Methods
The goal of structural design is to determine the number, material
composition and thickness of the different layers within a
pavement structure required to accommodate a given loading
regime. This includes the surface
course as well as any underlying
base or subbase layers. This section is focused on the structural
design of new pavement. Structural design for rehabilitation
is covered in Maintenance & Rehabilitation.
Structural design is mainly concerned with
determining appropriate layer thickness and composition. Calculations
are chiefly
concerned with traffic
loading stresses; other environmentally related stresses (such as temperature) are accounted for
in mix design
asphalt binder selection. The principal methods
of structural design in use today are (from simplest to
most complex) design catalogs, empirical and mechanistic-empirical.
Design Catalogs
The simplest approach to HMA pavement structural
design involves selecting a predetermined design from a catalog.
Typically,
design catalogs contain a listing of common loading, environmental
and service regimes and the corresponding recommended pavement
structures. State and local agencies often include them
in their design manuals.
The pavement designs within these catalogs
can be based on a number of different design methods ranging
from
mechanistic-empirical to
historical experience. When using a design catalog, it
is
important to be aware of the author's assumptions and design
procedure. Often assumptions and design procedures are
based on extremely local conditions, which may not be transferable.
For instance, basic Honolulu City & County structural
designs may
not be appropriate for Maui County or vice versa.
Often the required level of design does
not warrant the use of advanced equations or models. For instance,
a
local
residential street subject to only a few heavy
loads per week (i.e., school bus, garbage truck) does not
warrant
the expense
and time
of a mechanistic-empirical design approach. However,
some government agencies and many private owners do
not have specified standard pavement structural designs.
Empirical Design
Many pavement structural design procedures use an empirical
approach. This means that the relationships between design
inputs (e.g., loads, materials, layer
configurations and
environment) and pavement failure were determined using
experience, experimentation or a combination of both. Although
the scientific
basis for these relationships is not firmly established,
they can be used with confidence as long as the limitations
with such an approach are recognized. Specifically, it
is not prudent to use an empirically derived relationship
to
describe phenomena that occur outside the range of the
original data used to develop the relationship.
AASHTO Method
The most common empirical design
method is that put forward in the 1993
AASHTO Guide for Design of Pavement
Structures. The equation relates pavement structure
to applied loads, service life and subgrade support (as
measured by resilient
modulus). This equation was developed from
experimental data at the
AASHO Road
Test,
a $27 million (1960 dollars)
road experiment conducted in Ottawa, IL from 1956 - 1961.
The AASHO
Road Test was a complex study of the performance of highway
pavement structures of known thickness under moving loads
of known magnitude and frequency (Highway Research Board,
1961).
The test studied both portland cement concrete and asphaltic
concrete pavements, as well as certain types of short-span
bridges. The resultant design equation remains a popular
method for pavement structural design.
HAPI Pavement
Note on Structural Design
|
HDOT uses the California method of pavement
structural design. The California Department of
Transportation (Caltrans) is currently in the process
of updating their pavement structural design methods
and will eventually switch to a mechanistic-empirical
method.
|
California Method
Another common empirical design method was developed in California
during the early 1940s by Francis Hveem and others. Referred
to as the "California method", this method was originally
based on test track data from Brighton and Stockton,
CA (both near Sacramento). Similar to the AASHTO equation,
the California method relates pavement structure (in the form
of an equivalent thickness of gravel) to applied loads and
subgrade
support
(as measured
by R-value).
GE = 0.0032(TI)(100 - R)
| where: |
GE |
= |
Gravel Equivalent
(all structural materials
are expressed as an equivalent thickness of gravel) |
| |
TI |
= |
Traffic Index = 9(ESAL/1,000,000)0.119
(a measure of the pavement loading based
on truck traffic) |
| |
R |
= |
R-value of the underlying subgrade |
Expert knowledge is required to use either
the 1993 AASHTO empirical equation or the California method;
a pavement design expert should
be consulted
if you are considering their use.
HAPI Pavement
Note on the California Method
|
HDOT uses the California method of pavement
structural design. The California Department of
Transportation (Caltrans) is currently in the process
of updating their pavement structural design methods
and will eventually switch to a mechanistic-empirical
method.
|
Mechanistic-Empirical Design
The most advanced pavement structural design uses a mechanistic-empirical
approach. Unlike an empirical
approach, a mechanistic approach
seeks to explain phenomena only by reference to physical
causes. In pavement design, the phenomena are the stresses,
strains and deflections within a pavement structure, and
the physical causes are the loads and material properties
of the pavement structure. The relationship between these
phenomena and their physical causes is typically described
using a mathematical model. Various mathematical models
can be used.
Along with this mechanistic approach, empirical elements
are used when defining what values of the calculated
stresses, strains and deflections result in pavement failure.
The relationship
between physical phenomena and pavement failure is described
by empirically derived equations that compute the number
of
loading cycles to failure.
The basic advantages of a mechanistic-empirical pavement
design method over a purely empirical one are: