By Mr.Surasak Kaewdee Transportation Engineering Dr. Kunnawee Kanitpong (Adviser) Asian Institute of Technology ANALYSIS OF TRAFFIC LOADING CHARACTERISTICS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Oklahoma DOT Perpetual Pavement Test Sections at the NCAT Test Track
Advertisements

Traffic Data For Pavement 2012 FHWA Highway Information Seminar, Arlington, VA Tianjia Tang, PE, Ph.D. Chief, Travel Monitoring and Surveys Division 421.
Institute for Road Construction and Maintenance - Vienna University of Technology ISTU O PTIMIZED P AVEMENT D ESIGN W ITH R ESPECT TO Q UALITY AND E CONOMY.
Traffic Monitoring Guide Truck Weight Monitoring Section 5.
LOW VOLUME ROAD DESIGN EMPIRICAL APPROACH.
Dr. Wa'el M. Albawwab ECGD4228 Transportation Engineering II Summer 2008 Sat. 15:30-18:30 PM K115.
Pavement Design Session Matakuliah: S0753 – Teknik Jalan Raya Tahun: 2009.
Recalibration of the Asphalt Layer Coefficient Dr. David H. Timm, P.E. Mrs. Kendra Peters-Davis.
Kentrack Kentrack is a computer program designed to analyze a railroad track segment as a structure Uses Bousinessq’s Elastic Theory Uses Burmister’s.
Engr. Ejaz Ahmad Khan Deputy Director Pakhtunkhwa Highways Authority
Pavement Design CE 453 Lecture 28.
Weigh-In-Motion (WIM) Data Collection & Reporting Office of Highway Policy Information 2012 Highway Information Seminar - Session: 6B Thursday, October.
Guide for Mechanistic-Empirical Design of New and Rehabilitation Pavement Structures By Matt Mason.
Introduction to Pavement Design Concepts
 The material properties of each layer are homogeneous  Each layer has a finite thickness except for the lower  layer, and all are infinite in.
Flexible Pavement Thickness Design / Asphalt Institute Method
Transportation Engineering II
In Tai Kim & Erol Tutumluer University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
EVALUATION OF FWD DATA FOR DETERMINATION OF LAYER MODULI OF PAVEMENTS Dr. Yusuf Mehta, P.E. Rowan University Dr. Reynaldo Roque, P.E. University of Florida.
Vehicle and Traffic Consideration CEE 320 Steve Muench 5/9/ Highways Airports.
PAVEMENT DESIGN. Introduction Pavement design is the major component in the road construction. Nearly one-third or one-half of the total cost of construction,
SANRAL Overload Damage Quantification Louw Kannemeyer.
SCAG Region Heavy Duty Truck Model Southern California Region Heavy Duty Truck Model.
Considering multiple-axle group loads in mechanistic design of bound pavements Michael Moffatt.
Flexible Pavement Design
Pavement Design CEE 320 Anne Goodchild.
PAVEMENT CONDITION SURVEYS Lecture 4. Instructional Objectives n Need for condition surveys n Collection methodologies n Four basic types of condition.
Lec 28, Ch.20, pp : Flexible pavement design, ESAL (Objectives)
Load Characterization. Rigid Pavement Design Course Traffic Load Considerations Load Groups Lane Wander Load Configuration.
Flexible Pavement Thickness Design / AASHTO Method
KENTRACK 4.0: A Railway Structural Design Program -- Tutorial
Jerry G. Rose, PE University of Kentucky Department of Civil Engineering REES 3: Module 3-D REES 2014.
King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals Construction Equipment And Methods CEM 530 FLEXIBAL PAVEMENT DESIGN Prepared for: Dr.Abdulaziz Bubshait By.
Chapter 9. Highway Design for Rideability
Perpetual Pavement Design Perpetual Pavement Open House Ashton, Iowa October 5, 2005.
Nondestructive Testing and Data Analysis Module 2-3.
Concrete Pavements The Right Tool for The Right Job.
Impact of doubling heavy vehicles on bridge
1 the effect of heavy vehicle composition on design traffic loading calculations (E80s)
Part 2 Processes and approaches associated with the FHWA method 1 1 HPMS Vehicle Summary Data.
Civil Engineering Department Design of Nablus Tulkarm Highway Prepared by Ahmed Mohammed Mustafa Anas Zeyad Belbeasi Under the Supervision of Dr. Khaled.
Traffic Terms and Concepts Whydo we need to concern ourselves with traffic when we design pavements? Why do we need to concern ourselves with traffic when.
Status of the first experiment at the PaveLab Fabricio Leiva-Villacorta, PhD Jose Aguiar-Moya, PhD Luis Loria-Salazar, PhD August 31 st, 2015.
TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING II
New Mexico Department of Transportation Research Bureau Expanding the Use of Weigh-In-Motion Data.
1 Hot-Mix Asphalt and Flexible Pavement Design: the MEPDG Kevin D. Hall, Ph.D., P.E. Professor and Head, Dept. of Civil Engineering University of Arkansas.
1 Longer Combination Vehicles & Road Trains for Texas? TxDOT Project CTR: Robert Harrison, Jolanda Prozzi, Kara Kockelman, Bridget Bienkowski, C.M.
SESSION 6 Thickness Design
The Use of PAVEDAT for the District-wide Truck Enforcement Plan June 20, 2012 Mark Berndt Eulois Cleckley.
Potential Implications of NAFTA Truck Traffic:. for better or for worse? Potential Implications of NAFTA Truck Traffic:
TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING-II
DARWIN AC/AC Overlay Design. Course Materials Tables and Design Procedures for this manual.
FUZZY APPROACH FOR ESTABLISHING THE PAVEMENT CONDITION QUALITY INDEX Gwo-Hshiung Tzeng Institute of Technology Management and Institute of Traffic and.
Asphalt Technology Course
At Auburn University National Center for Asphalt Technology Accelerated Pavement Testing Facilities “APT”
Phase I Experiment 4 Different pavement structures, 8 sections Compare
CE 3500 Transportation Engineering Introduction to Pavement Materials
Transportation Engineering-II
TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING II
Structural Design of Highway
TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING-II
Pavement Design  A pavement consists of a number of layers of different materials 4 Pavement Design Methods –AASHTO Method –The Asphalt Institute Method.
Pavement Thickness Design
Transportation Engineering
Calculating Dimensions for a Typical Pavement Section using 1993 AASHTO Flexible Pavement Design Guide.
Flexible Pavement Design (JKR Method)
HVS Testing at ERDC – Last Five Years
Flexible pavement design
Flexible Pavement Design (ARAHAN TEKNIK JALAN 5/85 PINDAAN 2013)
Concrete Pavement Analyst 1 ADTT / 2.25 SN
Presentation transcript:

By Mr.Surasak Kaewdee Transportation Engineering Dr. Kunnawee Kanitpong (Adviser) Asian Institute of Technology ANALYSIS OF TRAFFIC LOADING CHARACTERISTICS FOR MECHANISTIC-EMPIRICAL PAVEMENT DESIGN IN THAILAND

Introduction Method for the flexible pavement design 1.Empirical Method - based on past experience designs and the data generated from the field tests 2.Mechanistic – Empirical (M-E) Method - based on the use of stress, strain and deflection analysis to determine the minimum thickness of pavement

Introduction Disadvantage of the empirical design method. 1.Limited only to certain pavement materials that were developed Limited only one or two pattern. 2.The thickness design of the pavement structure using design charts will have some errors. Advantage of the M-E design method 1.The design is correct and confident anywhere and any environment condition. 2.Pavements can be designed according to any available materials. 3.The approach can provide any magnitude of wheel loads and frequencies. 4.Pavement can be designed into various patterns.

Limited Traffic Applications AXLE LOAD REPETITIONS PAVEMENT THICKNESS CurrentDesigns Projection A > 100 Million Projection B Projection C Projection B Data Limits (AASHO Road Test) Source: FHWA (2002)

Problem statement Problem load characterization in Thailand. 1.The count station counts only the number of each vehicle. 2.The Truck factors are always assumed for the new pavement design and the rehabilitated design. 3.The calculation of ESALs does not represent the existing types and categories of vehicles. 4.The new limits of axle load and gross weight for ten wheels standard trucks has been increased from 21 tons to 25 tons.

Objectives of Study To classify loading types and configuration for the design. To analyze the input data as collected from weigh- in-motion (WIM) for the M-E design method. To use the M-E design method by considering the current traffic load in Thailand. To develop the guidelines of traffic data collection by using WIM for future use in the design and maintenance of pavements in Thailand.

Methodology Study Framework Conclusions and Recommendation Collect Traffic Data from WIM Station and Weight control center Identify and Understand Load configuration for use in M-E design and maintenance Identify and Understand Load configuration for use in M-E design and maintenance Classify groups of vehicles Test Location Traffic Data Analysis Truck Factor and ESAL Design and Compare pavement structure by using obtainable load parameter in M-E pavement design method Determine and Compare thickness of pavement overlay by M-E method and FWD Traffic Loads

Methodology Test Location Sikiu (Outbound) WIM Station Tatamnuk (Inbound) WIM Station Suwintawong (Inbound) WIM Station Bang pai (Inbound) WIM Station

Methodology Weigh-in-motion The devices which measure truck weights and axle configuration at highway speeds, are an integral part of the program to provide highway-use data.

Collection traffic data from two locations WIM stations Weight Control Center in DOH

Methodology Observe from January 2008 to December Collect in one direction located at the four selected WIM stations. Classify into 13 standard vehicle classes Select monthly reports; class by hour, class by single axle weight, class by tandem axle weight and class by tridem axle weight. Provide a load interval of each axle group in 2 tons. Assumption of Data Collection

Methodology Load Characterization Equivalent Axle Load Factor (EALF) Defines the damage per pass to a pavement by axle in question relative to the damage per pass of a standard axle load (18-kip, 80-Kn) single-axle load The failure criterion for fatigue cracking Truck factor Equivalent Single Axle Load(ESAL) The total number of passes of the standard axle load during the design period The sum of ESALs for all trucks weighed divided by the number of trucks Traffic Analysis

Comparison of Vehicle Classification in two station types Count StationsWIM Stations No.NameImageClassNameImage 1BI+TRI CYCLE 2MOTORCYCLE 1Motorcycle 3CAR < = 7 P 2Passenger Cars 4CAR > 7 5LIGHT BUS 4Buses 6MEDIUM BUS 7HEAVY BUS 8 LIGHT TRUCK (Light Truck or Pick-Up) 3 Single Unit Truck (Two Axle, Four Tire) 9 MEDIUM TRUCK (Two-Axle Truck (6 Wheels)) 5 Single Unit Truck (Two Axle, Six Tire) 10 HEAVY TRUCK (Three-Axle Truck,10 Wheels) 6 Single Unit Truck (Three Axle) 7 Single Unit Truck (Four Axle) 11 SEMI TRAILER Semi Trailer (Four or More Axle) 8 Single Trailer (Three Axle) Single Trailer (Four Axle) 9 Single Trailer (Five Axle) 10 Single Trailer (Six or More Axle) 12 FULL TRAILER Full trailer (Four or More Axle) 11 Full Trailer (Five Axle) 12 Full Trailer (Six Axle) 13 Multi-Trailer (Seven or More Axle)

Traffic Data Result and Analysis Truck Monthly Distributions Truck Traffic Distribution Highway number WIM Station Sikiu (Outbound) TatamnakSuwintawongBang pai Data Collection (month) Time periodPercent of daily truck traffic,% midnight to 6 a.m a.m a.m a.m. - 4 p.m p.m. - 8 p.m p.m. - midnight Truck Hourly Distributions Normalized truck traffic distribution

Traffic Data Result and Analysis AADT from four WIM stations Average Annual Daily Traffic (AADT) AADT on highway number 304 from the permanent count station. Class of Veh. Highway road number WIM Station Sikiu (Outbou nd) Tata mnak Suwint awong Bang pai Description Average Annual Daily Traffic (AADT) 1Motorcycle1, Passenger car2,96426,8785,54114,255 4Bus Single Unit truck 3 Two Axle, Four Tire174893,0381,485 5 Two Axle, Six Tire Three Axle Four Axle2412 Single Trailer 8 Three and Four Axle Five Axle Six or More Axle Full Trailer 11 Five Axle Six Axle Multi Trailer 13 Seven or More Axle Summary5,37828,9009,91118,190 Both directions10,75657,80019,82236,380 Year Types of vehicles TOTAL (AADT) CAR< =7P CAR>7 P LBMBHBLTMTHT FULL _TL SEMI _TL ,7574, , ,2381,2351,047 29,169 total car17,184 MB+ HB777 MT+ HT4,845 FTL+ STL2, ,6795, , ,1811,5221,080 29,066 total car16,198 MB+ HB659 MT+ HT5,100 FTL+ STL2, ,5325, , , ,177 total car20,483 MB+ HB804 MT+ HT4,064 FTL+ STL1,623

Traffic Data Result and Analysis Truck Factor Highway Road number WIM Station Sikiu (Outbound) TatamnakSuwintawongBang pai Data Collection (month) Bus Single Unit truck Two Axle, Four Tire Two Axle, Six Tire Three Axle Four Axle All Single Unit truck Single Trailer Three and Four Axle Five Axle Six or More Axle All Single Trailer Full Trailer Five Axle Six Axle All Full Trailer Multi Trailer Seven or More Axle All Truck

Traffic Data Result and Analysis Equivalent Single Axle Load (ESAL) Highways number24304 WIM StationSikiu (Outbound)TatamnakSuwintawongBang pai Vehicle class\ Purpose of design New design Overlay pavemen t New design Overlay pavemen t New design Overlay pavement New design Overlay pavemen t Bus451,283178,07931,06312,2581,257,277496,1282,163,153853,592 Single Unit truck Two Axle, Four Tire9,315,766 3,676,05 1 1,025, , ,272, ,503, ,232,83 7 6,010,96 0 Two Axle, Six Tire1,621,052639,676278,402109,8591,678,906662,5051,667,788658,118 Three Axle3,188,659 1,258,26 2 2,064, ,4801,134,754447,7801,688,090666,130 Four Axle41,17916,2506,8532,7044,3101,70111,2414,436 Single Trailer Three and Four Axle620,050244,67591,12935,960259,857102,541409,384161,545 Five Axle2,910,304 1,148,42 2 1,284, ,0031,161,966458,5181,785,481704,560 Six or More Axle2,334,745921,303 2,068, ,370360,825142,383594,124234,444 Full Trailer Five Axle4,159,379 1,641, ,775292,314843,593332,8862,669,148 1,053,26 0 Six Axle1,150,497453,992300,623118,627296,830117,1311,152,176454,655 Multi Trailer Seven or More Axle572,606225,953268,020105,76217,7046,98662,73224,755 ESAL Design Traffic 16,478,45 0 6,502,48 5 5,099,85 8 2,012, ,959,326 68,645, ,692,53 9 9,743,81 0 ESAL for new design and rehabilitation of four highways from WIM database

Materials Traffic Layer Thickness (Structure) Climate Analysis Pavement Compute Damage Modify Layer Thickness Meet Performance Criteria? YES NO Design Thickness INPUT ANALYSIS mechanistic-empirical design flowchart M-E design Source: Kevin,D (2005)

Pavement Design and Analysis New Pavement Design Typical Cross Section of the selected highway number 304 NoLayer Relations between thickness of pavement structure (cm.) and materials of each layer. For ESAL=2.47E+7 (WIM station) The first pavement structure The second pavement structure The third pavement structure The fourth pavement structure 1Pavement Asphalt Concrete 20 Asphalt Concrete 15PMA10PMA5 2BaseSoil Cement20 Modified Crush Rock 20Soil Cement20 Modified Crush Rock 30 3Subbase Soil Aggregate 20 Soil Aggregate 20 Soil Aggregate 20 Soil Aggregate 20 4 Selected Material Selected Material "A" 15 Selected Material "A" 30 Selected Material "A" 20 Selected Material "A" 40 5Subgrade(CBR=4%)infinite(CBR=4%)infinite(CBR=4%)infinite(CBR=4%)infinite Thickness of various new designs

Pavement Design and Analysis New Pavement Design Relation between the various pavement structures and allowable ESAL application sensitivity of structural responses

Overlay by Falling Weight Deflectometer (FWD) procedure Evaluate the physical properties of a pavement. Determine the requested thickness of the pavement overlay. LayerMaterial Type Thickness (cm) Elastic Modulus (Mpa) 1 Existing Asphalt Concrete 101,961 2Soil Cement Base Soil Aggregate Subbase and Selected Material “A” Subgrade (CBR=4%) infinite239 Source of Traffic data Year Average Overlay (cm.) Standard deviation Overlay (cm.) Overlay (cm.) Count station at Km Bang pai WIM station at Km Pavement Rehabilitation (Overlay) Pavement Design and Analysis Overlay by M-E method The thickness of the pavement overlay on this section of highway number 304 is two centimeters.

The traffic data from the WIM stations are accurate and reliable than the count station. The annual truck factors represent the actual truck distributions relating to the current traffic volume. The ESAL are determined for each vehicle which is more accurate and reliable. Truck distributions are important issues for planning and geometrical purposes. The new design by M-E method can design various pavement structures. The thickness of overlay design is two centimeters for both FWD and M-E approaches. Conclusions Conclusions and Recommendations Recommendations The WIM systems should be calibrated periodically. A future study should test the material properties.. Development of traffic data collection and results by using WIM for future use in the new design and maintenance of pavements in Thailand. These traffic data are collected continuously and systematically.

Questions and Comments