NTL Record

Title Review of the long-term pavement performance backcalculation results : final report
Record ID 30911
Personal Name
Creator
Stubstad, R. N.; Jiang, Y. J.; Lukanen, E. O.
Source 99p. in various pagings
Corporate Creator Applied Research Associates; Long-Term Pavement Performance Program (U.S.)
Corporate
Contributor
United States. Department of Transportation. Federal Highway Administration. Office of Infrastructure Research and Development
Publisher United States. Department of Transportation. Federal Highway Administration. Office of Infrastructure Research and Development
Publication Date 20060200
Language English
Abstract A new approach to determine layered elastic moduli from in situ load-deflection data was developed. This “forwardcalculation” approach differs from backcalculation in that modulus estimates come directly from the load and deflection data using closed-form formulae rather iteration. The forwardcalculation equations are used for the subgrade and the bound surface course for both flexible and rigid pavement falling weight deflectometer (FWD) data. Intermediate layer moduli are estimated through commonly used modular ratios between adjacent layers. The entire LTPP set of backcalculated parameters was screened using forwardcalculated moduli. Any assumed or fixed modulus value was left as is and not further screened (e.g., hard bottom). Further, any back- or forwardcalculated values outside a broad range of reasonable values were not further screened, but flagged as unreasonable. Finally, a set of broad range convergence flags (0 = acceptable, 1 = marginal, 2 = questionable, and 3 = unacceptable) were applied to the backcalculated dataset, depending on how closely the pairs of back- and forwardcalculated moduli matched. Since both techniques used identical FWD load-deflection data as input, the moduli derived from each approach should be reasonably close to each other (within a factor of 1.5 to qualify as acceptable, for example). Although backcalculated values cannot be rejected merely because they are outside a reasonable or acceptable range, the complementary forwardcalculated values were usually more stable on a section-by-section basis. The exception was the portion of the database based on slab-on-dense-liquid or slab-on-elastic-solid theory, where the correspondence between the two approaches was excellent and very stable. Therefore, it is recommended that the backcalculated database be retained as is, with the addition of checks and flags so the database user can choose the best method, depending on the application.
Rosap ID dot:781
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/781
TRT Terms Pavement performance; Statistics; Backcalculation; Modulus of elasticity; Concrete tests; Deflection; Deflection tests
General Subjects Pavements, flexible; Pavements, Asphalt concrete; Testing; LTPP; FWD
Classification NTL - HIGHWAY/ROAD TRANSPORTATION - HIGHWAY/ROAD TRANSPORTATION;
NTL - HIGHWAY/ROAD TRANSPORTATION - Materials;
NTL - HIGHWAY/ROAD TRANSPORTATION - Pavement Management and Performance;
NTL - REFERENCES AND DIRECTORIES - Statistics
Geographical
Coverage
United States
OCLC 70824448
TRIS Online
Accession No
1025732
Contract Number DTFH61-02-D-00138
Report Number HRT-05-150
Availability Federal Highway Administration
Resource type Tech Report
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/30000/30900/30911/05150.pdf
Alternative URL http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/pavement/ltpp/pubs/05150/05150.pdf
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository