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Road surface

A road surface (British English) or pavement (North American English) is the durable surface material laid down on an area intended to sustain vehicular or foot traffic, such as a road or walkway. In the past, gravel road surfaces, macadam, hoggin, cobblestone and granite setts were extensively used, but these have mostly been replaced by asphalt or concrete laid on a compacted base course. Asphalt mixtures have been used in pavement construction since the beginning of the 20th century and are of two types: metalled (hard-surfaced) and unmetalled roads. Metalled roadways are made to sustain vehicular load and so are usually made on frequently used roads. Unmetalled roads, also known as gravel roads or dirt roads, are rough and can sustain less weight. Road surfaces are frequently marked to guide traffic.

A road being resurfaced using a road roller
Red surfacing for a bicycle lane in the Netherlands
Construction crew laying down asphalt over fiber-optic trench, in New York City

Today, permeable paving methods are beginning to be used for low-impact roadways and walkways to prevent flooding. Pavements are crucial to countries such as United States and Canada, which heavily depend on road transportation. Therefore, research projects such as Long-Term Pavement Performance have been launched to optimize the life cycle of different road surfaces.[1][2][3][4]

Pavement, in construction, is an outdoor floor or superficial surface covering. Paving materials include asphalt, concrete, stones such as flagstone, cobblestone, and setts, artificial stone, bricks, tiles, and sometimes wood. In landscape architecture, pavements are part of the hardscape and are used on sidewalks, road surfaces, patios, courtyards, etc.

The term pavement comes from Latin pavimentum, meaning a floor beaten or rammed down, through Old French pavement.[5] The meaning of a beaten-down floor was obsolete before the word entered English.[6]

Pavement, in the form of beaten gravel, dates back before the emergence of anatomically modern humans. Pavement laid in patterns like mosaics were commonly used by the Romans.[7]

The bearing capacity and service life of a pavement can be raised dramatically by arranging good drainage by an open ditch or covered drains to reduce moisture content in the pavements subbase and subgrade.

Development edit

 
Old Roman road, leading from Jerusalem to Beit Gubrin, adjacent to regional highway 375 in Israel
 
Different layers of road including asphalt layer. The total thickness of a pavement can be measured using granular base equivalency

Wheeled transport created the need for better roads. Generally, natural materials cannot be both soft enough to form well-graded surfaces and strong enough to bear wheeled vehicles, especially when wet, and stay intact. In urban areas it began to be worthwhile to build stone-paved streets and, in fact, the first paved streets appear to have been built in Ur in 4000 BC. Corduroy roads were built in Glastonbury, England in 3300 BC,[8] and brick-paved roads were built in the Indus Valley Civilisation on the Indian subcontinent from around the same time. Improvements in metallurgy meant that by 2000 BC stone-cutting tools were generally available in the Middle East and Greece allowing local streets to be paved.[9] Notably, in about 2000 BC, the Minoans built a 50 km paved road from Knossos in northern Crete through the mountains to Gortyn and Lebena, a port on the south coast of the island, which had side drains, a 200 mm thick pavement of sandstone blocks bound with clay-gypsum mortar, covered by a layer of basaltic flagstones and had separate shoulders. This road could be considered superior to any Roman road.[10] Roman roads varied from simple corduroy roads to paved roads using deep roadbeds of tamped rubble as an underlying layer to ensure that they kept dry, as the water would flow out from between the stones and fragments of rubble, instead of becoming mud in clay soils.

Although there were attempts to rediscover Roman methods, there was little useful innovation in road building before the 18th century. The first professional road builder to emerge during the Industrial Revolution was John Metcalf, who constructed about 290 kilometres (180 mi) of turnpike road, mainly in the north of England, from 1765, when Parliament passed an act authorising the creation of turnpike trusts to build toll funded roads in the Knaresborough area.

Pierre-Marie-Jérôme Trésaguet is widely credited with establishing the first scientific approach to road building in France at the same time as Metcalf. He wrote a memorandum on his method in 1775, which became general practice in France. It involved a layer of large rocks, covered by a layer of smaller gravel.

By the late 18th and early 19th centuries, new methods of highway construction had been pioneered by the work of two British engineers: Thomas Telford and John Loudon McAdam. Telford's method of road building involved the digging of a large trench in which a foundation of heavy rock was set. He designed his roads so that they sloped downwards from the centre, allowing drainage to take place, a major improvement on the work of Trésaguet. The surface of his roads consisted of broken stone. McAdam developed an inexpensive paving material of soil and stone aggregate (known as macadam). His road building method was simpler than Telford's, yet more effective at protecting roadways: he discovered that massive foundations of rock upon rock were unnecessary, and asserted that native soil alone would support the road and traffic upon it, as long as it was covered by a road crust that would protect the soil underneath from water and wear.[11] Size of stones was central to McAdam's road building theory. The lower 200-millimetre (7.9 in) road thickness was restricted to stones no larger than 75 millimetres (3.0 in).

Modern tarmac was patented by British civil engineer Edgar Purnell Hooley, who noticed that spilled tar on the roadway kept the dust down and created a smooth surface.[12] He took out a patent in 1901 for tarmac.[13] Hooley's 1901 patent for tarmac involved mechanically mixing tar and aggregate prior to lay-down, and then compacting the mixture with a steamroller. The tar was modified by adding small amounts of Portland cement, resin, and pitch.[14]

Asphalt edit

 
Closeup of asphalt on a driveway

Asphalt (specifically, asphalt concrete), sometimes called flexible pavement since its viscosity causes minute deformations as it distributes loads, has been widely used since the 1920s. The viscous nature of the bitumen binder allows asphalt concrete to sustain significant plastic deformation, although fatigue from repeated loading over time is the most common failure mechanism. Most asphalt surfaces are laid on a gravel base, which is generally at least as thick as the asphalt layer, although some 'full depth' asphalt surfaces are laid directly on the native subgrade. In areas with very soft or expansive subgrades such as clay or peat, thick gravel bases or stabilization of the subgrade with Portland cement or lime may be required. Polypropylene and polyester geosynthetics are also used for this purpose,[15] and in some northern countries a layer of polystyrene boards are used to delay and minimize frost penetration into the subgrade.[16]

Depending on the temperature at which it is applied, asphalt is categorized as hot mix, warm mix, half warm mix, or cold mix. Hot mix asphalt is applied at temperatures over 150 °C (300 °F) with a free floating screed. Warm mix asphalt is applied at temperatures of 95–120 °C (200–250 °F), resulting in reduced energy usage and emissions of volatile organic compounds.[17] Cold mix asphalt is often used on lower-volume rural roads, where hot mix asphalt would cool too much on the long trip from the asphalt plant to the construction site.[18]

An asphalt concrete surface will generally be constructed for high-volume primary highways having an average annual daily traffic load greater than 1,200 vehicles per day.[19] Advantages of asphalt roadways include relatively low noise, relatively low cost compared with other paving methods, and perceived ease of repair. Disadvantages include less durability than other paving methods, less tensile strength than concrete, the tendency to become slick and soft in hot weather, and a certain amount of hydrocarbon pollution to soil and groundwater or waterways.

 
Laying asphalt

In the mid-1960s, rubberized asphalt was used for the first time, mixing crumb rubber from used tires with asphalt.[20] While a potential use for tires that would otherwise fill landfills and present a fire hazard, rubberized asphalt has shown greater incidence of wear in freeze-thaw cycles in temperate zones because of the non-homogeneous expansion and contraction with non-rubber components. The application of rubberized asphalt is more temperature-sensitive and in many locations can only be applied at certain times of the year.[21] Study results of the long-term acoustic benefits of rubberized asphalt are inconclusive. Initial application of rubberized asphalt may provide a reduction of 3–5 decibels (dB) in tire-pavement-source noise emissions; however, this translates to only 1–3 dB in total traffic-noise reduction when combined with the other components of traffic noise. Compared to traditional passive attenuating measures (e.g., noise walls and earth berms), rubberized asphalt provides shorter-lasting and lesser acoustic benefits at typically much greater expense.[citation needed]

Concrete edit

 
Concrete roadway in San Jose, California
 
A concrete road in Ewing, New Jersey.

Concrete surfaces (specifically, Portland cement concrete) are created using a concrete mix of Portland cement, coarse aggregate, sand, and water. In virtually all modern mixes there will also be various admixtures added to increase workability, reduce the required amount of water, mitigate harmful chemical reactions, and for other beneficial purposes. In many cases there will also be Portland cement substitutes added, such as fly ash. This can reduce the cost of the concrete and improve its physical properties. The material is applied in a freshly mixed slurry and worked mechanically to compact the interior and force some of the cement slurry to the surface to produce a smoother, denser surface free from honeycombing. The water allows the mix to combine molecularly in a chemical reaction called hydration.

Concrete surfaces have been classified into three common types: jointed plain (JPCP), jointed reinforced (JRCP) and continuously reinforced (CRCP). The one item that distinguishes each type is the jointing system used to control crack development.

One of the major advantages of concrete pavements is they are typically stronger and more durable than asphalt roadways. The surface can be grooved to provide a durable skid-resistant surface. Concrete roads are more economical to drive in terms of fuel consumption, they reflect light better, and they last significantly longer than other paving surfaces; but they have a much smaller market share than other paving solutions.[22] Modern paving methods and design methods have changed the economics of concrete paving so that a well-designed and placed concrete pavement will be cheaper in initial cost and significantly cheaper over the life cycle.[23] Another important advantage is that waterproof concrete can be used, which eliminates the need to place storm drains next to the road and reduces the need for a slightly sloped driveway to drain rainwater. Avoiding rainwater discharge by using runoff also means less electricity is needed (otherwise more pumps would be needed in the water distribution system) and rainwater is not polluted because it no longer mixes with polluted water. Rather, it is immediately absorbed by the earth.[24] A previous disadvantage was that they had a higher initial cost and could be more time-consuming to construct. This cost can typically be offset through the long life cycle of the pavement and the higher cost of bitumen. Concrete pavement can be maintained over time utilizing a series of methods known as concrete pavement restoration which include diamond grinding, dowel bar retrofits, joint and crack sealing, cross-stitching, etc. Diamond grinding is also useful in reducing noise and restoring skid resistance in older concrete pavement.[25][26]

The first street in the United States to be paved with concrete was Court Avenue in Bellefontaine, Ohio in 1893.[27][28] The first mile of concrete pavement in the United States was on Woodward Avenue in Detroit, Michigan in 1909.[29] Following these pioneering uses, the Lincoln Highway Association, established in October 1913 to oversee the creation of one of the United States' earliest east-west transcontinental highways for the automobile, began to establish "seedling miles" of specifically concrete-paved roadbed in various places in the American Midwest, starting in 1914 west of Malta, Illinois, while using concrete with the specified concrete "ideal section" for the Lincoln Highway in Lake County, Indiana, during 1922 and 1923.[30]

Concrete roadways may produce more noise than asphalt from tire noise on cracks and expansion joints. A concrete pavement composed of multiple slabs of uniform size will produce a periodic sound and vibration in each vehicle as its tires pass over each expansion joint. These monotonous repeated sounds and vibrations can cause a fatiguing or hypnotic effect upon the driver over the course of a long journey.

Composite pavement edit

 
An example of composite pavement: hot-mix asphalt overlaid onto Portland cement concrete pavement

Composite pavements combine a Portland cement concrete sublayer with an asphalt overlay. They are usually used to rehabilitate existing roadways rather than in new construction. Asphalt overlays are sometimes laid over distressed concrete to restore a smooth wearing surface.[31] A disadvantage of this method is that movement in the joints between the underlying concrete slabs, whether from thermal expansion and contraction, or from deflection of the concrete slabs from truck axle loads, usually causes reflective cracks in the asphalt.

To decrease reflective cracking, concrete pavement is broken apart through a break and seat, crack and seat, or rubblization process. Geosynthetics can be used for reflective crack control.[32] With break and seat and crack and seat processes, a heavy weight is dropped on the concrete to induce cracking, then a heavy roller is used to seat the resultant pieces into the subbase. The main difference between the two processes is the equipment used to break the concrete pavement and the size of the resulting pieces. The theory is that frequent small cracks will spread thermal stress over a wider area than infrequent large joints, reducing the stress on the overlying asphalt pavement. "Rubblization" is a more complete fracturing of the old, worn-out concrete, effectively converting the old pavement into an aggregate base for a new asphalt road.[33]

The whitetopping process uses Portland cement concrete to resurface a distressed asphalt road.

Recycling edit

An asphalt milling machine in Boise, Idaho

Distressed pavement can be reused when rehabilitating a roadway. The existing pavement is broken up and may be ground on-site through a process called milling. This pavement is commonly referred to as reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP). RAP can be transported to an asphalt plant, where it will be stockpiled for use in new pavement mixes,[34] or it may be recycled in-place using the techniques described below.

In-place recycling methods edit

  • Rubblizing of pavement: Existing concrete pavement is milled into gravel-sized particles. Any steel reinforcing is removed, and the ground pavement is compacted to form the base and/or sub-base layers for new asphalt pavement.[35] Ground pavement may also be compacted for use on gravel roads.[34]  
  • Cold in-place recycling: Bituminous pavement is ground or milled into small particles. The asphalt millings are blended with asphalt emulsion, foamed bitumen, or soft bitumen to rejuvenate the aged asphalt binder.[34][36] New aggregate may also be added. The resulting asphalt mix is paved and compacted. It may serve as the top pavement layer, or it may be overlaid with new asphalt after curing.[37]
  • Hot in-place recycling: Bituminous pavement is heated to 120–150 °C (250–300 °F), milled, combined with a rejuvenating agent and/or virgin asphalt binder, and compacted. It may then be overlaid with new asphalt concrete.[37] This process typically recycles the top 50 mm (2 in) or less and may be used to correct surface defects, such as rutting or polishing.[37] To preserve the condition of the asphalt binder and avoid excessive hydrocarbon emissions, heating is typically achieved gradually through the use of infrared or hot air heaters.[34]
  • Full depth reclamation: The full thickness of the asphalt pavement and underlying material is pulverized to provide a uniform blend of material.[34][37] A binding agent or stabilizing material may be mixed in to form a base course for the new pavement, or it may be left unbound to form a sub-base course. Common binding agents include asphalt emulsion, fly ash, hydrated lime, Portland cement, and calcium chloride.[34][37] Virgin aggregate, RAP, or crushed Portland cement may also be added to improve the gradation and mechanical properties of the mix.[37] This technique is typically used to address structural failures in the pavement, such as alligator cracking, deep rutting, and shoulder drop-off.[37]

Bituminous surface edit

 
newly installed chipseal surface on Ellsworth Road in Tomah, Wisconsin

Bituminous surface treatment (BST) or chipseal is used mainly on low-traffic roads, but also as a sealing coat to rejuvenate an asphalt concrete pavement. It generally consists of aggregate spread over a sprayed-on asphalt emulsion or cut-back asphalt cement. The aggregate is then embedded into the asphalt by rolling it, typically with a rubber-tired roller. This type of surface is described by a wide variety of regional terms including "chip seal", "tar and chip", "oil and stone", "seal coat", "sprayed seal",[38] "surface dressing",[39] "microsurfacing",[40] "seal",[41] or simply as "bitumen".

BST is used on hundreds of miles of the Alaska Highway and other similar roadways in Alaska, the Yukon Territory, and northern British Columbia. The ease of application of BST is one reason for its popularity, but another is its flexibility, which is important when roadways are laid down over unstable terrain that thaws and softens in the spring.

Other types of BSTs include micropaving, slurry seals and Novachip. These are laid down using specialized and proprietary equipment. They are most often used in urban areas where the roughness and loose stone associated with chip seals is considered undesirable.

Thin membrane surface edit

A thin membrane surface (TMS) is an oil-treated aggregate which is laid down upon a gravel road bed, producing a dust-free road.[42] A TMS road reduces mud problems and provides stone-free roads for local residents where loaded truck traffic is negligible. The TMS layer adds no significant structural strength, and so is used on secondary highways with low traffic volume and minimal weight loading. Construction involves minimal subgrade preparation, following by covering with a 50-to-100-millimetre (2–4 in) cold mix asphalt aggregate.[19] The Operation Division of the Ministry of Highways and Infrastructure in Saskatchewan has the responsibility of maintaining 6,102 kilometres (3,792 mi) of thin membrane surface (TMS) highways.[43]

Otta seal edit

Otta seal is a low-cost road surface using a 16–30-millimetre-thick (581+18 in) mixture of bitumen and crushed rock.[44]

Gravel surface edit

 
Gravel road in Namibia

Gravel is known to have been used extensively in the construction of roads by soldiers of the Roman Empire (see Roman road) but in 1998 a limestone-surfaced road, thought to date back to the Bronze Age, was found at Yarnton in Oxfordshire, Britain.[45] Applying gravel, or "metalling", has had two distinct usages in road surfacing. The term road metal refers to the broken stone or cinders used in the construction or repair of roads or railways,[46] and is derived from the Latin metallum, which means both "mine" and "quarry".[47] The term originally referred to the process of creating a gravel roadway. The route of the roadway would first be dug down several feet and, depending on local conditions, French drains may or may not have been added. Next, large stones were placed and compacted, followed by successive layers of smaller stones, until the road surface was composed of small stones compacted into a hard, durable surface. "Road metal" later became the name of stone chippings mixed with tar to form the road-surfacing material tarmac. A road of such material is called a "metalled road" in Britain, a "paved road" in Canada and the US, or a "sealed road" in parts of Canada, Australia and New Zealand.[48]

A granular surface can be used with a traffic volume where the annual average daily traffic is 1,200 vehicles per day or less.[citation needed] There is some structural strength if the road surface combines a sub base and base and is topped with a double-graded seal aggregate with emulsion.[19][49] Besides the 4,929 kilometres (3,063 mi) of granular pavements maintained in Saskatchewan, around 40% of New Zealand roads are unbound granular pavement structures.[43][50]

The decision whether to pave a gravel road or not often hinges on traffic volume. It has been found that maintenance costs for gravel roads often exceed the maintenance costs for paved or surface-treated roads when traffic volumes exceed 200 vehicles per day.[51]

 
Pavement ends and turns into gravel surface road

Some communities are finding it makes sense to convert their low-volume paved roads to aggregate surfaces.[52]

Other surfaces edit

Pavers (or paviours), generally in the form of pre-cast concrete blocks, are often used for aesthetic purposes, or sometimes at port facilities that see long-duration pavement loading. Pavers are rarely used in areas that see high-speed vehicle traffic.

Brick, cobblestone, sett, wood plank, and wood block pavements such as Nicolson pavement, were once common in urban areas throughout the world, but fell out of fashion in most countries, due to the high cost of labor required to lay and maintain them, and are typically only kept for historical or aesthetic reasons.[citation needed] In some countries, however, they are still common in local streets. In the Netherlands, brick paving has made something of a comeback since the adoption of a major nationwide traffic safety program in 1997. From 1998 through 2007, more than 41,000 km of city streets were converted to local access roads with a speed limit of 30 km/h, for the purpose of traffic calming.[53] One popular measure is to use brick paving - the noise and vibration slows motorists down. At the same time, it is not uncommon for cycle paths alongside a road to have a smoother surface than the road itself.[54][55]

Although rarely constructed today, early-style macadam and tarmac pavements are sometimes found beneath modern asphalt concrete or Portland cement concrete pavements, because the cost of their removal at the time of renovation would not significantly benefit the durabilty and longevity of the newer surface.

There are ways to create the appearance of brick pavement, without the expense of actual bricks. The first method to create brick texture is to heat an asphalt pavement and use metal wires to imprint a brick pattern using a compactor to create stamped asphalt. A similar method is to use rubber imprinting tools to press over a thin layer of cement to create decorative concrete. Another method is to use a brick pattern stencil and apply a surfacing material over the stencil. Materials that can be applied to give the color of the brick and skid resistance can be in many forms. An example is to use colored polymer-modified concrete slurry which can be applied by screeding or spraying.[56] Another material is aggregate-reinforced thermoplastic which can be heat applied to the top layer of the brick-pattern surface.[57] Other coating materials over stamped asphalt are paints and two-part epoxy coating.[58]

Acoustical implications edit

Roadway surfacing choices are known to affect the intensity and spectrum of sound emanating from the tire/surface interaction.[59] Initial applications of noise studies occurred in the early 1970s. Noise phenomena are highly influenced by vehicle speed.

Roadway surface types contribute differential noise effects of up to 4 dB, with chip seal type and grooved roads being the loudest, and concrete surfaces without spacers being the quietest. Asphaltic surfaces perform intermediately relative to concrete and chip seal. Rubberized asphalt has been shown to give a 3–5 dB reduction in tire-pavement noise emissions, and a marginally discernible 1–3 dB reduction in total road noise emissions when compared to conventional asphalt applications.

Surface deterioration edit

 
Deteriorating asphalt

As pavement systems primarily fail due to fatigue (in a manner similar to metals), the damage done to pavement increases with the fourth power of the axle load of the vehicles traveling on it. According to the AASHO Road Test, heavily loaded trucks can do more than 10,000 times the damage done by a normal passenger car. Tax rates for trucks are higher than those for cars in most countries for this reason, though they are not levied in proportion to the damage done.[60] Passenger cars are considered to have little practical effect on a pavement's service life, from a materials fatigue perspective.

Other failure modes include aging and surface abrasion. As years go by, the binder in a bituminous wearing course gets stiffer and less flexible. When it gets "old" enough, the surface will start losing aggregates, and macrotexture depth increases dramatically. If no maintenance action is done quickly on the wearing course, potholes will form. The freeze-thaw cycle in cold climates will dramatically accelerate pavement deterioration, once water can penetrate the surface. Clay and fumed silica nanoparticles may potentially be used as efficient UV-anti aging coatings in asphalt pavements.

If the road is still structurally sound, a bituminous surface treatment, such as a chipseal or surface dressing can prolong the life of the road at low cost. In areas with cold climate, studded tires may be allowed on passenger cars. In Sweden and Finland, studded passenger car tires account for a very large share of pavement rutting.[61]

The physical properties of a stretch of pavement can be tested using a falling weight deflectometer.

Several design methods have been developed to determine the thickness and composition of road surfaces required to carry predicted traffic loads for a given period of time. Pavement design methods are continuously evolving. Among these are the Shell Pavement design method, and the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) 1993/98 "Guide for Design of Pavement Structures". A mechanistic-empirical design guide was developed through the NCHRP process, resulting in the Mechanistic Empirical Pavement Design Guide (MEPDG), which was adopted by AASHTO in 2008, although MEPDG implementation by state departments of transportation has been slow.[62]

Further research by University College London into pavements has led to the development of an indoor, 80-sq-metre artificial pavement at a research centre called Pedestrian Accessibility and Movement Environment Laboratory (PAMELA). It is used to simulate everyday scenarios, from different pavement users to varying pavement conditions.[63] There also exists a research facility near Auburn University, the NCAT Pavement Test Track, that is used to test experimental asphalt pavements for durability.

In addition to repair costs, the condition of a road surface has economic effects for road users. Rolling resistance increases on rough pavement, as does wear and tear of vehicle components. It has been estimated that poor road surfaces cost the average US driver $324 per year in vehicle repairs, or a total of $67 billion. Also, it has been estimated that small improvements in road surface conditions can decrease fuel consumption between 1.8 and 4.7%.[64]

Markings edit

Road surface markings are used on paved roadways to provide guidance and information to drivers and pedestrians. It can be in the form of mechanical markers such as cat's eyes, botts' dots and rumble strips, or non-mechanical markers such as paints, thermoplastic, plastic and epoxy.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Raab, Robert (n.d.). "Long-Term Pavement Performance Studies". Transportation Research Board. Retrieved 22 October 2017.
  3. ^ "Ford, K., Arman, M., Labi, S., Sinha, K.C., Thompson, P.D., Shirole, A.M., and Li, Z. 2012. NCHRP Report 713: Estimating life expectancies of highway assets. In Transportation Research Board, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC. Transportation Research Board, Washington DC" (PDF).
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 February 2019.
  5. ^ "Pavement", The Century Dictionary
  6. ^ "pavement, n." Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition on CD-ROM (v. 4.0) Oxford University Press, 2009
  7. ^ "paver" def. 2. Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition on CD-ROM (v. 4.0) Oxford University Press, 2009
  8. ^ Lay (1992), p51
  9. ^ Lay (1992), p43
  10. ^ Lay (1992), p44
  11. ^ Craig, David, "The Colossus of Roads", Palimpsest, Strum.co.uk, retrieved 18 June 2010
  12. ^ Ralph Morton (2002), Construction UK: Introduction to the Industry, Oxford: Blackwell Science, p. 51, ISBN 0-632-05852-8, retrieved 22 June 2010. (Details of this story vary a bit, but the essence of is the same, as are the basic facts).
  13. ^ Harrison, Ian (2004), The Book of Inventions, Washington, DC: National Geographic Society, p. 277, ISBN 978-0-7922-8296-9, retrieved 23 June 2010
  14. ^ Hooley, E. Purnell, U.S. patent 765,975, "Apparatus for the preparation of tar macadam", July 26, 1904
  15. ^ (PDF). NUAE. May 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 2 November 2008.
  16. ^ Anon (June 1991). (PDF). Styropor: Technical information. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 October 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2010.
  17. ^ "Warm Mix Asphalt Technologies and Research". Federal Highway Administration. 29 October 2008. Retrieved 4 August 2010.
  18. ^ (PDF). Cornell Local Roads Program. June 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 October 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2010.
  19. ^ a b c Gerbrandt, Ron; Tim Makahoniuk; Cathy Lynn Borbely; Curtis Berthelot (2000). "Guidelines must be followed strictly – No exceptions" (PDF). Effect of Cold-in-place recycling on the Heavyweight Trucking Industry. 6th International Conference on Heavy Vehicle Weights and Dimension Proceedings. Retrieved 25 January 2009.
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  22. ^ "LCA Research Brief: Mapping of Excess Fuel Consumption". cshub.mit.edu. 5 December 2014. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
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  25. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 April 2012. Retrieved 7 April 2012.
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  27. ^ "Bellefontaine, Ohio: Court Avenue photo". City Profile. 17 February 2011. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
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  29. ^ Kulsea, Bill; Shawver, Tom (1980). Making Michigan Move: A History of Michigan Highways and the Michigan Department of Transportation. Lansing, Michigan: Michigan Department of Transportation. p. 4. OCLC 8169232. Retrieved 18 January 2021 – via Wikisource.
  30. ^ Weingroff, Richard F. (7 April 2011). "The Lincoln Highway". fhwa.dot.gov. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved 25 September 2017. The LHA also sponsored short concrete "Seedling Mile" object lesson roads in many locations (the first, built in the fall of 1914, was just west of Malta, Illinois). The "Seedling Miles," according to the LHA's 1924 guide, were intended "to demonstrate the desirability of this permanent type of road construction" and "crystallize public sentiment" for "further construction of the same character." Generally, the LHA worked with the Portland Cement Association to arrange donations of cement for the seeding mileage...The most famous "seedling" and one of the most talked about portions of the Lincoln Highway was the 1.3-mile "Ideal Section" between Dyer and Schererville in Lake County, Indiana. In 1920, the LHA decided to develop a model section of road that would be adequate not only for current traffic but for highway transportation over the following 2 decades. The LHA assembled 17 of the country's foremost highway experts for meetings in December 1920 and February 1921 to decide design details of the Ideal Section. They agreed on such features as: A 110-foot right-of-way; A 40-foot wide concrete pavement 10 inches thick (maximum loads of 8,000 pounds per wheel were the basis for the pavement design); Minimum radius for curves of 1,000 feet, with guardrail at all embankments; Curves superelevated (i.e., banked) for a speed of 35 miles per hour; No grade crossings or advertising signs; and A footpath for pedestrians.
  31. ^ Khazanovich, L.; Lederle, R.; Tompkins, D.; Harvey, J.T.; Signore, J. (2012). Guidelines for the Rehabilitation of Concrete Pavements Using Asphalt Overlays (FHWA TPF-5(149) Final Report).
  32. ^ Moghadas Nejad, Fereidoon; Noory, Alireza; Toolabi, Saeed; Fallah, Shahab (8 August 2014). "Effect of using geosynthetics on reflective crack prevention". International Journal of Pavement Engineering. 16 (6): 477–487. doi:10.1080/10298436.2014.943128. S2CID 137582766.
  33. ^ Lavin, Patrick (2003). Asphalt Pavements: A Practical Guide to Design, Production and Maintenance for Engineers and Architects. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-203-45329-2.
  34. ^ a b c d e f Karlsson, Robert; Isacsson, Ulf (1 February 2006). "Material-Related Aspects of Asphalt Recycling—State-of-the-Art". Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering. 18 (1): 81–92. doi:10.1061/(asce)0899-1561(2006)18:1(81). ISSN 0899-1561.
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External links edit

  •   Media related to Pavements at Wikimedia Commons
  • PaveShare - Concrete Paver Education
  • "Pavements" website of the US Department of Transportation's Federal Highway Administration
  • Long-life Surfacings for Roads. ITF Research Reports. 2017. doi:10.1787/9789282108116-en. ISBN 978-92-821-0810-9.

road, surface, this, article, about, road, surface, pavement, material, other, uses, term, pavement, pavement, disambiguation, road, surface, british, english, pavement, north, american, english, durable, surface, material, laid, down, area, intended, sustain,. This article is about road surface pavement material For other uses of the term pavement see Pavement disambiguation A road surface British English or pavement North American English is the durable surface material laid down on an area intended to sustain vehicular or foot traffic such as a road or walkway In the past gravel road surfaces macadam hoggin cobblestone and granite setts were extensively used but these have mostly been replaced by asphalt or concrete laid on a compacted base course Asphalt mixtures have been used in pavement construction since the beginning of the 20th century and are of two types metalled hard surfaced and unmetalled roads Metalled roadways are made to sustain vehicular load and so are usually made on frequently used roads Unmetalled roads also known as gravel roads or dirt roads are rough and can sustain less weight Road surfaces are frequently marked to guide traffic A road being resurfaced using a road rollerRed surfacing for a bicycle lane in the NetherlandsConstruction crew laying down asphalt over fiber optic trench in New York CityToday permeable paving methods are beginning to be used for low impact roadways and walkways to prevent flooding Pavements are crucial to countries such as United States and Canada which heavily depend on road transportation Therefore research projects such as Long Term Pavement Performance have been launched to optimize the life cycle of different road surfaces 1 2 3 4 Pavement in construction is an outdoor floor or superficial surface covering Paving materials include asphalt concrete stones such as flagstone cobblestone and setts artificial stone bricks tiles and sometimes wood In landscape architecture pavements are part of the hardscape and are used on sidewalks road surfaces patios courtyards etc The term pavement comes from Latin pavimentum meaning a floor beaten or rammed down through Old French pavement 5 The meaning of a beaten down floor was obsolete before the word entered English 6 Pavement in the form of beaten gravel dates back before the emergence of anatomically modern humans Pavement laid in patterns like mosaics were commonly used by the Romans 7 The bearing capacity and service life of a pavement can be raised dramatically by arranging good drainage by an open ditch or covered drains to reduce moisture content in the pavements subbase and subgrade Contents 1 Development 2 Asphalt 3 Concrete 4 Composite pavement 5 Recycling 5 1 In place recycling methods 6 Bituminous surface 6 1 Thin membrane surface 6 2 Otta seal 7 Gravel surface 8 Other surfaces 9 Acoustical implications 10 Surface deterioration 11 Markings 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksDevelopment editMain article History of road transport nbsp Old Roman road leading from Jerusalem to Beit Gubrin adjacent to regional highway 375 in Israel nbsp Different layers of road including asphalt layer The total thickness of a pavement can be measured using granular base equivalencyWheeled transport created the need for better roads Generally natural materials cannot be both soft enough to form well graded surfaces and strong enough to bear wheeled vehicles especially when wet and stay intact In urban areas it began to be worthwhile to build stone paved streets and in fact the first paved streets appear to have been built in Ur in 4000 BC Corduroy roads were built in Glastonbury England in 3300 BC 8 and brick paved roads were built in the Indus Valley Civilisation on the Indian subcontinent from around the same time Improvements in metallurgy meant that by 2000 BC stone cutting tools were generally available in the Middle East and Greece allowing local streets to be paved 9 Notably in about 2000 BC the Minoans built a 50 km paved road from Knossos in northern Crete through the mountains to Gortyn and Lebena a port on the south coast of the island which had side drains a 200 mm thick pavement of sandstone blocks bound with clay gypsum mortar covered by a layer of basaltic flagstones and had separate shoulders This road could be considered superior to any Roman road 10 Roman roads varied from simple corduroy roads to paved roads using deep roadbeds of tamped rubble as an underlying layer to ensure that they kept dry as the water would flow out from between the stones and fragments of rubble instead of becoming mud in clay soils Although there were attempts to rediscover Roman methods there was little useful innovation in road building before the 18th century The first professional road builder to emerge during the Industrial Revolution was John Metcalf who constructed about 290 kilometres 180 mi of turnpike road mainly in the north of England from 1765 when Parliament passed an act authorising the creation of turnpike trusts to build toll funded roads in the Knaresborough area Pierre Marie Jerome Tresaguet is widely credited with establishing the first scientific approach to road building in France at the same time as Metcalf He wrote a memorandum on his method in 1775 which became general practice in France It involved a layer of large rocks covered by a layer of smaller gravel By the late 18th and early 19th centuries new methods of highway construction had been pioneered by the work of two British engineers Thomas Telford and John Loudon McAdam Telford s method of road building involved the digging of a large trench in which a foundation of heavy rock was set He designed his roads so that they sloped downwards from the centre allowing drainage to take place a major improvement on the work of Tresaguet The surface of his roads consisted of broken stone McAdam developed an inexpensive paving material of soil and stone aggregate known as macadam His road building method was simpler than Telford s yet more effective at protecting roadways he discovered that massive foundations of rock upon rock were unnecessary and asserted that native soil alone would support the road and traffic upon it as long as it was covered by a road crust that would protect the soil underneath from water and wear 11 Size of stones was central to McAdam s road building theory The lower 200 millimetre 7 9 in road thickness was restricted to stones no larger than 75 millimetres 3 0 in Modern tarmac was patented by British civil engineer Edgar Purnell Hooley who noticed that spilled tar on the roadway kept the dust down and created a smooth surface 12 He took out a patent in 1901 for tarmac 13 Hooley s 1901 patent for tarmac involved mechanically mixing tar and aggregate prior to lay down and then compacting the mixture with a steamroller The tar was modified by adding small amounts of Portland cement resin and pitch 14 Asphalt edit nbsp Closeup of asphalt on a drivewayAsphalt specifically asphalt concrete sometimes called flexible pavement since its viscosity causes minute deformations as it distributes loads has been widely used since the 1920s The viscous nature of the bitumen binder allows asphalt concrete to sustain significant plastic deformation although fatigue from repeated loading over time is the most common failure mechanism Most asphalt surfaces are laid on a gravel base which is generally at least as thick as the asphalt layer although some full depth asphalt surfaces are laid directly on the native subgrade In areas with very soft or expansive subgrades such as clay or peat thick gravel bases or stabilization of the subgrade with Portland cement or lime may be required Polypropylene and polyester geosynthetics are also used for this purpose 15 and in some northern countries a layer of polystyrene boards are used to delay and minimize frost penetration into the subgrade 16 Depending on the temperature at which it is applied asphalt is categorized as hot mix warm mix half warm mix or cold mix Hot mix asphalt is applied at temperatures over 150 C 300 F with a free floating screed Warm mix asphalt is applied at temperatures of 95 120 C 200 250 F resulting in reduced energy usage and emissions of volatile organic compounds 17 Cold mix asphalt is often used on lower volume rural roads where hot mix asphalt would cool too much on the long trip from the asphalt plant to the construction site 18 An asphalt concrete surface will generally be constructed for high volume primary highways having an average annual daily traffic load greater than 1 200 vehicles per day 19 Advantages of asphalt roadways include relatively low noise relatively low cost compared with other paving methods and perceived ease of repair Disadvantages include less durability than other paving methods less tensile strength than concrete the tendency to become slick and soft in hot weather and a certain amount of hydrocarbon pollution to soil and groundwater or waterways nbsp Laying asphaltIn the mid 1960s rubberized asphalt was used for the first time mixing crumb rubber from used tires with asphalt 20 While a potential use for tires that would otherwise fill landfills and present a fire hazard rubberized asphalt has shown greater incidence of wear in freeze thaw cycles in temperate zones because of the non homogeneous expansion and contraction with non rubber components The application of rubberized asphalt is more temperature sensitive and in many locations can only be applied at certain times of the year 21 Study results of the long term acoustic benefits of rubberized asphalt are inconclusive Initial application of rubberized asphalt may provide a reduction of 3 5 decibels dB in tire pavement source noise emissions however this translates to only 1 3 dB in total traffic noise reduction when combined with the other components of traffic noise Compared to traditional passive attenuating measures e g noise walls and earth berms rubberized asphalt provides shorter lasting and lesser acoustic benefits at typically much greater expense citation needed Concrete editFurther information Concrete nbsp Concrete roadway in San Jose California nbsp A concrete road in Ewing New Jersey Concrete surfaces specifically Portland cement concrete are created using a concrete mix of Portland cement coarse aggregate sand and water In virtually all modern mixes there will also be various admixtures added to increase workability reduce the required amount of water mitigate harmful chemical reactions and for other beneficial purposes In many cases there will also be Portland cement substitutes added such as fly ash This can reduce the cost of the concrete and improve its physical properties The material is applied in a freshly mixed slurry and worked mechanically to compact the interior and force some of the cement slurry to the surface to produce a smoother denser surface free from honeycombing The water allows the mix to combine molecularly in a chemical reaction called hydration Concrete surfaces have been classified into three common types jointed plain JPCP jointed reinforced JRCP and continuously reinforced CRCP The one item that distinguishes each type is the jointing system used to control crack development One of the major advantages of concrete pavements is they are typically stronger and more durable than asphalt roadways The surface can be grooved to provide a durable skid resistant surface Concrete roads are more economical to drive in terms of fuel consumption they reflect light better and they last significantly longer than other paving surfaces but they have a much smaller market share than other paving solutions 22 Modern paving methods and design methods have changed the economics of concrete paving so that a well designed and placed concrete pavement will be cheaper in initial cost and significantly cheaper over the life cycle 23 Another important advantage is that waterproof concrete can be used which eliminates the need to place storm drains next to the road and reduces the need for a slightly sloped driveway to drain rainwater Avoiding rainwater discharge by using runoff also means less electricity is needed otherwise more pumps would be needed in the water distribution system and rainwater is not polluted because it no longer mixes with polluted water Rather it is immediately absorbed by the earth 24 A previous disadvantage was that they had a higher initial cost and could be more time consuming to construct This cost can typically be offset through the long life cycle of the pavement and the higher cost of bitumen Concrete pavement can be maintained over time utilizing a series of methods known as concrete pavement restoration which include diamond grinding dowel bar retrofits joint and crack sealing cross stitching etc Diamond grinding is also useful in reducing noise and restoring skid resistance in older concrete pavement 25 26 The first street in the United States to be paved with concrete was Court Avenue in Bellefontaine Ohio in 1893 27 28 The first mile of concrete pavement in the United States was on Woodward Avenue in Detroit Michigan in 1909 29 Following these pioneering uses the Lincoln Highway Association established in October 1913 to oversee the creation of one of the United States earliest east west transcontinental highways for the automobile began to establish seedling miles of specifically concrete paved roadbed in various places in the American Midwest starting in 1914 west of Malta Illinois while using concrete with the specified concrete ideal section for the Lincoln Highway in Lake County Indiana during 1922 and 1923 30 Concrete roadways may produce more noise than asphalt from tire noise on cracks and expansion joints A concrete pavement composed of multiple slabs of uniform size will produce a periodic sound and vibration in each vehicle as its tires pass over each expansion joint These monotonous repeated sounds and vibrations can cause a fatiguing or hypnotic effect upon the driver over the course of a long journey Composite pavement edit nbsp An example of composite pavement hot mix asphalt overlaid onto Portland cement concrete pavementComposite pavements combine a Portland cement concrete sublayer with an asphalt overlay They are usually used to rehabilitate existing roadways rather than in new construction Asphalt overlays are sometimes laid over distressed concrete to restore a smooth wearing surface 31 A disadvantage of this method is that movement in the joints between the underlying concrete slabs whether from thermal expansion and contraction or from deflection of the concrete slabs from truck axle loads usually causes reflective cracks in the asphalt To decrease reflective cracking concrete pavement is broken apart through a break and seat crack and seat or rubblization process Geosynthetics can be used for reflective crack control 32 With break and seat and crack and seat processes a heavy weight is dropped on the concrete to induce cracking then a heavy roller is used to seat the resultant pieces into the subbase The main difference between the two processes is the equipment used to break the concrete pavement and the size of the resulting pieces The theory is that frequent small cracks will spread thermal stress over a wider area than infrequent large joints reducing the stress on the overlying asphalt pavement Rubblization is a more complete fracturing of the old worn out concrete effectively converting the old pavement into an aggregate base for a new asphalt road 33 The whitetopping process uses Portland cement concrete to resurface a distressed asphalt road Recycling edit source source source An asphalt milling machine in Boise IdahoDistressed pavement can be reused when rehabilitating a roadway The existing pavement is broken up and may be ground on site through a process called milling This pavement is commonly referred to as reclaimed asphalt pavement RAP RAP can be transported to an asphalt plant where it will be stockpiled for use in new pavement mixes 34 or it may be recycled in place using the techniques described below In place recycling methods edit Rubblizing of pavement Existing concrete pavement is milled into gravel sized particles Any steel reinforcing is removed and the ground pavement is compacted to form the base and or sub base layers for new asphalt pavement 35 Ground pavement may also be compacted for use on gravel roads 34 Cold in place recycling Bituminous pavement is ground or milled into small particles The asphalt millings are blended with asphalt emulsion foamed bitumen or soft bitumen to rejuvenate the aged asphalt binder 34 36 New aggregate may also be added The resulting asphalt mix is paved and compacted It may serve as the top pavement layer or it may be overlaid with new asphalt after curing 37 Hot in place recycling Bituminous pavement is heated to 120 150 C 250 300 F milled combined with a rejuvenating agent and or virgin asphalt binder and compacted It may then be overlaid with new asphalt concrete 37 This process typically recycles the top 50 mm 2 in or less and may be used to correct surface defects such as rutting or polishing 37 To preserve the condition of the asphalt binder and avoid excessive hydrocarbon emissions heating is typically achieved gradually through the use of infrared or hot air heaters 34 Full depth reclamation The full thickness of the asphalt pavement and underlying material is pulverized to provide a uniform blend of material 34 37 A binding agent or stabilizing material may be mixed in to form a base course for the new pavement or it may be left unbound to form a sub base course Common binding agents include asphalt emulsion fly ash hydrated lime Portland cement and calcium chloride 34 37 Virgin aggregate RAP or crushed Portland cement may also be added to improve the gradation and mechanical properties of the mix 37 This technique is typically used to address structural failures in the pavement such as alligator cracking deep rutting and shoulder drop off 37 Bituminous surface editMain article Chipseal nbsp newly installed chipseal surface on Ellsworth Road in Tomah WisconsinBituminous surface treatment BST or chipseal is used mainly on low traffic roads but also as a sealing coat to rejuvenate an asphalt concrete pavement It generally consists of aggregate spread over a sprayed on asphalt emulsion or cut back asphalt cement The aggregate is then embedded into the asphalt by rolling it typically with a rubber tired roller This type of surface is described by a wide variety of regional terms including chip seal tar and chip oil and stone seal coat sprayed seal 38 surface dressing 39 microsurfacing 40 seal 41 or simply as bitumen BST is used on hundreds of miles of the Alaska Highway and other similar roadways in Alaska the Yukon Territory and northern British Columbia The ease of application of BST is one reason for its popularity but another is its flexibility which is important when roadways are laid down over unstable terrain that thaws and softens in the spring Other types of BSTs include micropaving slurry seals and Novachip These are laid down using specialized and proprietary equipment They are most often used in urban areas where the roughness and loose stone associated with chip seals is considered undesirable Thin membrane surface edit A thin membrane surface TMS is an oil treated aggregate which is laid down upon a gravel road bed producing a dust free road 42 A TMS road reduces mud problems and provides stone free roads for local residents where loaded truck traffic is negligible The TMS layer adds no significant structural strength and so is used on secondary highways with low traffic volume and minimal weight loading Construction involves minimal subgrade preparation following by covering with a 50 to 100 millimetre 2 4 in cold mix asphalt aggregate 19 The Operation Division of the Ministry of Highways and Infrastructure in Saskatchewan has the responsibility of maintaining 6 102 kilometres 3 792 mi of thin membrane surface TMS highways 43 Otta seal edit Otta seal is a low cost road surface using a 16 30 millimetre thick 5 8 1 1 8 in mixture of bitumen and crushed rock 44 Gravel surface editMain article Gravel road nbsp Gravel road in NamibiaGravel is known to have been used extensively in the construction of roads by soldiers of the Roman Empire see Roman road but in 1998 a limestone surfaced road thought to date back to the Bronze Age was found at Yarnton in Oxfordshire Britain 45 Applying gravel or metalling has had two distinct usages in road surfacing The term road metal refers to the broken stone or cinders used in the construction or repair of roads or railways 46 and is derived from the Latin metallum which means both mine and quarry 47 The term originally referred to the process of creating a gravel roadway The route of the roadway would first be dug down several feet and depending on local conditions French drains may or may not have been added Next large stones were placed and compacted followed by successive layers of smaller stones until the road surface was composed of small stones compacted into a hard durable surface Road metal later became the name of stone chippings mixed with tar to form the road surfacing material tarmac A road of such material is called a metalled road in Britain a paved road in Canada and the US or a sealed road in parts of Canada Australia and New Zealand 48 A granular surface can be used with a traffic volume where the annual average daily traffic is 1 200 vehicles per day or less citation needed There is some structural strength if the road surface combines a sub base and base and is topped with a double graded seal aggregate with emulsion 19 49 Besides the 4 929 kilometres 3 063 mi of granular pavements maintained in Saskatchewan around 40 of New Zealand roads are unbound granular pavement structures 43 50 The decision whether to pave a gravel road or not often hinges on traffic volume It has been found that maintenance costs for gravel roads often exceed the maintenance costs for paved or surface treated roads when traffic volumes exceed 200 vehicles per day 51 nbsp Pavement ends and turns into gravel surface roadSome communities are finding it makes sense to convert their low volume paved roads to aggregate surfaces 52 Other surfaces editPavers or paviours generally in the form of pre cast concrete blocks are often used for aesthetic purposes or sometimes at port facilities that see long duration pavement loading Pavers are rarely used in areas that see high speed vehicle traffic Brick cobblestone sett wood plank and wood block pavements such as Nicolson pavement were once common in urban areas throughout the world but fell out of fashion in most countries due to the high cost of labor required to lay and maintain them and are typically only kept for historical or aesthetic reasons citation needed In some countries however they are still common in local streets In the Netherlands brick paving has made something of a comeback since the adoption of a major nationwide traffic safety program in 1997 From 1998 through 2007 more than 41 000 km of city streets were converted to local access roads with a speed limit of 30 km h for the purpose of traffic calming 53 One popular measure is to use brick paving the noise and vibration slows motorists down At the same time it is not uncommon for cycle paths alongside a road to have a smoother surface than the road itself 54 55 Although rarely constructed today early style macadam and tarmac pavements are sometimes found beneath modern asphalt concrete or Portland cement concrete pavements because the cost of their removal at the time of renovation would not significantly benefit the durabilty and longevity of the newer surface There are ways to create the appearance of brick pavement without the expense of actual bricks The first method to create brick texture is to heat an asphalt pavement and use metal wires to imprint a brick pattern using a compactor to create stamped asphalt A similar method is to use rubber imprinting tools to press over a thin layer of cement to create decorative concrete Another method is to use a brick pattern stencil and apply a surfacing material over the stencil Materials that can be applied to give the color of the brick and skid resistance can be in many forms An example is to use colored polymer modified concrete slurry which can be applied by screeding or spraying 56 Another material is aggregate reinforced thermoplastic which can be heat applied to the top layer of the brick pattern surface 57 Other coating materials over stamped asphalt are paints and two part epoxy coating 58 nbsp Concrete pavers nbsp Replacing the old road with concrete blocks in Bo ao Road area Haikou City Hainan China nbsp Polymer cement overlaying to change asphalt pavement to brick texture and color to create decorative crosswalkAcoustical implications editRoadway surfacing choices are known to affect the intensity and spectrum of sound emanating from the tire surface interaction 59 Initial applications of noise studies occurred in the early 1970s Noise phenomena are highly influenced by vehicle speed Roadway surface types contribute differential noise effects of up to 4 dB with chip seal type and grooved roads being the loudest and concrete surfaces without spacers being the quietest Asphaltic surfaces perform intermediately relative to concrete and chip seal Rubberized asphalt has been shown to give a 3 5 dB reduction in tire pavement noise emissions and a marginally discernible 1 3 dB reduction in total road noise emissions when compared to conventional asphalt applications nbsp Cobbles nbsp Decorative wavy pattern on La Rambla nbsp Decorative mock brick pattern nbsp More decorative brickwork patternsSurface deterioration editSee also Pothole Crocodile cracking Rut roads Bleeding roads and Pavement performance modeling nbsp Deteriorating asphaltAs pavement systems primarily fail due to fatigue in a manner similar to metals the damage done to pavement increases with the fourth power of the axle load of the vehicles traveling on it According to the AASHO Road Test heavily loaded trucks can do more than 10 000 times the damage done by a normal passenger car Tax rates for trucks are higher than those for cars in most countries for this reason though they are not levied in proportion to the damage done 60 Passenger cars are considered to have little practical effect on a pavement s service life from a materials fatigue perspective Other failure modes include aging and surface abrasion As years go by the binder in a bituminous wearing course gets stiffer and less flexible When it gets old enough the surface will start losing aggregates and macrotexture depth increases dramatically If no maintenance action is done quickly on the wearing course potholes will form The freeze thaw cycle in cold climates will dramatically accelerate pavement deterioration once water can penetrate the surface Clay and fumed silica nanoparticles may potentially be used as efficient UV anti aging coatings in asphalt pavements If the road is still structurally sound a bituminous surface treatment such as a chipseal or surface dressing can prolong the life of the road at low cost In areas with cold climate studded tires may be allowed on passenger cars In Sweden and Finland studded passenger car tires account for a very large share of pavement rutting 61 The physical properties of a stretch of pavement can be tested using a falling weight deflectometer Several design methods have been developed to determine the thickness and composition of road surfaces required to carry predicted traffic loads for a given period of time Pavement design methods are continuously evolving Among these are the Shell Pavement design method and the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials AASHTO 1993 98 Guide for Design of Pavement Structures A mechanistic empirical design guide was developed through the NCHRP process resulting in the Mechanistic Empirical Pavement Design Guide MEPDG which was adopted by AASHTO in 2008 although MEPDG implementation by state departments of transportation has been slow 62 Further research by University College London into pavements has led to the development of an indoor 80 sq metre artificial pavement at a research centre called Pedestrian Accessibility and Movement Environment Laboratory PAMELA It is used to simulate everyday scenarios from different pavement users to varying pavement conditions 63 There also exists a research facility near Auburn University the NCAT Pavement Test Track that is used to test experimental asphalt pavements for durability In addition to repair costs the condition of a road surface has economic effects for road users Rolling resistance increases on rough pavement as does wear and tear of vehicle components It has been estimated that poor road surfaces cost the average US driver 324 per year in vehicle repairs or a total of 67 billion Also it has been estimated that small improvements in road surface conditions can decrease fuel consumption between 1 8 and 4 7 64 Markings editMain article Road surface marking Road surface markings are used on paved roadways to provide guidance and information to drivers and pedestrians It can be in the form of mechanical markers such as cat s eyes botts dots and rumble strips or non mechanical markers such as paints thermoplastic plastic and epoxy See also editAsphalt Cobblestone Diamond grinding of pavement Ecogrid Good Roads Movement List of road types by features Pavement management Plastic armour Portuguese pavement mosaic like Road construction Road slipperiness Sealcoat Sett paving References edit Nehme Jean 14 July 2017 About Long Term Pavement Performance Federal Highway Administration Retrieved 22 October 2017 Raab Robert n d Long Term Pavement Performance Studies Transportation Research Board Retrieved 22 October 2017 Ford K Arman M Labi S Sinha K C Thompson P D Shirole A M and Li Z 2012 NCHRP Report 713 Estimating life expectancies of highway assets In Transportation Research Board National Academy of Sciences Washington DC Transportation Research Board Washington DC PDF Piryonesi S M amp El Diraby T 2018 Using Data Analytics for Cost Effective Prediction of Road Conditions Case of The Pavement Condition Index summary report No FHWA HRT 18 065 United States Federal Highway Administration Office of Research Development and Technology Archived from the original on 2 February 2019 Pavement The Century Dictionary pavement n Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition on CD ROM v 4 0 Oxford University Press 2009 paver def 2 Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition on CD ROM v 4 0 Oxford University Press 2009 Lay 1992 p51 Lay 1992 p43 Lay 1992 p44 Craig David The Colossus of Roads Palimpsest Strum co uk retrieved 18 June 2010 Ralph Morton 2002 Construction UK Introduction to the Industry Oxford Blackwell Science p 51 ISBN 0 632 05852 8 retrieved 22 June 2010 Details of this story vary a bit but the essence of is the same as are the basic facts Harrison Ian 2004 The Book of Inventions Washington DC National Geographic Society p 277 ISBN 978 0 7922 8296 9 retrieved 23 June 2010 Hooley E Purnell U S patent 765 975 Apparatus for the preparation of tar macadam July 26 1904 NUAE Geosynthetics Ltd News Project Scout Moor Wind farm PDF NUAE May 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 2 November 2008 Anon June 1991 Highway construction Ground insulation PDF Styropor Technical information Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2018 Retrieved 29 January 2010 Warm Mix Asphalt Technologies and Research Federal Highway Administration 29 October 2008 Retrieved 4 August 2010 Hot Warm Luke Warm and Cold Mix Asphalt PDF Cornell Local Roads Program June 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 21 October 2012 Retrieved 4 August 2010 a b c Gerbrandt Ron Tim Makahoniuk Cathy Lynn Borbely Curtis Berthelot 2000 Guidelines must be followed strictly No exceptions PDF Effect of Cold in place recycling on the Heavyweight Trucking Industry 6th International Conference on Heavy Vehicle Weights and Dimension Proceedings Retrieved 25 January 2009 David Jones John Harvey Imad L Al Qadi Angel Mateos 2012 Advances in Pavement Design through Full scale Accelerated Pavement Testing CRC Press ISBN 978 0 203 07301 8 What is Rubberised Asphalt Commonly Used For 12 February 2021 Retrieved 12 February 2021 LCA Research Brief Mapping of Excess Fuel Consumption cshub mit edu 5 December 2014 Retrieved 7 June 2022 Concrete Roads concreteformworksydney com 11 January 2022 Retrieved 27 June 2022 Road Infrastructure Strategic Framework for South Africa A Discussion Document transport gov za 29 March 2003 Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 27 June 2022 Concrete Pavement Restoration PDF Archived from the original PDF on 17 April 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2012 Concrete Pavement Rehabilitation Guide for Diamond Grinding Retrieved 7 April 2012 Bellefontaine Ohio Court Avenue photo City Profile 17 February 2011 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Lee B J Lee H 2004 Position Invariant Neural Network for Digital Pavement Crack Analysis Computer Aided Civil and Infrastructure Engineering 19 2 105 118 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8667 2004 00341 x S2CID 109522695 Kulsea Bill Shawver Tom 1980 Making Michigan Move A History of Michigan Highways and the Michigan Department of Transportation Lansing Michigan Michigan Department of Transportation p 4 OCLC 8169232 Retrieved 18 January 2021 via Wikisource Weingroff Richard F 7 April 2011 The Lincoln Highway fhwa dot gov Federal Highway Administration Retrieved 25 September 2017 The LHA also sponsored short concrete Seedling Mile object lesson roads in many locations the first built in the fall of 1914 was just west of Malta Illinois The Seedling Miles according to the LHA s 1924 guide were intended to demonstrate the desirability of this permanent type of road construction and crystallize public sentiment for further construction of the same character Generally the LHA worked with the Portland Cement Association to arrange donations of cement for the seeding mileage The most famous seedling and one of the most talked about portions of the Lincoln Highway was the 1 3 mile Ideal Section between Dyer and Schererville in Lake County Indiana In 1920 the LHA decided to develop a model section of road that would be adequate not only for current traffic but for highway transportation over the following 2 decades The LHA assembled 17 of the country s foremost highway experts for meetings in December 1920 and February 1921 to decide design details of the Ideal Section They agreed on such features as A 110 foot right of way A 40 foot wide concrete pavement 10 inches thick maximum loads of 8 000 pounds per wheel were the basis for the pavement design Minimum radius for curves of 1 000 feet with guardrail at all embankments Curves superelevated i e banked for a speed of 35 miles per hour No grade crossings or advertising signs and A footpath for pedestrians Khazanovich L Lederle R Tompkins D Harvey J T Signore J 2012 Guidelines for the Rehabilitation of Concrete Pavements Using Asphalt Overlays FHWA TPF 5 149 Final Report Moghadas Nejad Fereidoon Noory Alireza Toolabi Saeed Fallah Shahab 8 August 2014 Effect of using geosynthetics on reflective crack prevention International Journal of Pavement Engineering 16 6 477 487 doi 10 1080 10298436 2014 943128 S2CID 137582766 Lavin Patrick 2003 Asphalt Pavements A Practical Guide to Design Production and Maintenance for Engineers and Architects CRC Press ISBN 978 0 203 45329 2 a b c d e f Karlsson Robert Isacsson Ulf 1 February 2006 Material Related Aspects of Asphalt Recycling State of the Art Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering 18 1 81 92 doi 10 1061 asce 0899 1561 2006 18 1 81 ISSN 0899 1561 Heckel L B 1 April 2002 Rubblizing with Bituminous Concrete Overlay 10 Years Experience in Illinois The National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine Al Qadi Imad Elseifi Mostafa Carpenter Samuel 1 March 2007 Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement A Literature Review CiteSeerX 10 1 1 390 3460 a b c d e f g Asphalt Paving Principles www clrp cornell edu Cornell Local Roads Program March 2004 Retrieved 5 October 2016 Sprayed Seal Local Government amp Municipal Knowledge Base accessed 29 January 2010 Gransberg Douglas D James David M B 2005 Chip Seal Best Practices National Cooperative Highway Transportation Research Board pp 13 20 ISBN 978 0 309 09744 4 Microsurfacing Treatment Types More than 100 motorists lodge damage claims after road seal peels off at Dome Valley Lazic Zvjezdan Ron Gerbrandt 2004 Feasibility of Alternative salt storage structures in Saskatchewan Neilburg case study PDF Measuring performance indicators for decision making in winter maintenance operations 2004 Annual conference of the Transportation Association of Canada Saskatchewan Highways and Transportation Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2009 Retrieved 25 February 2009 a b Highways and Infrastructure Government of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on 8 February 2008 Retrieved 15 April 2008 Manins Rosie 28 February 2009 New dust suppression method Otago Daily Times Retrieved 5 November 2011 Anon July 1998 Bronze Age metalled road near Oxford British Archaeology News 36 Retrieved 29 January 2010 Anon Road metal Merriam Webster online dictionary Merriam Webster inc Retrieved 29 January 2010 Anon Metal Online etymological dictionary 2001 Douglas Harper Retrieved 29 January 2010 Anon Metalled Road World Web Online WordWeb Software Retrieved 29 January 2010 Surfacing Aggregate PDF Product brochure Afrisam com South Africa 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2009 Retrieved 25 January 2009 Oeser Markus Sabine Werkmeister Alvaro Gonzales David Alabaster 2008 Experimental and numerical simulation of loading impact on modified granular pavements PDF 8th World Congress on Computational Mechanics 5th European Congress on computational methods in applied sciences and engineering ECCOMAS 6th International Conference on Heavy Vehicle Weights and Dimension Proceedings Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2009 Retrieved 25 January 2009 Mary C Rukashaza Mukome et al 2003 Cost Comparison of Treatments Used to Maintain or Upgrade Aggregate Roads PDF Proceedings of the 2003 Mid Continent Transportation Research Symposium Iowa State University Retrieved 16 September 2011 Roads to Ruin Towns Rip Up the Pavement Wall Street Journal 17 July 2010 Retrieved 16 September 2011 De balans opgemaakt Duurzaam Veilig 1998 2007 Sustainable Safety in the Netherlands 1998 2007 PDF in Dutch SWOV Dutch Institute for Road Safety Research 2009 p 6 English abstract ISBN 978 90 73946 06 4 Retrieved 13 July 2014 Hembrow David 25 April 2011 Road noise cobbles and smooth asphalt A view from the cycle path Retrieved 14 August 2014 Fred Young 23 February 2013 What can Seattle learn from Dutch street design presentation video Seattle Neighborhood Greenways Event occurs at 3 49 and 9 19 min Archived from the original on 13 November 2021 Retrieved 14 August 2014 the cycle track is asphalt and the lane for cars is brick Endurablend Systems for Color Surfacing Colors Seals Textures and Protects to Extend Service Life of Asphalt and Concrete Pavement Surfaces PDF Retrieved 13 November 2014 High Performance Crosswalks PDF Alternative Paving Concepts Retrieved 13 November 2014 Decorative Stamped Asphalt ThermOTrack Retrieved 13 November 2014 Hogan C Michael September 1973 Analysis of highway noise Water Air and Soil Pollution 2 3 387 392 Bibcode 1973WASP 2 387H doi 10 1007 BF00159677 S2CID 109914430 Statement Of Garth Dull For The Senate Epw Committee Land Clearing MN Land Clearing 11 January 2019 Retrieved 10 October 2019 Li Qiang Xiao Danny X Wang Kelvin C P Hall Kevin D Qiu Yanjun 27 September 2013 Mechanistic empirical pavement design guide MEPDG a bird s eye view Journal of Modern Transportation 19 2 114 133 doi 10 1007 bf03325749 Scientists walk on tech pavement BBC News 12 September 2006 Retrieved 22 May 2010 The Value of Smooth Better Roads Randall Reilly August 2011 External links edit nbsp Media related to Pavements at Wikimedia Commons PaveShare Concrete Paver Education Pavements website of the US Department of Transportation s Federal Highway Administration Long life Surfacings for Roads ITF Research Reports 2017 doi 10 1787 9789282108116 en ISBN 978 92 821 0810 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Road surface amp oldid 1205171505, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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