
distributions to assess stresses and strains in pavement layers
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