Title: Hot Mix Asphalt Production and Placement
1Hot Mix AsphaltProduction and Placement
Texas AM University, CVEN 342 Friday, August 21,
2020
- Gary L. Fitts, P.E.
- Sr. Field Engineer
- Asphalt Institute
2 ASPHALT INSTITUTE
- International association of petroleum asphalt
producers, manufacturers, and affiliated
businesses, established in 1919 - Promotes the use, benefits and quality
performance of petroleum asphalt through
engineering, research and educational activities. - HQ office-Lexington, KY
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4References
- Asphalt Institute
- www.asphaltinstitute.org
- 859-288-4960
- Texas Asphalt Pavement Association
- www.txhotmix.org
- 512-312-2099
- National Asphalt Pavement Association
- www.hotmix.org
- 888-468-6499
- Asphalt Pavement Alliance
- www.AsphaltAlliance.com
5HMA Plant Functions
- Aggregate and asphalt storage
- Aggregate drying
- Dust collection, air pollution control
- Aggregate and asphalt proportioning
- Mixing
- Mixture discharge/storage
6Topics
- Basic information on
- HMA Production
- HMA Placement
- HMA Compaction
- Considerations for developing HMA specifications
7Batch Plant
8Batch Plants-Features
- Aggregates dried, separated by size
- Aggregates recombined by weight in weigh hopper
- Aggregates introduced into pugmill, briefly mixed
- Asphalt introduced by weight, mixed with
aggregates - Completed HMA discharged or stored
9Batch Plant Layout
Dust Collector
Cold Feed Bins
Batch Tower
Dryer
Asphalt
Cold Elevator
Hot Elevator
Storage Silo (optional)
Asphalt Trucking, Inc
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11Drum Plants
- Aggregates are dried, mixed with asphalt in a
continuous operation - Quality control entirely dependent on
- stockpile management
- plant calibration
- Mixture must be stored in surge bin or silo
12Drum Plant Layout
13Multipav, S.A., El Salvador
14Drum Plant-Knippa, Texas
15Drum Plant Configurations
- Parallel flow
- Counter flow
- Coater (continuous dryer/pugmill)
- Drum in a drum
- double
- triple
16Weigh Bridge
17HMA Production
- Objective is to produce a mixture meeting the
specified design requirements - Volumetric
- Mechanical
- Samples are normally obtained from trucks at the
plant, taken to the laboratory, and tested to
confirm these qualities
18Surface Preparation
- Prime Coats
- Applied to unbound surface
- Moderate, uniform application (0.15-0.35 gal/sy)
of low viscosity liquid asphalt - Example materials
- MC-30
- MC-70
- AEP
19Surface Preparation
- Tack Coats
- Applied to bound surface
- Light, uniform application of liquid asphalt
(0.03-0.05 gal/sy residual) - Example materials
- Asphalt emulsions
- SS-1h, CSS-1h, MS-2
- Special Tack Emulsions
- Paving grade asphalt
- PG 64-22
20Tack Coat Application
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22Paving Equipment
- Paving Machine Components
- Tractor unit
- Screed
- Electronic grade controls
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24HMA Delivery
- Paver pulls up to meet the truck
- DONT BUMP THE PAVER!
- Break the load before opening tailgate
- Charge the hopper before its empty
25Tractor and Screed Units
MS-22, Fig. 5.11 (Courtesy of Blaw-Knox)
26Forces Acting on Screed
27Automatic Screed Controls
- Electronic adjustment to screed height using
sensing and reference system - Sensor detects elevation changes, adjusts height
of tow point - Slope (transverse) controls
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29Paving Operations
- Maintain uniform resistance to face of screed!
- Keep uniform head of material at the face of the
screed - Operate paver within a narrow range of forward
speed - Coordinate mixture delivery, paver speed and
compaction operations
30Uniform Head of Material
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32Compaction
- The process of compressing a material into a
smaller volume while maintaining the same mass.
33Compaction
- Essential to good performance!
- Need to compact to desirable air voids level
- Fine graded mixtures 4-8
- Coarse or gap-graded mixtures 3-6
- Compaction can only achieved if
- Mixture is confined
- Mixture is hot (workable)
34Factors Affecting Compaction
- Mixture properties
- Base/subgrade support (confinement)
- Ambient conditions
- Lift thickness
35Asphalt Binder Properties
- Binder grade
- increase high temperature grade ? stiffer binder
- neat or modified?
- PG grades with 92C or more temp. difference are
usually polymer modified - Temperature
- must complete compaction while mix temp exceeds
- 85C (185F) for neat binders
- 115C (240F) for modified binders
36Compaction-Lift/Layer Thickness
- Coarse-graded mixtures, mixtures using modified
asphalts - Minimum 4X nominal maximum size
- ½ in NMS minimum 2 lift thickness
- Fine-graded mixtures
- Minimum 3X nominal maximum size
- Thicker lifts also conserve heat, providing more
time to complete compaction
37Aggregate Gradation
100
max density line
restricted zone
max size
nom max size
Percent Passing
control point
0
.075 .3 2.36
12.5 19.0
Sieve Size, mm, raised to 0.45 power
38Design Aggregate Structure
100
max size
nom max size
Percent Passing
0
.075 .3 2.36
12.5 19.0
Sieve Size, mm, raised to 0.45 power
39Mix Temp. 275F
90F
30F
60F
Time avail. for Compaction, min
6 min
1
2
3
4
Compacted Thickness, in
40Rolling Phases
- Breakdown
- Intermediate
- Finish
- Different equipment and different techniques for
each phase
41Compaction Equipment
- Screed unit
- weight of screed
- external force applied to screed
- vibratory unit
- 35 Hz (2100 VPM)
- tamper bar
- Rollers
- vibratory steel-wheeled
- pneumatic
- static steel-wheeled
- combination
42Vibratory Rollers
- Commonly used for initial (breakdown) rolling
- 8-18.5 tons, 57-84 in wide (heavy rollers)
- 50-200 lbs/linear inch (PLI)
- Frequency 2700-4200 impacts/min.
- Amplitude 0.016-0.032 in.
- For thin overlays ( 2 in.) use low amplitude or
static mode - Operate to attain at least 10 impacts/ft
- 2-4 mph
43Amplitude Frequency
Time between blows, t
Frequency 1/t
Amplitude
44Roller Eccentrics
Low amplitude
High amplitude
Example from Dynapac CC 501
45Amplitude vs. Frequency
- High amplitude generates most force
- At same frequency, high amplitude does more work
- Is it logical to use high amplitude with high
frequency?
46Vibratory Frequency
- Frequency is drum impacts per minute
- Working speed must match frequency
- Best results when impact spacing is 10-14 per
foot
47Frequency
Impacts/ft 1/Impact Spacing
48Impacts per Foot of TravelVibratory Rollers
VPM 2 mph 2.5 mph 3 mph 3.5 mph 4 mph
2000 11.4 --- --- --- ---
2500 14.2 11.4 --- --- ---
3000 17.0 13.6 11.4 --- ---
3500 19.9 15.9 13.3 11.4 10.0
4000 22.7 18.2 15.2 13.0 11.4
Reed Tachometer-used to check frequency of
vibratory rollers
49Static Steel-Wheeled Rollers
- 10-14 ton rollers normally used for HMA
compaction - Commonly use vibratory rollers operated in static
mode - Lighter rollers used for finish rolling
- Drums must be smooth and clean
- For initial compaction, drive wheel must face
paver
AI MS-22, Figure 6.05
50Static Steel-Wheeled Rollers
51Pneumatic Tire Manipulation
- Overlap manipulates mat under and between tire
- Tight finish resists moisture penetration
- Manipulation increased by lowering tire pressure
- Static force increased by high tire pressure
52Rolling Pattern
- Speed lap pattern for each roller
- No. of passes for each roller
- Min. temperature by which each roller must
complete pattern - IMPORTANT
- Paver speed must not exceed that of the
compaction operation!!!
53Typical Pattern, 2 inch Overlay
- 2-4 passes, tandem vibratory roller
- Mix temperature above 250F
- Lowest amplitude setting, highest frequency
- Vibration on one or both drums
- Travel speed to obtain 10 impacts/ft (3 mph)
- 2-4 passes, pneumatic roller
- Mix temperature 180-230F
- Roller speed 3 mph
- 2-4 passes, static rolling
- Mix temperature 140-180F
- As necessary to remove blemishes
54HMA Specifications
- General types of project specifications
- Method
- Statistically-based acceptance
- QC/QA
- End result
- Warranty
- Short-term (workmanship related)
- Long-term (design-build)
- No one type is appropriate for all conditions
55Method Specifications
- Contractor is required to follow specific
instructions during all phases of construction - Owner provides mixture design
- Mixture is accepted on the basis of owners (or
contractors) quality monitoring tests - Delivery, placement, and compaction accepted
based on inspection by owner/owners agent - Examples of method spec
- TxDOT, Item 340 (all Standards Specs through
1982) - 2004 Standard Specifications to include
method-type Item 340
56Statistically-Based QC/QA
- Requires a minimum established level of
contractor quality monitoring tests - Contractor usually furnishes the mixture design
- Defines lots and sublots for production and
placement, requires stratified random sampling of
materials - Acceptance/payment performed on a lot-to-lot
basis - Usually includes penalty/bonus provisions on key
materials qualities - Many agencies applying percent-within-limits
(PWL) criteria, whereby upper and/or lower limits
of key criterion are defined - Most commonly applied specification type for
highways and airports - 1993 TxDOT Standard Specifications, all 2004 HMA
items (except 340) - Most common PWL specification FAA P-401
57Short-Term Warranty
- Acceptance based on observed performance under
limited term - Performance defined through measurement of
- Roughness/ride quality
- Cracking (non-wheelpath)
- Rutting
- Surface friction
- Contractor controls materials selection, mixture
design, and all construction requirements - Term may vary from 1 to 7 years, becoming more
popular for use on highway projects - Indiana, Wisconsin, Michigan, other states
58Long-Term Warranties
- Contractor is required to deliver a pavement with
performance characteristics at defined levels at
the end of an extended period (15-30 years) - Contractor responsible for pavement structural
design and construction - Most often used outside USA (design/build/operate/
concessions projects in Central and South
America, Europe) - Best US example, NM 44 project
59Comparison of Different Types of Specifications
Relative Risk Relative Risk
Type Owner Cntrctr Comment
Method - Requires diligent inspection
QC/QA Best applicable to large-scale projects
S-T Warranty - Project selection is crucial
L-T Warranty -- Bonding a concern, full control must be given to contractor
60Thanks for your attention!