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Influence of asphalt thickness on performance of geosynthetic-reinforced asphalt: Full-scale field study
Affiliation:1. Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, 78712, USA
Abstract:In this study, a series of controlled traffic loadings was conducted on unreinforced and geosynthetic-reinforced full-scale asphalt overlays. Unlike the common objective of using paving interlayers to mitigate the development of reflective cracks, the main purpose of adopting geosynthetics for this study was to render an increased roadway structural capacity. The project involved instrumented test sections constructed during the rehabilitation of an in-service roadway in Texas, USA. The rehabilitation involved repairing the pre-existing pavement, placing tack coat, installing a geosynthetic interlayer (except in the unreinforced section), and finally constructing a 75 mm-thick asphalt overlay. This overlay comprised a 50 mm-thick, dense-graded (TY-D) layer overlain by a 25 mm-thick, thin-overlay mixture (TOM) layer. Controlled traffic loadings were conducted, which involved driving standard and light axle loads directly above asphalt strain gauges that had been installed at mid-depth of the pre-existing asphalt layer. Comparison of tensile strains among the different test sections revealed significantly smaller tensile strains in the geosynthetic-reinforced sections compared to those obtained in the unreinforced section. Consequently, and even though geosynthetic interlayers have often been adopted to minimize reflective cracking in asphalt overlays, the field monitoring results generated in this study demonstrate that they also provide added roadway structural capacity.
Keywords:Geosynthetics  Asphalt overlay  Instrumentation  Field monitoring  Tensile strains  Structural capacity
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