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Journal article

Environmental impact on critical responses of lightweight cellular concrete subbase flexible pavements

Abstract

Previous analytical studies have demonstrated that low-density lightweight cellular concrete (LCC) subbase pavements can support up to 20 times more traffic loads than unbound granular subbase pavements while protecting the pavement subgrade from adverse freeze–thaw effects in cold regions. This study examines the possibility of providing better-performing pavements on the field through the construction, instrumentation, and monitoring of flexible pavement sections incorporating three LCC densities (400, 475, and 600 kg/m³) as subbase material compared with unbound granular material in Canada. The effects of daily and seasonal temperatures on pavement critical responses to stress and strains were evaluated. The findings showed that these LCC pavements reduced asphalt concrete tensile strain by over two times compared with unbound granular pavements, and that strain increased with a daily temperature increase. Daily subgrade pressure (stress) change was reduced by up to 68%. The study concluded that longer life pavements could be achieved with LCC subbase thicknesses ≥250 mm.

Authors

Oyeyi AG; Al-Bayati HKA; Ni FM-W; Tighe S

Journal

Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering, Vol. 51, No. 1, pp. 47–59

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Publication Date

January 1, 2024

DOI

10.1139/cjce-2023-0027

ISSN

0315-1468

Labels

Fields of Research (FoR)

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