Accelerated pavement testing of drained and undrained pavements under wet base conditions.

Author(s)
Bejarano, M.O. & Harvey, J.T.
Year
Abstract

The California Department of Transportation requires that all new flexible pavements include a 75-mm layer of asphalt-treated permeable base (ATPB) between the asphalt concrete and aggregate base layers. The purpose of the ATPB layer is to intercept water entering the pavement, either through cracks in the asphalt concrete or through high-permeability asphalt concrete, and to transport it out of the pavement before it reaches the unbound materials. Results are presented of a study using heavy vehicle simulator (HVS) trafficking to evaluate the performance of drained and undrained flexible pavements under wet conditions. A drained structure is a pavement section that contains an ATPB layer between the asphalt concrete and aggregate base. An undrained structure is a pavement section that does not contain an ATPB layer. Wet conditions intend to simulate approximate surface infiltration rates that would occur along the northwest coast of California during a wet month for a badly cracked asphalt concrete layer. Results of the accelerated pavement testing indicate that ATPB strips under combined conditions of wet base and heavy loading. Drained and undrained sections have similar pavement lives; however, the primary mode of failure for the drained section was surface rutting and for the undrained sections it was fatigue cracking.

Request publication

3 + 5 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Publication

Library number
C 30002 (In: C 29987 S [electronic version only]) /22 /23 / ITRD E822873
Source

In: Pavement management, monitoring, and accelerated testing 2002 : pavement design, management, and performance, Transportation Research Record TRR 1816, p. 137-147, 15 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.