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Bernhard Hofko 1

This document discusses the Austrian pavement design method. It provides an overview of the design process, which involves calculating traffic load, determining material characteristics, and analyzing layer thickness using a multi-layer elastic model. Traffic load is estimated based on vehicle types and growth rates. Material properties consider seasonal variations in stiffness. Layer characteristics like modulus are defined based on past research. The method analyzes stress/strain to determine fatigue life and required thickness for new pavement constructions. Standardized designs are provided but additional conditions must be met.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
74 views19 pages

Bernhard Hofko 1

This document discusses the Austrian pavement design method. It provides an overview of the design process, which involves calculating traffic load, determining material characteristics, and analyzing layer thickness using a multi-layer elastic model. Traffic load is estimated based on vehicle types and growth rates. Material properties consider seasonal variations in stiffness. Layer characteristics like modulus are defined based on past research. The method analyzes stress/strain to determine fatigue life and required thickness for new pavement constructions. Standardized designs are provided but additional conditions must be met.

Uploaded by

Dem Hasi
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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FLEXIBLE PAVEMENT DESIGN WORKSHOP

Ljubljana, 2012

AUSTRIAN PAVEMENT DESIGN METHOD

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

PAVEMENT DESIGN METHOD


AUSTRIAN PAVEMENT DESIGN CATALOGUE (RVS 08.03.63)

1986

Standardized pavement structures for bituminous and


concrete pavements (1st version)

1998

Modification of underlying analytical design procedure &


extension by load classes for highest level of traffic
(completely revised version published March 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,

updating according to new EN material standards for stabilized


and asphalt layers, small revisions in respect to requirements
to slab pavements
(revised version of edition 2005 published in April 2008)

PAVEMENT DESIGN METHOD


OUTLINE OF THE DESIGN CATALOGUE (RVS 3.63)

Calculation of design traffic load & attribution to load


classes (olad class S highest to VI lowest)
Standardized construction types
4 bituminous construction types
2 concrete construction types
2 block pavement construction types
Standardized minimum bearing capacity at formation
level (EV1 35 MN/m)
Background: Analytical design calculations

PAVEMENT DESIGN METHOD


OUTLINE OF THE DESIGN CATALOGUE (RVS 03.08.63)

Calculation of design traffic load & attribution to load


classes (olad class S highest to VI lowest)
Standardized construction types
4 bituminous construction types
2 concrete construction types
2 block pavement construction types
Standardized minimum bearing capacity at formation
level (EV1 35 MN/m)
Background: Analytical design calculations

TRAFFIC LOAD CALCULATION

TRAFFIC

TRAFFIC LOAD CALCULATION


DESIGN LOAD
Generally the relevant traffic load - expressed in Design ESALs (= DESALs)
is determined by means of the following formula:

DESAL = ESAL day R V S 365 n z


ESALday

average daily standard load applications (passages of the 100 kN


standard axle load) across the entire cross-section at the time the
road is opened to traffic

factor for considering traffic direction (R = 0,5 if traffic is equally


distributed on the two directions)

factor according to number of lanes per direction (V = 1,0 for 1 or


2 lanes per direction; V = 0,9 if lanes per direction 3 )

factor for distribution of wheel tracking in one lane

TRAFFIC LOAD CALCULATION

Average daily standard load applications ESALday


-

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:

ESAL day AADTCV,i .A CV,i


i

where ACV,i is the mean equivalency factor of vehicle category i


representativeheavyvehiclecategoryi

ACV,i
Vehicleequivalencyfactor

truck

0.70

truckwithtrailer,semitrailer

1.20

bus

0.60

lowfloorbus,inurbanpublictransport

0.80

articulatedbus,inurbanpublictransport

1.40

TRAFFIC LOAD CALCULATION

Average daily standard load applications ESALday


-

or if data from traffic counts do not differentiate between vehicles of


different vehicle categories:

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

TRAFFIC LOAD CALCULATION

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.

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS

DESIGN CALCULATION METHODOLOGY

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS


DESIGN CALCULATION METHODOLOGY
Flexible and semi-rigid pavement types
Linear elastic multi-layer theory
Sub-grade model taking into account seasonal variation of bearing capacity
(4 seasons of different bearing capacity)
Stiffness of unbound sub-base and unbound base layers determined with
respect to the material type and thickness, and to the stiffness of the underlying
layer
Stiffness of cement stabilized layer is considered to be constant during the life
time
Stiffness of asphalt is depended of representative seasonal temperature
distribution in the bituminous bound layer (6 climatic periods / day & night)
Number of permissible load applications to fatigue damage is calculated for each
individual period from the respective material fatigue law
Summation over the whole year is based on Miners law and results in the
consumption of life-time per year
Minimum design life of 20 years

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS


LAYER CHARACTERISTICS
Formation level:
For computation purposes, the static deformation modulus (EV1 = 35 N/mm2)
was transformed into a dynamic modulus of elasticity (Edyn = 2 - 4.EV1).
Seasonal variations in subgrade strength were taken into account by dividing
the year into four different periods with a decrease in the Edyn-value by 50 %
during the spring thaw period.
Unbound bases and subbases:
Depending on the thickness of each layer and the material used (gravel,
crushed material, etc.), its dynamic elasticity modulus was stated as a
multiple of the modulus of the unbound supporting layer (factor 1.5 to 2.5).

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS


LAYER CHARACTERISTICS
Unbound bases and subbases (cont.):
beside origin materials the following proportions of reclaimed asphalt
concrete RAC (crushed or milled granulated asphalt) may be used:
subbase
up to 100 % RAC
base course

5 % RAC for load classes S - II


50 % RAC for load classes III - VI only
up to 100 % RAC for construction type 3,
suitable only for load lasses III - VI

Cement-treated base course:


acc. to of back-calculations, the modulus of elasticity of these layers was
stated as a constant 5,000 N/mm2 under operating conditions, e.g. in the
presence of micro cracks.
the permissible load repetitions to fatigue damage were calculated by
means of a fatigue law derived from backcalculations and comparisons with
existing pavement structures.

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS


Hot Mix Asphalt (HMA) STIFFNESS
Bituminous layers:

Stiffness (dynamic modulus Edyn) of the bituminous


layers was derived from a diagram in the Shell Design
Manual for a standard asphalt (model asphalt) at a
given temperature.
E dyn [MN/m]
10 5

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]

no representative values were available from


laboratory tests at the time the standard was
established .

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS


TEMPERATURE
bituminous layer temperatur [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

Stiffness (dynamic modulus) of the


model asphalt is derived for each
layer from the temperature profile
and used for the design calculations

CH
I

SLO
100 km

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS


DESIGN CALCULATION
PAVEMENT MODEL

STRENGTH
HYPOTHESIS

STRESS/STRAIN CALCULATION
UNDER STANDARD AXLE (100 kN)

EFFECITVE
STRAIN

HMA FATIGUE

FATIGUE LAW

ALLOWABLE LOAD
REPITITIONS Nallowable

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS


STRENGTH HYPOTHESIS

Different fatigue mechanism:


3D stress/strain field 2D stress in lab (fatigue test)

concept of effective stess eff/strain eff :


modified shear stress hypothesis acc. to [LEON, 1934] and
[HAGEMANN, 1980]: LEONsche Parable
1,923

D 72,7749 T

Z 32,8565

eff = f (1, 3, c(T))

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS NEW CONSTRUCTIONS


HMA FATIGUE LAW

Adapted fatigue law acc. to [KENIS et al., 1982]

N allowable

1
k1 .
v

k2

0,08896 T700,0023817 T 70
2

k1(T) k1(70) 10

k 2 (T) k 2 (70) 0,01349 (T 70) 0,0004624 (T 70)2

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).

11

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS RECONSTRUCTIONS

OVERLAY DESIGN

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS RECONSTRUCTIONS


AUSTRIAN STANDARD FOR OVERLAY DESIGN
RVS 03.08.63 (1992)
Three different methods applicable:
Determination of the effective layer thickness
(empirical method)
Deflection method
(semi-empirical method)
Backcalculation on basis of FWD measurements
(analytical method)

12

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS RECONSTRUCTIONS


EFFECTIVE LAYER THICKNESS
Austrian method utilizes The Asphalt Institute condition information from
visual inspections to compute the effective thickness of the in situ
pavement using the equation:
where:
Deff =

di =
ci =

D eff d i .c i
i

total effective HMA thickness of existing pavement


thickness of pavement layer i
HMA conversion factor for pavement layer i

the required overly thickness Doverlay can be calculated from

Drequired Deff Doverlay


Doverlay Drequired Deff
Drequired = required HMA thickness according to RVS 03.08.63 (Austrian Design
Catalog) for the remaining design period

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS RECONSTRUCTIONS


EFFECTIVE LAYER THICKNESS

D eff d i .c i
i

HMA conversion factor ci for pavement layer i according to the Austrian


overlay design method
HMA condition

HMA conversion factor ci

asphalt surfaces and bases that show extensive cracking,


considerable raveling or aggregate degradation and lack of
stability

0,3 to 0,5

Asphalt concrete surface that exhibit appreciable cracking and


crack patterns

0,5 to 0,7

Asphalt concrete surface that exhibit some fine cracking, have


small intermittent cracking patterns in the wheel paths but remain
stable
Asphalt concrete surface generally uncracked

0,7 to 0,9
0,9 to 1,0

13

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS RECONSTRUCTIONS


DEFLECTION METHOD
Factor influencing actual surface deflection

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS RECONSTRUCTIONS


DEFLECTION METHOD
Static deflection measurement Benkelman beam
measurement point

Unloading

load

Measurement
point

Loading

14

MATERIAL CHARACTERISTICS RECONSTRUCTIONS


DEFLECTION METHOD
Calculation of effective deflection
_

d m = c ( d + k s)
d
s
dm
c

mean value of measured deflections


standard deviation of measured deflections
effective deflection
correction factor for measurements outside the frost and thaw period
between 1.3 and 2.0
correction factor to consider the statistical distribution of the deflection
measurements (confidence interval)

Load class

I, II

III

IV, V

2,0

1,6

1,3

RECONSTRUCTION - OVERLAY DESIGN


DEFLECTION METHOD
Calculation of required overlay
dm [1/100mm]

min. overlay 4 cm

no overlay

DESAL [-]

15

RECONSTRUCTION - OVERLAY DESIGN


Falling Weight Deflector FWD MEASUREMENTS
dynamic deflection measurement

RECONSTRUCTION - OVERLAY DESIGN


Falling Weight Deflector FWD MEASUREMENTS
backcalculation of pavement layer stiffness

16

RECONSTRUCTION - OVERLAY DESIGN


ANALYTICAL OVERLAY
DESIGN
(t) (t)

Long term test

(t)

(t )
(t )

Short term test

(t)

material fatigue

material stiffness

pavement model

FWD backcalculation

PAVEMENT LIFE

PROBLEMS/POSSIBLE IMPROVEMENTS OF PAVEMENT DESIGN

Critical Review & Improvements

17

PROBLEMS/POSSIBLE IMPROVEMENTS OF PAVEMENT DESIGN


Critical Review of current Austrian Pavement design method
-

Design traffic load is not based on modern Weight-In-Motion (WIM)


technology allowing to take into account specific axle and gross weight
data of HGVs

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

Due to the consideration of just one representative HMA material


behaviour (model asphalt) in the design calculations neither modified
HMA nor innovative HMA concepts are taken into account.

Modern performance based bitumen and HMA test methods to assess


stiffness and material fatigue are disregarded.

PROBLEMS/POSSIBLE IMPROVEMENTS OF PAVEMENT DESIGN


Critical Review of current Austrian Pavement design method
-

The method permits the calculation of a theoretical structural life time


and therefore is capable to assess different pavement structures in this
respect. A link to the real life time is missing.

Only the classical failure criteria bottom down fatigue cracking is


facilitated. However, different failure modes such as top down cracking or
rutting also effect the practical pavement life time.

No Life Cycle Cost Analysis (LCCA) is included in the given design


concept and different pavement types are only evaluated on the basis of
their ESAL bearing capacity.

The Effective Thickness concept for overlay design is rather imprecise


and should be strictly restricted to low volume roads.

The static deflection method (Benkelman beam) uses very empirical


correction factors for the measured deflections with a broad variation of
possible values.

18

PROBLEMS/POSSIBLE IMPROVEMENTS OF PAVEMENT DESIGN


Some of this topics are subject of the
on-going revision of Austrian pavement design method

Thank you for your attention !

19

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