Rut Initiation Mechanisms in Asphalt Mixtures as Generated under Accelerated Pavement Testing

Author:

Gokhale Salil1,Choubane Bouzid2,Byron Tom2,Tia Mang3

Affiliation:

1. ERES Consultants Division, Applied Research Associates, Inc., 5007 Northeast 39th Avenue, Gainesville, FL 32609.

2. Materials Research Park, Florida Department of Transportation, 5007 Northeast 39th Avenue, Gainesville, FL 32609.

3. Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida, Weil Hall, PO Box 116580, Gainesville, FL 32609.

Abstract

The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) conducted an experiment to address the effects of polymer modifiers on the performance of Superpave® mixes by using a heavy vehicle simulator. Two fine-graded Superpave mixes were considered. One mix included a virgin binder meeting the requirements of PG 67-22, and the other contained a styrene– butadiene–styrene polymer (SBS)-modified binder meeting those of PG 76-22. Both respective mixes contained the same effective binder content, aggregate components, and gradation. The mixes were designed for 10 million to 30 million equivalent single-axle loads with the use of the standard Superpave mix design methodology. During placement of these mixes, all standard FDOT density requirements and acceptance criteria were applicable. The subsequent investigation showed that the sections with SBS-modified mixture significantly outperformed those with the unmodified mixture. It was also determined that rutting in the unmodified mixture was primarily a function of shear flow, whereas rutting in the SBS-modified mixture was caused mainly by densification. This paper presents a description of the testing program, the data collection effort, and the subsequent analyses and findings, focusing primarily on the initiation mechanisms of rutting in asphalt mixtures as generated and observed under accelerated pavement testing.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering

Reference3 articles.

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