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High severity transverse crack in JRCP (Miller and

Bellinger 2003: 41). 50


3.5 High severity transverse joint spalling (ACPA 1996a:
VIII-47). 52
3.6 Map cracking (Miller and Bellinger 2003: 48). 53
3.7 Scaling (Miller and Bellinger 2003: 48). 54
3.8 Polished aggregate surface (Miller and Bellinger 2003: 49). 55
3.9 Blowup (Miller and Bellinger 2003: 52). 56
3.10 Faulted transverse joint (photo by author). 57
3.11 Water bleeding and pumping (Miller and Bellinger 2003: 58). 60
3.12 High severity punchout (Miller and Bellinger 2003: 79). 61
4.1 Roadway geometry inputs for concrete pavement drainage
design. 88
4.2 Computation of inflow. 88
4.3 Determining the permeability of the base. 89
4.4 Designing the base by the depth-of-flow method. 89
4.5 Checking the base design by the time-to-drain method. 90
4.6 User-defined subgrade material. 91
4.7 Checking need for a separator layer. 91
4.8 Edge-drain design. 93
5.1 Combined aggregate relationship (coarseness factor) chart
(courtesy: Shilstone and Shilstone 2002). 102
6.1 Comparison of PCA 1984 and StreetPave fatigue
relationships. 117
7.1 Curling stress correction factors for a finite slab (after
Bradbury 1938). 133
7.2 Corner, edge, and interior loading. 135
7.3 Maximum joint spacing based on slab thickness D
and modulus of subgrade reaction k for L/_ ≤5_0 in
(a) U.S. customary units and (b) metric units. 144
8.1 WinPAS solution to design problem. 162
8.2 Spreadsheet solution to AASHTO 1998 design example. 164
8.3 Spreadsheet faulting check for AASHTO 1998 design. 165
8.4 Sensitivity analysis for AASHTO 1998 design. 166
9.1 StreetPave traffic major arterial traffic category. 178
9.2 StreetPave life cycle cost module input screen. 181
9.3 Design example traffic inputs. 182
9.4 Design example pavement inputs. 183
9.5 Concrete pavement design. 184
9.6 Design example fatigue and erosion table. 185
9.7 Rounding considerations. 185
9.8 Sensitivity of slab thickness to k-value. 186
9.9 Quadrant construction at an urban intersection in
Cleveland, Ohio (photo by the author). 196
Figures xi
10.1 FAA R805FAA.xls rigid airport pavement design
spreadsheet. 211
10.2 FAA R805FAA.xls rigid airport pavement design
spreadsheet frost design. 211
10.3 FAA R805FAA.xls rigid airport pavement design
spreadsheet computation of composite k-value. 212
10.4 Determining critical aircraft. 213
10.5 LEDFAA basic input screen. 214
10.6 Sample rigid pavement section from the LEDFAA
samples file. 215
10.7 Aircraft traffic mix. 216
10.8 Example problem rigid pavement section as designed. 218
11.1 RCCPave vehicle library. 224
11.2 RCCPave design results for example 1. 226
11.3 RCCPave design inputs for example 2. 227
12.1 Combination chair and transverse steel detail
_1 in = 25_4 mm_ (FHWA 1990b). 243
12.2 Lug anchor treatment _1 in = 25_4 mm_1 ft = 305 mm_
(FHWA 1990b). 245
12.3 Recommended WF steel beam terminal joint design
_1 in = 25_4 mm_1 ft = 305 mm_ (FHWA 1990b). 247
14.1 Slipform paving train (ACPA 1996a: VI-6). 264
14.2 Concrete pavement produced by slipforming (ACPA
1996a: VI-6). 265
14.3 Stringline and paver sensing wand (ACPA 1996a: VI-15). 266
14.4 The pad line (ACPA 1996a: VI-20). 267
14.5 Vibrators (ACPA 1996a: VI-26). 268
14.6 Dowel basket (ACPA 1996a: VI-88). 269
14.7 Dowel bar inserters (ACPA 1996a: VI-32). 270
14.8 CRCP steel installation with tube feeders (ACPA 1996a:
VI-37). 271
14.9 Fixed form paving (ACPA 1996a: VI-68). 272
14.10 Steel forms for fixed form paving (ACPA 1996a: VI-72). 273
14.11 Blockouts for utility, drainage, and similar structures
(ACPA 1996a: VI-91). 274
15.1 Transverse tining to provide macrotexture (ACPA 1996a:
VI-53). 280
15.2 Burlap drag to provide microtexture (ACPA 1996a: VI-53). 280
15.3 Transverse joint initial and widening cut (ACPA 1996a:
VII-11). 290
15.4 Properties of rough asphalt concrete subbase. 301
15.5 Concrete mixture proportions. 302
15.6 Construction inputs. 303
15.7 Environmental inputs. 304
xii Figures
15.8 Results of analysis. 304
15.9 Evaporation rate predictions. 305
16.1 Effect of delay in applying a maintenance treatment. 307
16.2 Falling weight deflectometer (photo by the author). 310
17.1 Hole prepared for a full depth repair at a joint (ACPA
1996a: VIII-28). 317
17.2 Partial depth repair (ACPA 1996a: VIII-57). 318
17.3 Full depth repair with dowels and fiberboard for isolation
(ACPA 1996a: VIII-41). 320
17.4 Dowel bar retrofit (ACPA 1996a: VIII-66). 323
17.5 Diamond grinding (ACPA 1996a: VIII-11). 325
17.6 Grout injection for slab stabilization (ACPA 1996a:
VIII-23). 328
18.1 Joint mismatching (Smith et al. 2002: 4–9). 333
18.2 Lane widening options (Smith et al. 2002: 4–12). 334
18.3 Unbonded overlay on two lanes with a third lane paved at
the same time (photo courtesy: Dale Crowl). 335
18.4 A transition detail for bridge approaches and overpasses
for unbonded overlays (Smith et al. 2002: 4–13). 335
18.5 Saw cutting for whitetopping with ruts (figure courtesy:
ACPA, Smith et al. 2002: 5–12). 343
18.6 A transition detail for bridge approaches and overpasses
for whitetopping (figure courtesy: ACPA, Smith et al.
2002: 5–9). 343
18.7 Output of ACPA UTW calculator
(http://www.pavement.com/Concrete_
Pavement/Technical/UTW_Calculator/index.asp). 346
18.8 UTW placed as an inlay (photo by the author). 347
18.9 Failure of UTW by panel sliding (photo by the author). 348
18.10 UTW-thickened end transition detail (figure courtesy:
ACPA, Smith et al. 2002: 6–7). 349
Tables
4.1 Recommended k-value ranges for various soil types
(adapted from Hall et al. 1997: 80, AASHTO 1998: 6) 72
4.2 Effect of untreated subbases on k-values (PCA 1984: 6) 75
4.3 Effect of cement-treated subbases on k-values (PCA 1984: 6) 75
4.4 Effect of untreated subbases on k-values (FAA 2004: 15) 75
4.5 Effect of stabilized subbases on k-values (FAA 2004: 57) 76
4.6 Conditions where no subbase is required (FAA 2004: 55,
Table 3.10) 77
6.1 Sample concrete mixture designs for early opening to traffic
(Van Dam et al. 2005: A-1–A-2) 127
7.1 Dowel bar diameter recommendations (ACPA 1998: 27,
ACI Committee 2002 325: 15) 149
7.2 Tie bar spacing recommendations in mm (in) 152
8.1 Reliability and standard normal deviate ZR (AASHTO
1993, I-62 and II-9) 158
8.2 Drainage coefficients Cd (AASHTO 1993, II-26) 159
8.3 Load transfer coefficients J by pavement type (AASHTO
1993, II-26) 159
8.4 Input values for design example (AASHTO 1993, II-45) 161
8.5 Sensitivity analysis – effect of design parameters on
thickness D 162
9.1 Street and parking lot traffic classifications from ACI
325.12R-11 and ACI-330R-6 (ACI Committee 325 2002:
11, ACI Committee 330 2001: 6) 174
9.2 StreetPave traffic categories from help file 177
9.3 Traffic categories – axles per 1000 trucks 179
9.4 Pavement thickness design tables, aggregate interlock joints,
no edge-support 187
9.5 Pavement thickness design tables, aggregate interlock joints,
supported edges 190
9.6 Pavement thickness design tables for pervious concrete 192
10.1 Landing gear type conversion factors (FAA 2004: 25)

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