目录

  • 1 Introduction and Civil Engineering
    • 1.1 Course Introduction
    • 1.2 Civil Engineering
    • 1.3 Civil Engineer
    • 1.4 Grammar (English Reading fo Frequently-used Numerals and Symbol)
  • 2 Multi-storey and High-rise Building
    • 2.1 Single-storey and Multi-storey Building
    • 2.2 High-rise Building and Skyscraper
    • 2.3 Grammar(Useful Sentences Pattern )
  • 3 Seismic and Dynamic Analysis
    • 3.1 Earthquake
    • 3.2 Seismic Analysis
    • 3.3 Grammar (Structural features)
  • 4 Tunnel Engineering
    • 4.1 Tunnel
    • 4.2 Tunnel Engineering
    • 4.3 Grammar(构词法)
  • 5 Bridge Engineering
    • 5.1 Bridge
    • 5.2 Bridge Engineering
  • 6 Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering
    • 6.1 Soil Mechanics
    • 6.2 Foundation Engineering
  • 7 Concrete and Steel Structure Engineering
    • 7.1 Reinforced Concrete Structure Engineering
    • 7.2 Steel Structure Engineering
    • 7.3 Debate
  • 8 Road Engineering
    • 8.1 Road Engineering
    • 8.2 Pavement Engineering
  • 9 English Abstract Writing
    • 9.1 A Model of ABSTRACT
    • 9.2 Writing an Abstract of English for Science and Technology
Pavement Engineering

8.2 Pavement Engineering


Flexible pavement design

A flexible, or asphalt, or Tarmac pavement typically consists of three or four layers. For a four layer flexible pavement, there is a surface course, base course, and subbase course constructed over a compacted, natural soil subgrade. When building a three layer flexible pavement, the subbase layer is not used and the base course is placed directly on the natural subgrade.

A flexible pavement's surface layer is constructed of hot-mix asphalt (HMA).Unstabilized aggregates are typically used for the base course; however, the base course could also be stabilized with asphalt, Foamed Bitumen,<Roadstone Recycling> Portland cement, or another stabilizing agent. The subbase is generally constructed from local aggregate material, while the top of the subgrade is often stabilized with cement or lime.

With flexible pavement, the highest stress occurs at the surface and the stress decreases as the depth of the pavement increases. Therefore, the highest quality material needs to be used for the surface, while lower quality materials can be used as the depth of the pavement increases. The term "flexible" is used because of the asphalts ability to bend and deform slightly, then return to its original position as each traffic load is applied and removed. It is possible for these small deformations to become permanent, which can lead to rutting in the wheel path over an extended time.

The service life of a flexible pavement is typically designed in the range of 20 to 30 years. Required thicknesses of each layer of a flexible pavement vary widely depending on the materials used, magnitude, number of repetitions of traffic loads, environmental conditions, and the desired service life of the pavement. Factors such as these are taken into consideration during the design process so that the pavement will last for the designed life without excessive distresses.


Rigid pavement design

Rigid pavements are generally used in constructing airports and major highways, such as those in the interstate highway system. In addition, they commonly serve as heavy-duty industrial floor slabs, port and harbor yard pavements, and heavy-vehicle park or terminal pavements. Like flexible pavements, rigid highway pavements are designed as all-weather, long-lasting structures to serve modern day high-speed traffic. Offering high quality riding surfaces for safe vehicular travel, they function as structural layers to distribute vehicular wheel loads in such a manner that the induced stresses transmitted to the subgrade soil are of acceptable magnitudes.

Portland cement concrete (PCC) is the most common material used in the construction of rigid pavement slabs. The reason for its popularity is due to its availability and the economy. Rigid pavements must be designed to endure frequently repeated traffic loadings. The typical designed service life of a rigid pavement is between 30 and 40 years, lasting about twice as long as a flexible pavement.

One major design consideration of rigid pavements is reducing fatigue failure due to the repeated stresses of traffic. Fatigue failure is common among major roads because a typical highway will experience millions of wheel passes throughout its service life. In addition to design criteria such as traffic loadings, tensile stresses due to thermal energy must also be taken into consideration. As pavement design has progressed, many highway engineers have noted that thermally induced stresses in rigid pavements can be just as intense as those imposed by wheel loadings. Due to the relatively low tensile strength of concrete, thermal stresses are extremely important to the design considerations of rigid pavements.

Rigid pavements are generally constructed in three layers - a prepared subgrade, base or subbase, and a concrete slab. The concrete slab is constructed according to a designed choice of plan dimensions for the slab panels, directly influencing the intensity of thermal stresses occurring within the pavement. In addition to the slab panels, temperature reinforcements must be designed to control cracking behavior in the slab. Joint spacing is determined by the slab panel dimensions.

Three main types of concrete pavements commonly used are jointed plain concrete pavement (JPCP), jointed reinforced concrete pavement (JRCP), and continuously reinforced concrete pavements (CRCP). JPCPs are constructed with contraction joints which direct the natural cracking of the pavement. These pavements do not use any reinforcing steel. JRCPs are constructed with both contraction joints and reinforcing steel to control the cracking of the pavement. High temperatures and moisture stresses within the pavement creates cracking, which the reinforcing steel holds tightly together. At transverse joints, dowel bars are typically placed to assist with transferring the load of the vehicle across the cracking. CRCPs solely rely on continuous reinforcing steel to hold the pavement's natural transverse cracks together. Prestressed concrete pavements have also been used in the construction of highways; however, they are not as common as the other three. Prestressed pavements allow for a thinner slab thickness by partly or wholly neutralizing thermally induced stresses or loadings.

Development of the Discipline of Pavement Engineering


Video from Institution of Civil Engineers

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZZ8nBqWUfs&feature=emb_logo

Quiz



Topic Discussion


References

 Mamlouk, Michael S. "Design of Flexible Pavements." The Handbook of Highway Engineering. Ed. T.W. Fwa. CRC Press, 2005.

 Fwa, T.F. and Wei, Liu. "Design of Rigid Pavements." The Handbook of Highway Engineering. Ed. T.W. Fwa. CRC Press, 2005.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway_engineering#Planning_and_development