L01 Pavement Design - Introduction Notes
L01 Pavement Design - Introduction Notes
1. INTRODUCTION
It is built over a prepared foundation (the subgrade) and are used to serve two purposes;
To provide a guide to drivers and boarders of the roadway by showing the visual
perspective of the horizontal and vertical alignment of the travelled way
Airports,
Haul roads,
Loading yards,
Bus terminals, and
Highways
Low volume roads,
Main carriageways of major highways,
Shoulders of major highways
Service roads, and
Intersection areas
Pavements are categorised according to the way they are constructed, which reflects
their importance and the loading to be carried. These categories include;
Flexible pavements
Loss of lives.
A highway engineer dealing with design of a pavement has to deal with three main
challenges;
Layer material,
In order to select the design inputs, there are three main external parmenters, which
have to be considered. These include;
Subgrade strength
Embankment or cutting,
Soil type,
Strength, and
Drainage characteristics.
Traffic loading
Vehicle numbers/volumes,
Vehicle type,
Loads carried, and
Vehicular speeds (stationary, slow moving, fast moving)
Climatic conditions
Rainfall,
Total rainfall
Seasonal distribution
Temperature
Maximum temperatures
Minimum temperatures
Daily variations
Seasonal variations
The performance.
While the concept of design variables/parameters of the pavement have been discussed
above, the concept of performance involves;
The facility must be able to perform over a specified period of time (design life or
service life).
1. Functional performance: This is the type of performance that the road user is
concerned with
Most distress (or defects on the road pavement surfaces are caused by
repeated application of the traffic loads.
Temperature,
Moisture,
Cracking,
Permanent deformation (e.g. rutting),
Bleeding (bitumen coming on the pavement surface)
Mud pumping (in concrete pavements)
Blow up (in concrete pavements)
These approaches are (normally) developed on the basis of observed performance of the
pavements.
The observed performance is correlated to one or more design parameters resulting into a
relationship (between the design parameter and the performance of pavements), which is
referred to as Performance criterion.
Depending on the design parameters selected and the manner in which the relationship
is dscribed, the performance criteria are classified as;
Empirical methods therefore cannot be extrapolated with confidence beyond the range
of experience and therefore, these methods may not work for new materials, new
climatic conditions or new traffic conditions.
This approach explains the different phenomena (stresses, strains and deflections)
occuring in the pavement with reference to the physical causes (loads and material
properties).
The relationship between the phenomena and the physical causes is explained using
mathematical model.
The relationship between the phenomena (stresses, strains and deflections) and the
failure is explained by emperically obtained relationships, which estimates the number
of load repetions to failure.
It is more reliable
Performance criterion has to be developed from sufficient data on the performance of in-
service pavements.
Pavement design done on the basis of any performance criterion is only reliable as the
criterion is.