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Characterization of Cementitiously Stabilized Layers for Use in Pavement Design and Analysis. National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Report 789
The use of cementiously stabilized materials, such as lean concrete, cement stabilized aggregate, and soil stabilized with cement, lime, fly ash, or combination thereof in subgrade, subbase, and base layers of flexible and rigid pavement structures is a widely accepted practice by many state highway agencies. Although a great deal of research has been performed on the properties of these materials, limited research has related the properties of such materials (e.g., shrinkage) to performance of the pavements in which they are used. The AASHTO Interim Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide Manual of Practice (MEPDG) (see Special Note A) developed under NCHRP Project 01-37A provides a methodology for the analysis and performance prediction of pavements incorporating such layers. However, the short- and long-term properties of these materials differ substantially depending on the type and quantity of stabilizing agent, pavement structure, environmental conditions during and after construction, loading, etc. The characterization of such materials, the changes of their properties over time, and their distress models have not been adequately addressed in the MEPDG. Also, limited material properties have been considered; other properties may have significant influence on the long-term performance and need to be considered. Research is needed to identify properties of cementitiously stabilized materials that significantly influence the design, constructibility, and performance of highway pavements and recommend methods for measuring these properties. This information can be incorporated into the MEPDG thus allowing a rational analysis and design procedures of flexible and rigid pavements constructed with stabilized layers.
Characterization of Cementitiously Stabilized Layers for Use in Pavement Design and Analysis. National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Report 789
The use of cementiously stabilized materials, such as lean concrete, cement stabilized aggregate, and soil stabilized with cement, lime, fly ash, or combination thereof in subgrade, subbase, and base layers of flexible and rigid pavement structures is a widely accepted practice by many state highway agencies. Although a great deal of research has been performed on the properties of these materials, limited research has related the properties of such materials (e.g., shrinkage) to performance of the pavements in which they are used. The AASHTO Interim Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide Manual of Practice (MEPDG) (see Special Note A) developed under NCHRP Project 01-37A provides a methodology for the analysis and performance prediction of pavements incorporating such layers. However, the short- and long-term properties of these materials differ substantially depending on the type and quantity of stabilizing agent, pavement structure, environmental conditions during and after construction, loading, etc. The characterization of such materials, the changes of their properties over time, and their distress models have not been adequately addressed in the MEPDG. Also, limited material properties have been considered; other properties may have significant influence on the long-term performance and need to be considered. Research is needed to identify properties of cementitiously stabilized materials that significantly influence the design, constructibility, and performance of highway pavements and recommend methods for measuring these properties. This information can be incorporated into the MEPDG thus allowing a rational analysis and design procedures of flexible and rigid pavements constructed with stabilized layers.
Characterization of Cementitiously Stabilized Layers for Use in Pavement Design and Analysis. National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Report 789
H. Wen (author) / B. Muhunthan (author) / J. Wang (author) / X. Li (author) / T. Edil (author) / J. M. Tinjum (author)
2014
82 pages
Report
No indication
English
Highway Engineering , Soil & Rock Mechanics , Construction Equipment, Materials, & Supplies , Soil Sciences , Construction Materials, Components, & Equipment , Construction Management & Techniques , Geotechnolog , Granular materials , Moisture content , Soil stabilization , Construction materials , Dry conditions , Durability , Freezing , Modifications , Pavements , Thawing , Urban areas , Wet conditions , Tube section test , Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide Manual of Practice(MEPDG)