Publication | Closed Access
Flexible pavement responses to different loading amplitudes considering layer interface condition and lateral shear forces
120
Citations
10
References
2006
Year
Flexible Pavement ResponsesHighway PavementPavement EngineeringEngineeringMechanical EngineeringSoil-structure InteractionPavement DesignVehicle DynamicPavement ResponsesStructural EngineeringLayer Interface ConditionGeotechnical EngineeringMechanics ModelingPavementsHybrid MethodsPavement ResponseMechanicsTest MethodsLateral Shear ForcesFoundation EngineeringMaterial MechanicsLoad-bearing CapacityDual TireCivil EngineeringStructural MechanicsMechanics Of Materials
A 3‑D finite‑element parametric study examined viscoelastic pavement responses to dual and wide‑base tires across temperatures (5–40 °C) and speeds (8–72 km/h), varying loading amplitude (continuous vs. trapezoidal), interface layer condition (simple‑friction vs.
A three-dimensional (3D) finite element (FE) parametric study was conducted to quantify the viscoelastic pavement responses due to different tire configurations: dual and wide-base tires, at three temperatures (5, 25 and 40°C) and two speeds (8 and 72 km/h). Three factors affecting pavement responses were investigated: type of moving wheel loading amplitude (continuous, trapezoidal), interface layer condition (simple-friction and elastic-stick models) and lateral surface forces. It was found that the continuous loading amplitude, which has an asymmetric stress magnitude and considers the difference between the entrance and exit of the tire, can simulate pavement responses to moving wheel vehicular loading more accurately than the currently used trapezoidal loading amplitude. The elastic-stick model resulted in a sensible improvement for predicting pavement responses to dual tire, while the simple-friction model is more comparable to field measurements in the case of the wide-base tire. The shear force was found to positively improve the prediction of the calculated strain at the bottom of the wearing surface and to a lesser degree at the bottom of the hot mix asphalt (HMA) base layer. This study concludes that using continuous loading amplitude and non-uniform pressure distribution to simulate a moving wheel, surface shear forces and appropriate layer interface friction may significantly improve the capability of FE models to predict pavement response to vehicular loading. Results have been successfully validated against field measurements.
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