Title: Subgrade
1SESSION 6
Thickness Design
2Objectives
- Identify key design parameters in concrete
pavement design - Describe the principal concrete pavement design
procedures - 1986/1993 AASHTO Guide
- 1998 AASHTO Supplement
- Portland Cement Association
3Key Design Parameters
- Traffic
- Subgrade
- Climate
- Concrete properties
- Base
- Performance
- Reliability
4Key Parameter Traffic
- Traffic over design period
- Axle load spectrum (PCA)
- numbers and weights of
- axles expected over
- design period
- ESALs (AASHTO)
- axle load spectrum
- converted to number of
- equivalent 18-kip 80 kN
- single-axle loads
5Key Parameter Subgrade
- Subgrade characterization
- modulus of subgrade reaction (k value)
- natural soil, embankment, rigid
substrate
Embankment
Subgrade
Natural soil
Rigid layer
6Key Parameter Climate
- Environmental effects
- joint opening and closing
- slab curling
- erosion of base and foundation
- freeze-thaw weakening of soils
- freeze-thaw damage to concrete
- corrosion of dowels, reinforcement
7Key Parameter Concrete
- Concrete strength
- 28-day modulus of
- rupture (flexural
- strength) used in
- thickness design
- Concrete stiffness
- 28-day modulus of elasticity
8Key Parameter Base
- Base characteristics
- type
- thickness
- stiffness
- erodibility
- drainability
- slab/base friction
PCC Slab
Base
9Key Parameter Performance
- Performance criteria
- One or more performance criteria used to
define the end of the performance life of the
pavement - AASHTO loss of serviceability
- PCA fatigue cracking, erosion
10Key Parameter Reliability
- Design reliability
- margin of safety against premature failure
- higher functional classes and traffic volumes
warrant higher reliability - AASHTO adjustment to ESALs
- PCA adjustment to strength
11Evolution of the AASHTO Method
- Original AASHO Road Test model (1961)
- applicable to Road Test conditions only
- 1962 extended AASHO model
- strength, elastic modulus, k value, ESALs
- 1972 extended AASHO model
- J factor
- 1981 modification
- modulus of rupture safety factor
12Evolution of the AASHTO Method (continued)
- 1986 AASHTO Guide
- drainage factors, revised J, reliability
- 1993 AASHTO Guide
- overlay chapters revised
- 1998 AASHTO Supplement
- revised model, improved k guidelines,
- curling/warping, structural effects of base
13Effect of Subgrade k and Base Stiffness
Lean concrete base (E 1 Mpsi, friction 35)
400
Asphalt-treated base (E 500 ksi, friction 6)
Granular base (E 25 ksi, friction 1.5)
Subgrade k-value (psi/in)
200
100
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
Allowable ESALs (millions)
14Effect of Climate on Slab Thickness
Required Slab Thickness (in)
8.0
8.5
9.0
9.5
10.0
10.5
11.0
Miami, FL
Las Vegas, NV
Raleigh, NC
Baltimore, MD
Chicago, IL
Albany, NY
15Effect of Climate on Joint Spacing
Allowable Joint Spacing (ft)
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Miami, FL
20 ft max
12 ft min
recommended
recommended
Las Vegas, NV
Raleigh, NC
Baltimore, MD
Chicago, IL
Albany, NY
16PCA Method
- Axle load spectrum
- Total damage due to fatigue and erosion
- Joint, edge, and corner loading stresses
- Dowels or aggregate interlock
17PCA Method (continued)
- Asphalt or tied concrete shoulder
- Composite k
- Safety factor on concrete strength
- Safety factor on axle loads for high traffic
conditions
18Other Methods
- Customized AASHTO methods empirical
adaptations, calibration to local conditions - Mechanistic-empirical methods mechanistic
stress calculation empirical cracking model - Zero-Maintenance, NCHRP 1-26
- Design catalogs guidelines on thickness and
other design details, formatted for ease of use - NCHRP 1-32, other countries
19Summary
- Modern concrete pavement design procedures
consider not only slab thickness and traffic
loading, but also - multilayer foundations
- structural contribution of base
- interaction between thickness and joint spacing
20Summary (continued)
- climatic effects (curling, warping, joint
opening) - load transfer and edge support
- cracking, faulting, corner break distresses