Title: Resilient Modulus Testing and Startup Procedures
1Resilient Modulus Testing and Startup Procedures
2PRESENTATION OBJECTIVES
What is the Resilient Modulus (Mr) Testing and
Startup Product Line
- Why Mr Testing and the Startup Procedures are
Important - Development of the Mr Startup Procedure
- How to Conduct the Mr Startup Procedure
- Who Should Use the Mr Testing and Startup Product
Line and Why - How to Get Information on the Mr Testing and
Startup Product Line
3LTPP Mr Start-up Procedure Product Line
- FHWA LTPP Protocol P46, Resilient Modulus of
Unbound Granular Base/Subbase Materials and
Subgrade Soils
FHWA-RD-96-176, Resilient Modulus of
Unbound Materials Laboratory Startup and Quality
Control Procedure
- FHWA Video Tape Series
- Laboratory Resilient Modulus Testing Is This
the Right Time? - Laboratory Resilient Modulus Testing Startup and
Quality Control Procedure - Laboratory Resilient Modulus Testing Sample
Preparation and Test Procedure
4Resilient Modulus Lab Tests Videotape 1
- Laboratory Resilient Modulus Testing Is This
the Right Time? - 8 minutes
- Explains resilient modulus and what it is used
for. - Describes developments that have made the testing
more consistent and easier to adopt. - Target Audience Administrators and engineers
5Resilient Modulus Lab Tests Videotape 2
- Laboratory Resilient Modulus Testing Startup
and Quality Control Procedure - 15 minutes
- Gives detailed definition of resilient modulus.
- Explains the procedure developed to ensure that a
lab is set up properly to conduct the test
procedure and to collect accurate test results. - Target Audience Laboratory managers and
technicians
6Resilient Modulus Lab Tests Videotape 3
- Laboratory Resilient Modulus Testing Sample
Preparation and Test Procedure - 13 minutes
- Describes each step in the resilient modulus test
procedure, including how to prepare soil and
aggregate samples. - Target Audience Lab managers and technicians
7PRESENTATION OBJECTIVES
- What is the Resilient Modulus (Mr) Testing and
Startup Procedure Product Line - Development of the Mr Startup Procedure
- How to Conduct the Mr Startup Procedure
- Who Should Use the Mr Testing and Startup Product
Line and Why - How to Get Information on the Mr Testing and
Startup Product Line
Why Mr Testing and the Startup Procedures Are
Important
8Resilient Modulus 101
- AASHTO Definition
- A measure of the elastic property of soil
recognizing certain non-linear characteristics. - Resilient Modulus Mr
- Resilient Modulus elastic modulus (mod. of
elasticity) - Resilient Modulus stress/strain
- Resilient Modulus stiffness
- Resilient modulus ? strength
9Typical Elastic Modulus Values (ksi)
- PCC 3,000 6,000
- Asphalt Concrete 500 2,000
- Crushed Stone 20 40
- Silty Soils 5 20
- Clayey Soils 5 10
10Usefulness of Resilient Modulus
- Used to define fundamental material properties
- Used in constitutive models
- Used to predict stress, strain, and displacement
- Used to develop performance models
- Used in current AASHTO pavement design guide
- Used in mechanistic design approach
11The Resilient Modulus Startup Procedure
- Verifies the ability of equipment and personnel
to perform resilient modulus testing - Developed by LTPP to ensure consistent,
repeatable and accurate results - Implemented in FHWA, state DOTs, academia, and
industry
12Benefits Of Mr Startup Procedure
- Procedure useful to anyone conducting resilient
modulus testing - Prepared for resilient modulus of soils but can
be applied to asphalt - Generic procedure useful to anyone performing
testing using servo-hydraulic test systems (i.e.
complex modulus, creep, etc.)
13PRESENTATION OBJECTIVES
- What is the Resilient Modulus (Mr) Testing and
Startup Procedure Product Line - Why Mr Testing and the Startup Procedures are
Important -
- How to Conduct the Mr Startup Procedure
- Who Should Use the Mr Testing and Startup Product
Line and Why - How to Get Information on the Mr Testing and
Startup Product Line
Development of the Mr Startup Procedure
14Testing and Protocol History
- 1987 - Strategic Highway Research Program (SHRP)
adopts resilient modulus testing - 1990 - Initial protocols developed
- 1991 - Resilient Modulus testing began
- 1992 - FHWA assumes leadership of LTPP
- Early 1993 - SHRP Resilient Modulus Testing Ends
15Data Problems 1993/1994 - SHRP data
- Serious flaws found in the data
- Large amount of data deemed unusable
- Probable cause
- faulty electronics
- mechanical problems
- operator error
16Causes of Data Problems
- Sample loading non-symmetrical
- Sample loaded too long
- Deformation occurs prior to loading
- Deformation impulse shorter than load impulse
- Deformation fluctuation
- Deformation flat-line or clipping phenomenon
17High Testing Variability and Low Confidence
- Poor precision and bias
- SHRP precision and bias testing yielded 100
variation between labs, 50 within lab - Many practitioners have no confidence in test
results - Equipment standardization lacking
18The Mr Testing Challenge
- Significant modulus testing remained to be
completed - Need for equipment and operator verification
procedure established
- Result
- P46 test procedure revised to reflect
- lessons learned
- P46 startup procedure developed to address
- equipment/operator issues
19The Startup Procedure Development Objectives
- Develop a simple, efficient and inexpensive
methodology to verify equipment performance and
accuracy of a laboratory - Verify laboratory ability (personnel/equipment)
to conduct P46 Resilient Modulus Tests
20PRESENTATION OBJECTIVES
- What is the Resilient Modulus (Mr) Startup
Procedure Product Line - Why Mr Testing and the Startup Procedure is
Important - Development of the Mr Startup Procedure
- Who Should Use the Mr Startup Procedure and Why
- How to Get Information on the Mr Startup Procedure
How to Conduct the Mr Startup Procedure
21Equipment
- LVDT Modulator/Oscillator (optional)
- NIST Traceable Proving Rings
- NIST Traceable Pressure Gauge
22The 3-Phase Startup Process
- Verification of Electronic System
- Verification of Mechanical System
- Verification of Laboratory Ability to Conduct P46
Resilient Modulus Test
23Electronic System VerificationElectrical Method
(Method 1)
- Focuses on the signal path from the transducers
to the digitized output data - Input an electrical signal with known frequency
and amplitude - Output acquired digitized data
- Compares input and output signals for a range in
frequency
24Electronic System VerificationMechanical Method
(Method 2)
- Focuses on the signal path from the transducers
to the digitized output data - Input a reference LVDT and the machine LVDT
are exercised mechanically with known frequency
and amplitude - Output acquired digitized data and visual
reference to oscilloscope - Compares input and output signals for a range in
frequency - Note new procedure, not documented in
FHWA-RD-96-176, simpler than Method 1
25Electronic System VerificationComponents Checked
- Analog signal conditioning
- Digitized signal processing
- Transducers (load cells, LVDTs)
- Signal filters
- Various layers of data acquisition and control
software
- Acceptance Criteria
- Matched input to output delays lt .5 msec
- Amplitude constant from 2 to 50 hz
26The 3-Phase Startup Process
- Verification of Electronic System
- Verification of Mechanical System
- Verification of Laboratory Ability to Conduct P46
Resilient Modulus Test
27Mechanical System Verification
- Focuses on the performance capability of the
laboratory equipment - Uses NIST traceable calibrated proving rings and
other measurement devices
28Mechanical System Verification Components
- LVDT Calibration
- Load Cell Zero
- Load Cell Calibration Certificates
- Load Cell Cal. Verification
- Dynamic Response
- Phase Angles
- Triaxial Pressure Chamber