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LTPP Lessons Learned: National Experiment

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Title: LTPP Lessons Learned: National Experiment


1
LTPP Lessons Learned National Experiment
  • Tuesday December 16, 2014
  • Bismarck, ND
  • Jack Springer, P.E. - FHWA
  • Gabe Cimini, PM LTPP - NCRSC

2
Lessons Learned Overview
  • Program Benefits and Return on Investment
  • Construction Effects on PCC Pavement Performance
  • Specific SPS-2 Lessons Learned
  • Pavement Performance
  • Pavement Design
  • Materials Testing
  • Data Collection
  • Future Benefits

3
LTPP Benefits
  • The LTPP program has generated a wide range of
    benefits all across the pavement engineering and
    performance spectrum.

4
Return on Investment
LTPP by the Numbers
LTPP Resource Statistics
Requests for Data 48,000 Requests
Registered LTPP Website Users 3,000 Users (in 75 Countries)
Published Documents Resulting from LTPP Data 500 Publications
ASCE Paper Contest 60 Entries
Distress Manuals 20 State Agencies
FWD Calibration Centers 500 Calibrations
WIM Systems 550 Installations
SPS Traffic Pooled Fund Study Installations 21 WIM Sites Installed
MRL Materials 2,000,000 Pounds Available
MRL Shipments 17,000 Pounds Delivered
The numerous innovations that have directly
resulted from the LTPP program include
procedures, tools, manuals, and research findings
that have been implemented across the United
States and abroad.
5
Return on Investment
Cost Savings
LTPP has already realized over 2 Billion in
savings, with the potential for even greater
future savings.
Savings To Date Projected Cumulative Future Savings (2015-2024) Projected Cumulative Future Savings (2015-2024)
Savings To Date No Additional Monitoring Continued Monitoring
2.1 Billion 2.28 Billion 4.56 Billion
6
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedPavement Performance
  • Standardizing AVC and WIM data storage formats
    (Card 4 and Card 7, respectively)
  • The initial IRI of SPS-2 sections after placement
    ranged from 0.76 to 2.19 m/km with a mean of 1.30
    m/km
  • Increased roughness, faulting and transverse
    cracking are more prevalent in wet climates
  • Pavements located in areas of higher annual
    freeze-thaw cycles experience more spalling

7
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedPavement Design
  • Widened slab sections show less faulting than
    conventional width slabs
  • Sections with aggregate base show the highest
    joint faulting level. Sections with LCB and PATB
    have the lowest joint faulting
  • Thinner (203 mm) slabs show more transverse
    cracks than thicker slabs. Sections with a
    thinner slab and a widened slab show the highest
    level of transverse cracking

8
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedPavement Design (cont.)
  • JPCP constructed on PATB were smoother than
    sections constructed on LCB or untreated
    aggregate base
  • Sections with PATB show the lowest total
    longitudinal cracking levels, while the sections
    with LCB show the highest longitudinal cracking
  • Sections with PATB show the lowest percentage of
    slabs cracked transversely, while the sections
    with an LCB show the highest transverse cracking

9
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedPavement Design (cont.)
  • In general, LCB provided the worst performance
    and PATB over DGAB provided the best performance
  • Longitudinal cracking was influenced by base type
    and slab thickness
  • Widened lanes contributed to lower transverse
    joint faulting

10
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedPavement Design (cont.)
  • Thicker slabs were found to have more initial
    roughness as compared to thinner slabs
  • The presence of drainage was the driving factor
    of change in roughness with time. Sections with
    drainage showed a slower increase in roughness
    than those without drainage
  • 900 PSI sections typically show map cracking and
    550 PSI sections typically show polished
    aggregate
  • 14 lane 1 of thickness

11
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedPavement Design (cont.)
Rigid Pavement Design
12
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedMaterials Testing
  • JPCP constructed on coarse-grained soil were
    smoother (lower initial IRI) than those
    constructed on fine-grained soils
  • PCC slabs placed on LCB displayed the largest
    amounts of curling and slabs placed on ATB
    displayed the smallest amounts of curling
  • Concrete performed the worst with a lean concrete
    base (LCB) and the best with an asphalt treated
    base (ATB)

13
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedMaterials Testing (cont.)
  • Six inches of LCB has approximately the same
    stiffness as 8 inches of ATB, both of which are
    less stiff than 8 inches of dense graded
    aggregate base (DGAB)
  • Creating the Materials Reference Librarywhich
    allows researchers to obtain and test materials
    used in constructing specific LTPP sections

14
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedMaterials Testing (cont.)
  • Collecting periodic non-destructive testing
    measurements to allow the backcalculation of
    in-situ moduli
  • Developing standardized laboratory and field
    testing protocols
  • Providing materials data for calibrating M-E PDG
    damage functions and performing M-E PDG pavement
    designs

15
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedData Collection
  • The IRI trend over time depends heavily on the
    initial IRI, the traffic loadings, and the extent
    of joint faulting
  • Loads below design table (2 million)
  • Standardizing data collection and quality control
    practices
  • Pavement distress
  • Automated profile
  • FWD

16
SPS-2 Lessons LearnedData Collection
  • Indiana Department of Transportation found that
    an FWD that was only 1 mil out of calibration
    resulted in additional construction and
    maintenance costs of 17,000 per mile

17
Future Benefits
  • Looking forward, there are many potential
    benefits LTPP can provide. A partial listing
    includes
  • Increasing service lives for new and
    rehabilitated pavements,
  • Comparison of new vs. existing material
    performance

We see the LTPP database serving into the
indefinite future as a key component of the
agencys pavement research activities, and those
activities will benefit substantially from the
many LTPP data collection and analysis activities
in FY 2010 -FY 2015 that are mentioned in the
FHWA document. Victor Mendez, Chairman Twenty-thi
rd letter report of the Transportation Research
Board Long-Term Pavement Performance Committee
18
Future Benefits (continued)
  • Effects of specific design features
  • SHRP 2 support
  • Determining the impact of environment on
    performance
  • Baseline data sets for agencies to evaluate
    performance
  • Year-to-year checks against agency pavement
    management system/pavement condition index data

LTPP is a major contributor toward assuring
that we will have good pavements into the 21st
Century. Charlie Churilla, An Investment in
the Future Roads Bridges, August 2001
19
Future Benefits (continued)
  • MEPDG local calibration and model refinement
  • Top-down vs. bottom-up cracking
  • Improved rutting prediction
  • Improved curing procedures to reduce built-in
    temperature gradients
  • Next design procedure (and state-specific design
    procedures)
  • Optimizing treatment selection
  • Constructing new sections to expand inference
    set
  • Calibration of new field data equipment
  • Refining concrete coefficient of thermal
    expansion (CTE) test protocol
  • Understanding/properly addressing curl and warp

20
Curl and Warp Study040215
21
Curl and Warp Study040213
22
For more information http//www.fhwa.dot.gov/res
earch/tfhrc/programs/infrastructure/pavements/ltpp
/
More products and information at http//www.infop
ave.com/
Thank You !
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