WINPAS User Manual
WINPAS User Manual
PavementDesigner.org
• Can be challenging for designers to determine best choice and get consistent
results and recommendations across products
• Contributes to negative perception that cement-based pavement solutions are
difficult to design compared to asphalt pavements
Bringing Online the Best
of the Best Available Design Tools
+
Design Guidance
Substructure Sensitivity
Asphalt Design
Evaluation
Overview and Background
• ACPA, NRMCA, and PCA partnership, with a contribution from
the RCC Council to develop a website application to design
cement-based solutions for:
• Streets and Local Roads
• Parking Lots
• Intermodal/Industrial Facilities
• Design guidance and tools for:
• Jointed-Plain Concrete Pavements
• Continuously Reinforce Concrete Pavement
• Concrete Overlays
• Composite Pavements
• Roller Compacted Concrete
• Cement Modified Soils
• Cement-Treated Base
• Full-Depth Reclamation
Summary –
• Primary audience is city, county, and consultant
engineers who design pavements
• Secondary audience is professors and students
• Unifies design methods, providing promoters
with a single source to direct target audience to
for consistent answers
• Fills a design void for some products
• Web-based platform, appealing to existing and
future generations of design engineers…
• …with broad industry partner support!
• FREE and easily accessible!
Agenda
• PavementDesigner Project Intro
• Brief History of Pavement Design
• JPCP Street Design with PD
• Break (2 p.m.)
• Overlay Design with PD
• Parking Design with PD
• Intermodal Design with PD
• Future Updates
• Further Tools for Design (~3 p.m. w/ Dan King)
Design Method Basis
𝜖 = 𝜎/𝐸 ∆L = α ∗ ∆𝑇 ∗ 𝐿𝑜
AASHTOWare
Pavement ME
(previously known as
DARWin-ME and
MEPDG)
ACPA
StreetPave
AASHTO 93
(software as
325 & 330
ACPA WinPAS)
AASHTO 93 / WinPAS
acpa.org/winpas
AASHO Road Test (1958-1960)
• Wholly empirical
• Included 368 concrete and 468 asphalt
sections | focus was highway pavement
Necessary Thickness was Guessed!
Max Single
Axle
Max Tandem
Axle
1986-93 JPCP AASHTO 93 Equation
Change in Serviceability
Overall
Standard Standard Deviation
Normal Deviate Thickness PSI
Log 4.5 1.5
Log ( ESAL) Z R * so 7.35 * Log ( D 1) 0.06
1.624 *10
7
Traffic 1 ( D 1)8.46
Modulus of
Rupture Drainage
Terminal
Coefficient
Serviceability
' 0.75
(4.22 0.32 * pt ) * Log
S c * C d * ( D 1 . 132 )
0.75 18.42
215.63 * J * D 0.25
( Ec / k )
Load Modulus Modulus of
Transfer of Elasticity Subgrade Reaction
WinPAS Makes it Easy!
Performance Estimated Subjectively
PAVEMENT THICKNESS
Data
Limits
(AASHO
Road
Test)
• • • •• • Current
•
Designs
1.1mil >100
million
AXLE LOAD REPETITIONS
Don’t Just Take My Word…
“The current design guide and its predecessors
were largely based on design equations
empirically derived from the observations
AASHTO’s predecessor made during road
performance tests completed in 1959-60.
Several transportation experts have criticized
the empirical data thus derived as outdated
and inadequate for today’s highway system. In
addition, a March 1994 DOT Office of
Inspector General report concluded that the
design guide was outdated and that pavement
design information it relied on could not be
supported and validated with systematic
comparisons to actual experience or
research.”…this is why Pavement ME exists!
MEPDG / DARWin-ME /
AASHTOWare Pavement ME
Pavement ME Design
+ =
Mechanistic Calculation Empirical Tie Pavement Performance
of Responses to Ground Prediction
JPCP Calibration – BIG INF. SPACE!
AASHTO Pavement ME
1 climate/2 years 1 set of materials
Fatigue Data
Stress Ratio
low enough to 0.7
0.4
1.E+00 1.E+01 1.E+02 1.E+03 1.E+04 1.E+05 1.E+06 1.E+07 1.E+08 1.E+09 1.E+10
Repetitions
• PavementDesigner fatigue
calculation should be
conservative relative to ME
Design because:
• Size Effects – Slabs have a …versus…
greater fatigue capacity than
beams
• Support – The beam test has a d=L/3
k-value for support of 0
L/3
psi/in.! Span Length = L
Faulting Design in PavementDesigner
• Total trucks in design lane over the design life… calculated from trucks/day
(2-way), traffic growth rate (%/yr), design life (yrs), directional distribution (%) and design lane
distribution (%)
AASHTO Pavement ME
U.S. Agencies Quickly Changing National Users Group
Meetings Technical
• Summary of State Agency practice in 2005: Report - 2016
Design Method Percent of Responding
State Agency
Used Agencies
AR, AZ, DE, FL, ID, IN, IA, KS, MD,
AASHTO
85% MI, NV, NC, OH, OK, SC, SD, TN,
72/86/93
UT, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY
AASHTO
4%
MEPDG MO
PCA Method 11% HI, IN, IA
State-
7%
Developed IL, MT
• At the end of 2013, 41 state agencies had performed ME
Design calibration and implementation efforts, indicating a
relatively quick shift from AASHTO 93.
U.S. Roadway Length (lane miles)
Federal, 3%
Other, 1%
AASHTO tools are
being developed for
State
Agency, these owners…
19%
http://www.dot.state.mn.us/stateaid/admin/memos/12-sa-03.pdf
http://www.dot.state.mn.us/research/documents/201210.pdf
And Its Use is Growing!
13 325
12 300
10 250
9 225
8 200
4 100
- 10,000,000 20,000,000 30,000,000 40,000,000 50,000,000
Design Lane ESALs
remember AASHTO 93 limit?
Flexural Strength Sensitivity
14 350
13 325
12 300
10 250
9 225
5 125
4 100
400 450 500 550 600 650 700 750 800
Concrete Flexural Strength (psi)
Modulus of Elasticity Sensitivity
14 350
13 325
12 300
10 250
9 225
8 200
AASHTO 93 (ACPA WinPAS)
7 175
AASHTOWare Pavement ME @ ORD
6 150
AASHTOWare Pavement ME @ PHX
5 ACPA StreetPave 125
4 100
3,000,000 3,500,000 4,000,000 4,500,000 5,000,000 5,500,000 6,000,000
(20.7 GPa) Modulus of Elasticity (psi) (41.4 GPa)
… in reality, need to change strength too…
Thickness Reduction w/ Edge Support
4 100
2 50
1.5
1 25
0.5
0 0
- 10,000,000 20,000,000 30,000,000 40,000,000 50,000,000
Design Lane ESALs
Reliability Sensitivity
14 350
13 325
12 300
10 250
9 225
8 200
AASHTO 93 (ACPA WinPAS)
7 175
AASHTOWare Pavement ME @ ORD
6 150
AASHTOWare Pavement ME @ PHX
5 ACPA StreetPave 125
4 100
50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
Reliability
k-value
14
Sensitivity 350
AASHTO 93 (ACPA WinPAS)
13 325
AASHTOWare Pavement ME @ ORD
12 300
AASHTOWare Pavement ME @ PHX
10 250
9 225
4 100
0 100 200 300 400 500
(136 MPa/m)
Static k-value (psi)
Agenda
• PavementDesigner Project Intro
• Brief History of Pavement Design
• JPCP Street Design with PD
• Break (2 p.m.)
• Overlay Design with PD
• Parking Design with PD
• Intermodal Design with PD
• Future Updates
• Further Tools for Design (~3 p.m. w/ Dan King)
Estimated Traffic From Asphalt Design
• PavementDesigner calculates
total allowable flexible ESALs
• Using AASHTO 93
Estimated Traffic From Asphalt Design
• PavementDesigner calculates
total allowable flexible ESALs
• Divides this by the flexible LEFs
for the axles in the selected
spectrum to calculate total
trucks
Total Trucks
Estimated Traffic From Asphalt Design
• PavementDesigner calculates
total allowable flexible ESALs
• Divides this by the flexible LEFs
for the axles in the selected
spectrum to calculate total
trucks
• Distributes the calculated total
trucks over the entire design life
5538 𝑇𝑟𝑢𝑐𝑘𝑠 𝐷𝑒𝑠𝑖𝑔𝑛 𝐿𝑖𝑓𝑒 𝑌𝑒𝑎𝑟 𝑇𝑟𝑢𝑐𝑘
∗ ∗ =1
𝐷𝑒𝑠𝑖𝑔𝑛 𝐿𝑖𝑓𝑒 30 𝑌𝑒𝑎𝑟𝑠 365 𝐷𝑎𝑦𝑠 𝐷𝑎𝑦
BACK TO THE DEMO!
Agenda
• PavementDesigner Project Intro
• Brief History of Pavement Design
• JPCP Street Design with PD
• Break (2 p.m.)
• Overlay Design with PD
• Parking Design with PD
• Intermodal Design with PD
• Future Updates
• Further Tools for Design (~3 p.m. w/ Dan King)
Concrete Overlays
• Released in 2012
• Not a design procedure!
• Background on
recommended overlay
design techniques
• 18 pages
• Detailed design examples
• 35 pages
Design Methods Recommended
apps.acpa.org
Note: StreetPave12, Pitt BCOA-ME, and Pavement ME’s SJPCP
released after guide was published
Guide to All Things Overlays!
• StreetPave/PCA Method
Overlay Design
• Utilizes StreetPave with
modification to account for
existing surface layer’s condition
and thickness
Positive ΔT
Negative ΔT Positive ΔT
BCOA-ME
PCA Model
Stress for
Jt. Spacing corner cracks
< 4.5 ft
ACPA
Model
Jt. Spacings
5 to 6 ft Stress for long. Fatigue
Inputs hpcc
& diag. cracks model
Pitt Model
Jt. Spacings
10 x 12 ft Stress for
12 x 12 ft trans. cracks
15 x 12 ft
CDOT Model
Agenda
• PavementDesigner Project Intro
• Brief History of Pavement Design
• JPCP Street Design with PD
• Break (2 p.m.)
• Overlay Design with PD
• Parking Design with PD
• Intermodal Design with PD
• Future Updates
• Further Tools for Design (~3 p.m. w/ Dan King)
WHAT ABOUT PARKING LOTS?
ACI 330
• ACI 330R-08
• Guide for Concrete
Parking lots
• Uses Design Tables
ACI 330
Parking Lot Design
• PavementDesigner uses a
slightly modified version of
StreetPave for the sake of
simplicity
• Allows for various design
lives, reliabilities, and
percent slabs cracked at the
end of the design life
Agenda
• PavementDesigner Project Intro
• Brief History of Pavement Design
• JPCP Street Design with PD
• Break (2 p.m.)
• Overlay Design with PD
• Parking Design with PD
• Intermodal Design with PD
• Future Updates
• Further Tools for Design (~3 p.m. w/ Dan King)
BUT WHAT ABOUT THESE?
What Designs are Available for Heavy Intermodal/Industrial
Vehicles
• ACI 330.2R-17 – Guide for the
Design and Construction of
Concrete Site Paving for
Industrial and Trucking Facilities
• Uses design tables
• Lists additional design software:
• ACPA StreetPave
• Pavement ME
• TCPavements / Optipave
• ACPA AirPave
AirPave Methodology for Heavy Equipment
AirPave Load Distribution
Nose Gear: 5%
of Total Weight
Landing Gears:
47.5% of Total Weight
Demo Time!