Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Issued by
Queensland Department of Main Roads
Pavements & Materials Branch
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
The requirements of this document represent Technical Policy of Main Roads and contain
Technical Standards. Compliance with Main Roads Technical Standards is mandatory for all
applications for the design, construction, maintenance and operation of road transport
infrastructure in Queensland by or on behalf of the State of Queensland.
This document will be reviewed from time to time as the need arises and in response to
improvement suggestions by users. Please send your comments and suggestions to the feedback
email given below.
FEEDBACK
Your feedback is welcomed. Please send to mr.techdocs@mainroads.qld.gov.au.
COPYRIGHT
State of Queensland (Department of Main Roads) 2009
Copyright protects this publication. Except for the purposes permitted by and subject to the
conditions prescribed under the Copyright Act, reproduction by any means (including electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, microcopying or otherwise) is prohibited without the prior written
permission of the Queensland Department of Main Roads. Enquiries regarding such permission
should be directed to the Road & Delivery Performance Division, Queensland Department of Main
Roads.
DISCLAIMER
This publication has been created for use in the design, construction, maintenance and operation
of road transport infrastructure in Queensland by or on behalf of the State of Queensland.
The State of Queensland and the Department of Main Roads give no warranties as to the
completeness, accuracy or adequacy of the publication or any parts of it and accepts no
responsibility or liability upon any basis whatever for anything contained in or omitted from the
publication or for the consequences of the use or misuse of the publication or any parts of it.
If the publication or any part of it forms part of a written contract between the State of Queensland
and a contractor, this disclaimer applies subject to the express terms of that contract.
January 2009
Table of Contents
1
INTRODUCTION...............................................................................................................................1
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
2
PAVEMENT DESIGN........................................................................................................................8
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
General ..................................................................................................................................20
Unbound granular ..................................................................................................................20
Stabilised materials ................................................................................................................20
Temporary connections for HILI pavements ..........................................................................21
Asphalt pavements.................................................................................................................21
Working platform ....................................................................................................................21
Settlement ..............................................................................................................................22
Moisture ingress and maintenance ........................................................................................22
Trafficking of incomplete pavement .......................................................................................22
Thickness of bituminous seals ...............................................................................................22
ENVIRONMENT..............................................................................................................................23
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.5
4.6
5
Foreword ..................................................................................................................................1
MR Pavement Design System .................................................................................................1
Scope and applicability ............................................................................................................2
1.3.1
General ......................................................................................................................2
1.3.2
Applying the MR Pavement Design System..............................................................2
1.3.3
MR Pavement Design System policy parameters .....................................................3
Definitions ................................................................................................................................4
General ..................................................................................................................................23
Climatic zones........................................................................................................................23
Water environment.................................................................................................................24
Minimising exposure to and influence of water......................................................................27
4.4.1
General ....................................................................................................................27
4.4.2
Design requirements................................................................................................27
4.4.3
During construction..................................................................................................28
Situations where pavement or subgrades cannot be protected ............................................28
Temperature environment......................................................................................................29
SUBGRADE ....................................................................................................................................30
5.1
General ..................................................................................................................................30
January 2009
5.2
5.3
5.4
5.5
5.6
5.7
5.8
5.9
6
Subgrade assessment........................................................................................................... 30
5.2.1
General ................................................................................................................... 30
5.2.2
Laboratory CBR test conditions .............................................................................. 31
5.2.3
Statistical analysis of CBR data .............................................................................. 31
5.2.4
Adoption of presumptive CBR values ..................................................................... 31
5.2.5
Variation in subgrade support with moisture changes ............................................ 32
Subgrade water-induced volume change.............................................................................. 32
5.3.1
General ................................................................................................................... 32
5.3.2
Minimising volume change...................................................................................... 33
5.3.3
Cover over reactive subgrade................................................................................. 33
Select fill and treated material ............................................................................................... 34
Working platform ................................................................................................................... 34
5.5.1
In-service requirements .......................................................................................... 34
5.5.2
Contractors design requirements........................................................................... 35
Capping ................................................................................................................................. 35
Drainage layer ....................................................................................................................... 36
Combined subgrade treatments ............................................................................................ 36
Elastic characterisation of subgrade materials...................................................................... 39
6.2
6.3
6.4
6.5
6.6
7
Unbound granular.................................................................................................................. 40
6.1.1
General ................................................................................................................... 40
6.1.2
Determining modulus of unbound granular materials ............................................. 40
Modified granular materials ................................................................................................... 41
Stabilised granular material................................................................................................... 41
6.3.1
General ................................................................................................................... 41
6.3.2
Determining design modulus and Poissons ratio................................................... 42
6.3.3
Cracking .................................................................................................................. 42
6.3.4
Minimising cracks.................................................................................................... 43
Lean mix concrete ................................................................................................................. 43
Asphalt................................................................................................................................... 44
6.5.1
Asphalt types........................................................................................................... 44
6.5.2
Determining asphalt modulus and Poissons ratio.................................................. 44
6.5.3
Recycled asphalt..................................................................................................... 46
6.5.4
Minimising water infiltration..................................................................................... 46
Concrete ................................................................................................................................ 46
6.6.1
Base concrete ......................................................................................................... 46
DESIGN TRAFFIC.......................................................................................................................... 47
7.1 Average daily ESA in design lane in year of opening ........................................................... 47
7.2 Selecting design period and assessment period................................................................... 47
7.3 Identifying design lane........................................................................................................... 47
7.4 Initial daily heavy vehicles in the design lane........................................................................ 47
7.5 Growth rate and cumulative traffic volumes .......................................................................... 48
7.6 Project specific traffic load distribution .................................................................................. 48
7.7 Reduced design standard for sealed unbound granular pavements with average daily ESA < 100
in design lane in year of opening.................................................................................................... 48
8.3
8.4
8.5
ii
General.................................................................................................................................. 50
Mechanistic procedure .......................................................................................................... 50
8.2.1
Selecting a trial pavement....................................................................................... 50
8.2.2
Consideration of post-cracking phase in cemented materials ................................ 50
Empirical design of unbound granular pavements with thin bituminous surfacing ............... 50
Modified granular pavements ................................................................................................ 51
Example design charts for mechanistic design ..................................................................... 51
January 2009
General ..................................................................................................................................52
Pavement types .....................................................................................................................52
Concrete channels .................................................................................................................52
Example design charts for rigid pavements ...........................................................................53
January 2009
iii
INTRODUCTION
1.1
Foreword
The Queensland Department of Main Roads (MR) Pavement Design Manual (this manual) is
written as a supplement to Part 2: Pavement Structural Design of the Austroads Guide to
Pavement Technology (Austroads, 2008), hereafter referred to as Part 2 of the Austroads guide.
The MR Pavement Design Manual, used in conjunction with Part 2 of the Austroads guide and the
other components of the MR Pavement Design System, provides requirements for the design of
new pavements for MR.
Designers are also referred to the following MR documents:
1.2
The MR Pavement Design System, which includes this manual, sets out MR specific pavement
design requirements. For most fundamental design principles Part 2 of the Austroads guide is
used. For Main Roads purposes, the MR components of the Pavement Design System take
precedence over Part 2 of the Austroads guide, if and where they differ.
The MR Pavement Design System includes all the following documents, systems and design
properties:
a)
ii)
standard specifications
iii)
supplementary specifications
iv)
technical standards
v)
standard drawings
vi)
vii)
technical notes
viii)
engineering policies
ix)
engineering notes
x)
quality requirements
b)
c)
design properties
i)
ii)
The design properties used in the MR Pavement Design System are based on the
products, components and materials of the pavement conforming to the requirements
of the documents listed in 1.2 a) above.
January 2009
1.3
1.3.1
General
The MR Pavement Design Manual is intended as a guide for professional, trained, experienced
and knowledgeable pavement designers who are required to:
a)
work within the confines of Main Roads organisational policies, guidelines and road network
requirements
b)
be aware of, assess and apply risk management and budgetary constraints to the road
system as a whole and its various components
c)
d)
optimise initial designs and in-service treatments to suit budget and whole-of-life cost issues.
1.3.2
be applied as a complete and integrated system. No part can be used in isolation from the
others, nor shall other models, methodologies, specifications, properties and/or materials be
substituted for those required by the MR Pavement Design System.
b)
not be used on its own to form part of any contract including, but not limited to, those for the
following delivery mechanisms
i)
design
ii)
iii)
design-construct-maintain
iv)
alliance
v)
partnering
vi)
build-own-operate-transfer
not be used for performance based contracts and/or with performance based
specifications. Performance contracts and standards must be based on functional
requirements guaranteed for the service life of the project.
d)
not be used in isolation where functional requirements are specified. Where used by Main
Roads as part of an infrastructure delivery model that includes functional requirements,
achievement of the functional requirements must be based on requirements for initial
construction and interventions that involve periodic treatments including overlays, reseals,
rejuvenation, re-texturing and so on.
e)
not be used for any purpose other than within the context described above. In particular, it
must not be used for
i)
designing facilities other than those to be designed directly for Main Roads. It must not
be used for facilities including, but not limited to container and freight yards, mining
roads and airports.
ii)
designing facilities for any Legal Entity other than the State of Queensland
iii)
designing projects with parameters other than those set out in Section 1.2 for the
Queensland road network
iv)
January 2009
Because of differences between design inputs and whole-of-life realities (e.g. traffic growth,
enforcement of and legislative changes to legal axle loads and tyre pressures, variability in
construction control and ongoing maintenance and rehabilitation) the analytical processes and
tools contained herein can provide only an indication of future pavement performance.
If a contract interface involves a planning and/or design component, requirements separate to the
MR Pavement Design System must be developed to address the means of supplying an
acceptable design process and design to the owner/client/principal.
1.3.3
The MR Pavement Design System has evolved and been developed to provide solutions that best
serve the needs of the MR controlled road network as a whole and applies only in this context. The
policy parameters that provided guidance and the context of developments to date have included:
a)
b)
ii)
an adequate level of service over the whole network within the context of budgetary
constraints and the comparatively large geographical area with relatively low population
density
a project delivery system requiring a defined contract between the owner and the contractor,
for construction only, based on detailed drawings, specifications and test methods.
high cost of maintenance interventions and associated user disruptions on highly trafficked
urban roads, leading to the lowest whole-of-life cost solution for such pavements being high
load intensity low intervention (HILI) pavements
b)
increasing load intensities caused by increases in vertical loading and major increases in
horizontal shear loading caused by increased truck gross masses. This has required stiffer
and stronger pavement bases and surface layers.
c)
d)
January 2009
1.4
Definitions
Table 1.4-1 Definitions
Term
Description
assessment period
The time span over which total costs for the pavement are determined so that wholeof-life cost comparisons can be made between alternative pavement design options.
Refer to Table 7.2-1 for determination of the assessment period.
The assessment period may be the same as the design period, or there may be
several design periods within the assessment period due to decisions to reconstruct
or rehabilitate the pavement at intermediate intervals.
Part 2 of the
Austroads guide
Part 2: Pavement
(Austroads 2008)
base layer
binder layer
An asphalt layer that is placed between an asphalt base layer and an asphalt surface
layer. The binder layer is included for its better workability to reduce permeability and
improve roughness levels.
capping layer
A layer that provides cover over an in situ material that has a design CBR of less than
3.0% but not less than 1.0%.
CBR
A thickness of material beneath the lowest pavement layer intended to reduce waterinduced volume change effects on the pavement where there are in situ materials
with the potential for water-induced volume change.
Cover thickness may include any working platform, select fill, capping layer and/or
drainage layer.
curling
constituents
deep strength
asphalt pavement
design period
drainage layer
A layer located between the pavement and the untreated subgrade that intercepts
water and/or breaks capillary rise.
Structural
Design
Guide
to
Pavement
Technology
January 2009
Term
Description
flexible composite
pavement
flexible pavement
A pavement structure consisting of full depth asphalt usually over a working platform.
functional
characteristics
Characteristics provided by the particular pavement that address the necessities for
traffic and are expressed in terms of lane availability, rideability, grade, cross-fall,
water film thickness, flood immunity, skid resistance, etc.
functional
requirements
HILI pavement
load intensity
Traffic loading applied to the pavement over a specified time period, comprising the
accumulation of applications of a variety of pavement contact stresses and repetitions
derived from the traffic spectrum, vehicle frequency and growth rate.
lower subbase
mechanical
properties
Properties that can be used as direct inputs into a mathematical equation and/or
model, such as layered linear elastic theory or finite element. At this time only the
layered linear elastic model CIRCLY is calibrated for use.
MR Pavement
Design System
Main Roads Pavement Design System as defined in Section 1.2 and applied as
described in Section 1.3.
MR Pavement
Design Manual
This manual.
MR Specifications
and Standards
pavement
rehabilitation
January 2009
Term
Description
pavement
A pavement that will be used by traffic and designed and constructed in accordance
with the Main Roads Pavement Design System, including this manual.
permanent
pavement
property
Result of a test method that is used to provide useful information about a material or
product.
reactive subgrade
rigid pavement
safety
Qualities of the pavement and associated facilities that directly affect vehicle safety
related to but not limited to: surface type, surface texture, skid resistance, surface
drainage, cross-fall, delineation, sight distance, guide posts, lighting and guardrail.
settlement
A lowering of the height of the pavement and subgrade as a result of loading imposed
by traffic, the pavement and/or the embankment, and caused by creep, shear or
reduction in volume.
stabilised subgrade
A subgrade that has been stabilised with chemical binders and site investigation
and laboratory testing has verified that the intended long-term properties of the
stabilised material will be achieved. The structural contribution of the layer may be
considered in the same manner as an un-stabilised select fill with a material CBR
determined by a CBR test, but not greater than 20% and subject to the maximum
modulus that can be developed when sub-layered as an unbound material.
staged construction
subbase layer
subgrade level
The level of the interface between the bottom of the pavement and the top of the
Subgrade.
subgrade material
Subgrade material includes working platform, select fill, treated material, drainage
layer, capping, general fill and Untreated Subgrade to a minimum depth of 1.5 m
below the bottom of the pavement.
surface layer
temporary pavement
Any pavement constructed for the purpose of carrying traffic for short periods
(maximum 2 years) while the pavement for the road is under construction,
reconstruction and/or rehabilitation, designed in accordance with the Main Roads
Pavement Design System and the requirements for temporary pavements in this
manual. The design, material and construction requirements for temporary
pavements are the same as for permanent pavements, unless specifically stated
otherwise.
test method
Unless otherwise noted a test method as specified in the relevant Main Roads
specification, technical standard, or supplementary specification.
January 2009
Term
Description
treated material
Material treated with lime and/or cement in accordance with the relevant Main Roads
specification, technical standard, or supplementary specification.
UCS
unbound granular
pavement material
A material complying with the relevant Main Roads specification, technical standard, or
supplementary specification that consists of graded aggregates and may include clay.
untreated subgrade
Natural unprocessed material, other than that moved from another location and/or
compacted at the location, where the characteristics of the subgrade are to be
determined to assess:
a) the need for one or more of the following elements: capping layer; cover over
reactive subgrade; drainage layer and/or combined capping/drainage layer
b) subgrade design CBR and swell.
warping
water-induced
volume change
Change in the volume of the subgrade material resulting from a change in water
content usually on a reactive subgrade material.
weighted plasticity
index (WPI)
The product of the plasticity index and percentage passing the AS 0.425 mm sieve
working platform
January 2009
2
2.1
2.1.1
PAVEMENT DESIGN
Overview of MR Pavement Design System
Design models and mechanical properties
b)
c)
d)
Where provided, the values given in the MR Pavement Design Manual must be used.
2.1.2
Designers
Adequate design is possible only when carried out by professional, trained, experienced, and
knowledgeable personnel. It requires consideration and integration of all inputs including local
conditions, material characteristics, cross-sections, loading, design models, road user safety and
constructability.
2.1.3
The unbound granular design chart considers only rutting and shape loss.
2.1.4
Mechanistic design
Mechanistic pavement design, utilising layered linear elastic theory, considers only three distress types:
rutting and shape loss, fatigue of asphalt, and fatigue of cement stabilised materials.
For concrete pavements designed utilising this Manual, the design method for base thickness
considers two distress types: fatigue of the base and erosion of the subbase/subgrade.
Other types of distress, such as those caused by horizontal stresses on grades, at intersections
and on curves, or by environmental influences such as temperature and water, are not directly
assessed by these design methods. These forms of distress have to be constrained by other
means such as specification of appropriate materials or provision of relevant cross-sections,
pavement types and drainage. Consequently, this Manual cannot be used in isolation and must be
used in conjunction with all other components of the MR Pavement Design System.
2.1.5
Estimate of life
The MR Pavement Design System will provide an estimate of the life of various pavement
elements. To maintain the functionality of the pavement, including for the initial design period,
interventions are required to replace, overlay and/or rejuvenate elements of the pavement. Regular
pavement monitoring, with input from designs in accordance with this Manual, is essential to
determine when these interventions are to occur.
2.2
Reliability
The Austroads reliability guidelines (Part 2 of the Austroads guide, Section 2.2.1.2) consider only
the following structural distress modes:
January 2009
a)
b)
i)
fatigue of asphalt
ii)
iii)
for concrete pavements designed with Westergaard and finite element theory
i)
ii)
erosion of subbase/subgrade.
These reliability guidelines were based on general assessments of network performance. As the
underlying causes of performance vary widely over the network, these probabilities can not be
used for determining the reliability of a specific project or in the contract interface for a specific
project.
The reliability guidelines are not appropriate for assessing reliability for other distress modes
including, but not limited to, stripping or rutting of asphalt, roughness, skid resistance, and distress
caused by environmental factors.
The choice of reliability is influenced by the classification/function of the road, its location and
intended usage both prior to and after the completion of the design period. It is to be defined in
accordance with Main Roads policy. Judgement of the appropriateness of the reliability level has to
be based on the overall network performance of similar designs under similar conditions.
The minimum reliability levels to be used in the design of MR projects are given in Table 2.2-1.
These reliability levels are to be used for the design of both temporary and permanent pavements.
Table 2.2-1 Minimum reliability levels
Road category
Reliability (%)
All roads, or sections of road, where intervention costs are very high or traffic
management is very difficult1
97.5
Motorways, highways and main roads with lane AADT > 2000
97.5
Highways and main roads with lane AADT > 500 and 2000
95
90
Note:
1) Examples include high traffic volume metropolitan highways and arterials roads, mountainous sections, flood-ways,
intersections and approaches to structures such as bridges.
2.3
2.3.1
Appropriate pavement configurations vary markedly with the function of the road, traffic loading,
availability of materials and environment.
Pavement types and standards given in Table 2.3-1 to Table 2.3-5 are based on straight
alignments with flat grades. The minimum layer thicknesses given are absolute minimums and the
actual adopted layer thicknesses must be designed for fatigue and deformation requirements.
Temporary pavement types are for temporary use while the permanent pavement is constructed,
maintained, overlaid or re-constructed.
Where a permanent pavement is temporarily trafficked during construction, the damage resulting
from the temporary trafficking must be included in the design calculations for the permanent
pavement.
January 2009
2.3.2
Project-specific factors
There are a number of project-specific factors that could not be taken into account in the
development of the pavement type selection tables. Consequently, there will be occasions when
the pavement type and/or pavement details will need to be changed from those given in the tables.
Project-specific factors that may influence pavement selection include, but are not limited to:
a)
b)
pavement contact stresses higher than those used in the development of the current
pavement design models and specifications
c)
availability of materials
d)
e)
f)
g)
h)
i)
j)
k)
whole-of-life costs. Whole-of-life costs must include direct and indirect costs of interventions
such as raising drainage structures, increasing clearances, raising safety barriers, providing
temporary access, maintaining alternative routes, delays and disruptions to road users, etc.
l)
m)
ii)
concrete pavements
Concrete pavements must have their complete cross-section (thickness and width)
completed within a month to minimise differential and potentially detrimental
movement.
iii)
asphalt pavements
Asphalt pavements must be kept as dry as possible as water is a contributor to
stripping.
2.3.3
Specifications
Minimum pavement standards are given in Table 2.3-1 to Table 2.3-5, with primary selection based
on traffic loading in terms of the average daily ESA in the design lane in the year of opening.
When selecting a pavement standard from these tables for a particular traffic level, a standard for a
higher traffic category may be used. A standard for a lower traffic category may not be used.
There may be other factors that affect the choice of the pavement structure. Examples include
those described below:
1)
10
January 2009
For asphalt over granular pavements, the lowest whole-of-life cost usually occurs when the
asphalt thickness is sufficient to enable the asphalt to achieve a fatigue life at least the same
as a reasonable pavement design life and the subgrade rutting life provided by the cover
over subgrade.
While relatively thin1 asphalt surfaced granular pavements usually do not provide the lowest
long-term whole-of-life solution, other factors may have a significant effect on selection of the
pavement type, such as
a)
b)
c)
d)
noise.
In addition, in areas with surfaces subject to significant horizontal shear (such as grades, curves
and intersections), the minimum thickness and type of asphalt should be determined so that it
also accommodates this horizontal shear. In such cases the minimum thickness should be 100
mm. Thicker and/or polymer modified asphalt should be used for more severe applications.
Models for determining the required thicknesses to resist shear forces are not currently available
and local performance history is to be applied.
2)
b)
The design modulus for the base must be determined from repeat load triaxial testing
and in situ deflection analysis of a similar existing pavement. When in situ analysis is
not available, the maximum design modulus for the base shall be 350 MPa. The
absolute maximum design modulus of the base shall be 600 MPa.
c)
In all cases there must be a working platform and, where there is a reactive subgrade,
cover over reactive subgrade.
d)
e)
The potential for and risk associated with cracking must be recognized and accepted
and appropriate interventions allowed for in the whole-of-life costing and maintenance
during service;
f)
Modified granular pavements cannot be used where the average daily ESA in the
design lane in the year of opening is > 1000 or only a HILI pavement type is given in
Table 2.3-1.
Typical pavement cross-sections for various pavement categories are given in Chapter 11.
Relatively thin asphalt surfaced granular pavements are those where the fatigue life of the asphalt cannot
achieve a reasonable design life for the pavement. In these cases, the asphalt has to be regularly replaced,
rejuvenated and/or overlaid.
January 2009
11
Location
Temporary
pavement
Permanent
pavement
Type
< 10
10 to < 100
3000
SG(C) 2,3
AG(C) 2,3
SG(B) 2,3
AG(A-C)3
ASt(A)
HILI
SG(A) 2,3
HILI
Rural
SG(D) 2,3
AG(C)3
SG(C) 2,3
AG(C) 2,3
SG(B) 2,3
AG(A-C)3
ASt(A)
HILI
HILI
Urban
SG(D) 2,3
AG(C)3
SG(D) 2,3
AG(C)3
SG(C) 2,3
AG(C)3
SG(B) 2,3
AG(A-C)3
ASt(B)
AG(A)
ASt(B)
AG(A)
Rural
and
urban
Abbreviations
HILI
AG(A)
AG(B)
AG(C)
AG(A-C)
SG(A)
SG(B)
SG(C)
SG(D)
ASt(A)
ASt(B)
Asphalt over cement stabilised (Cat 1 or Cat 2) pavement as defined in Table 2.3-5.
Notes:
1) The average daily ESA in the design lane in the year of opening used in this table and elsewhere in this manual are based
on a heavy vehicle growth rate not exceeding 10.0% per annum. If the heavy vehicle growth rate exceeds 10.0% per
annum in any of the first five years after opening, then the average daily ESA in the design lane for the first five years after
opening shall be used instead.
2) Asphalt over granular pavement or HILI pavement instead of spray sealed granular pavement is required in areas with high
horizontal shear stresses such as intersections, grades and curves.
3) Pavements incorporating unbound granular material must not be used where there is an in-service exposure of the
unbound material to water to the extent that the water content of the granular material is likely to rise above the specified
maximum degree of saturation.
12
January 2009
Table 2.3-2 Pavement type details: high load intensity low intervention (HILI)
Surface1,2
Binder
Base
Jointed plain
(unreinforced)
concrete
Jointed plain
(unreinforced)
concrete
Jointed
reinforced
concrete
pavement
Jointed
reinforced
concrete
Continuously
reinforced
concrete
pavement
DG14HS3
(if required)
DG14HS3
(if required)
Full depth
asphalt
Subbase
Lean mix
concrete
(150 mm)
Continuously
reinforced
concrete
DG14HS3
Deep strength
asphalt
Flexible
composite
DG14HS3
DG20HM4,5
Subgrade
Cat 16 or
Cat 2
stabilised
granular7
(150 to
200 mm)
Type
Lean mix
concrete8
(175 to
250 mm)
Notes:
1) Surface must comply with the Main Roads pavement surface property standards given in the MR Pavement Surfacings
Manual. Asphalt over jointed plain concrete or jointed reinforced concrete not recommended because of reflective
cracking. Asphalt over continuously reinforced concrete used if required (usually to reduce noise). Special prime over
concrete required for any asphalt surface.
2) All surface asphalt must have an underlying S4.5S polymer modified seal (refer Section 3.5).
3) The minimum thickness of DG14HS for both surface and binder layers is 50 mm, except where the base layer is concrete
in which case the minimum thickness is 45 mm (surface layer) and 40 mm (binder layer).
4) The DG20HM base layer may be replaced with a different mix (DG14HS, DG14(320), DG20(320) or DG20(600)), subject
to the total thickness of binder layer plus surface layer being at least 100 mm where the base layer is not DG20HM or
DG14HS. DG28 cannot be used in HILI pavements.
5) The minimum thickness of the base layer in deep strength asphalt and flexible composite pavements must be such that
the total thickness of dense graded asphalt (base plus binder plus surface) is a minimum of 175 mm.
6) At this time, these material types are only available for project specific work with the MR project specific supplementary
specification for unbound granular materials. Contact Pavements & Materials branch for advice on their use.
7) A prime plus a SAMI (incorporating S4.5S polymer modified binder) must be included above the stabilised granular
subbase.
8) A 10 mm Class 170 bitumen seal protection layer must be included above the lean mix concrete.
January 2009
13
Binder
Base
4
AG(A)
DG14
(min 50 mm)
DG204
(min 50 mm)
DG284
(min 70 mm)
DG144
(min 50 mm)
DG14 (min 50 mm)
DG204
(min 50 mm)
DG284
(min 70 mm)
AG(B)6
AG(C)
Subgrade
Subbase
8
Standard1
Notes:
1) Thin asphalt-surfaced granular options may have a low asphalt fatigue life, which decreases significantly with increasing load
intensities. Frequently, where an asphalt surface is required for the whole project, a HILI pavement or a sealed granular
pavement, as relevant, provides the lowest whole-of-life cost. However, an asphalt over granular pavement may be the
appropriate choice where other factors dominate, such as when there is a restricted initial budget, short sections are to be
constructed (e.g. for high stress areas) or there is an absence of suitable materials for the HILI or sealed granular options. All
asphalt over granular pavements must only be constructed in an Unbound Granular Acceptable Environment.
2) Surface must comply with the Main Roads pavement surface property standards in the MR Pavement Surfacings Manual.
3) All surface asphalt must have an underlying seal (refer Section 3.5). Where the layer below the asphalt surface is also asphalt,
the seal must comprise S4.5S polymer modified binder. Where the layer below the asphalt surface is unbound granular
material, the unbound material must first be primed and the seal must comprise Class 170 bitumen and minimum 10 mm size
cover aggregate.
4) DG14, DG20 or DG28 mix shall be selected to suit the situation.
5) The unbound subbase must be primed and sealed with a minimum 10 mm nominal size Class 170 bitumen seal. For asphalt
over granular temporary pavements, where the average daily ESA in the design lane in the year of opening exceeds 1000,
A5S binder shall be used in the surface and binder asphalt layers. The unbound subbase can be replaced with a working
platform, in which case the pavement is called a full depth asphalt pavement. An unbound subbase shall not be used over a
working platform.
6) The unbound base must be primed and sealed with a minimum 10 mm nominal size Class 170 bitumen seal.
7) The unbound base must be primed and sealed with a minimum 10 mm nominal size Class 170 bitumen seal.
8) At this time, these material types are only available for project specific work with the MR project specific supplementary
specification for unbound granular materials. Contact Pavements & Materials branch for advice on their use.
9) A new MR specification for unbound granular pavement types is being developed. Until the new specification is issued, the
current standard specification types that can be used are given in Table 2.3-6.
14
January 2009
Project
location1, 2
Surface3
Base
Upper
subbase
Lower
subbase
SG(A)
AE
sprayed seal
B15
SB15
LSB15
SG(B)
AE
sprayed seal
B2
SB2
LSB2
SG(C)
AE
sprayed seal
B3
SB3
LSB3
AE
sprayed seal
B4
SB4
LSB4
Low pavement
water-content
sprayed seal
B5
SB5
LSB5
SG(D)
Subgrade
Refer
Section
3.6 and
Chapter 5
Notes:
1) AE: Unbound Granular Acceptable Environment (refer definitions).
2) In low pavement water-content environments the subbase layers can be assessed with an unsoaked CBR.
3) Surface must comply with the Main Roads pavement surface property standards given in the MR Pavement Surfacings
Manual.
4) A new MR specification for unbound granular pavement types is being developed. Until the new specification is issued, the
current standard specification types that can be used are given in Table 2.3-6.
5) At this time, these material types are only available for project specific work with the MR project specific supplementary
specification for unbound granular materials. Contact Pavements & Materials branch for advice on their use.
January 2009
15
OG10
(min 30 mm)
or
OG14
(min 40 mm)
Binder
DG14
(min 45 mm)
Base
Subbase
DG145
Cat 16 or Cat 2
stabilised granular7
(150 to 200 mm)
DG20
Cat 16 or Cat 2
stabilised granular7
(150 to 200 mm)
DG28
Cat 16 or Cat 2
stabilised granular7
(150 to 200 mm)
DG14
Cat 16 or Cat 2
stabilised granular7
(150 to 200 mm)
DG20
Cat 16 or Cat 2
stabilised granular7
(150 to 200 mm)
DG28
Cat 16 or Cat 2
stabilised granular7
(150 to 200 mm)
ASt(A)3
DG14
(min 45 mm)
ASt(B)4
OG10
(min 30 mm)
or
OG14
(min 40 mm)
DG14
(min 50 mm)
DG14
(min 50 mm)
Subgrade
Standard
Cat 16 or Cat 2
stabilised granular8
(min 150 mm)
Cat 15 or Cat 2
stabilised granular8
(min 150 mm)
Notes:
1) Surface must comply with the Main Roads pavement surface property standards given in the MR Pavement Surfacings
Manual.
2) All surface asphalt must have an underlying S4.5S polymer modified seal (refer Section 3.5)
3) The minimum thickness of the base layer in ASt(A) pavements must be such that the total thickness of dense graded
asphalt (base plus binder plus surface) is a minimum of 175 mm.
4) Standard ASt(B) is only suitable for use as temporary pavement and not permanent pavement. Where the average daily
ESA in the design lane in the year of opening exceeds 1000, A5S binder shall be used in the surface and binder asphalt
layers.
5) DG14, DG20 or DG28 mix shall be selected to suit the situation.
6) At this time, these material types are only available for project specific work with the MR project specific supplementary
specification for unbound granular materials. Contact Pavements & Materials branch for advice on their use.
7) A prime plus a SAMI (incorporating S4.5S polymer modified binder) must be included above the stabilised granular
subbase.
8) A prime and seal (minimum 14 mm nominal size with C170 bitumen) must be included above the stabilised granular base.
16
January 2009
Base materials
B1
Note 1
B2
1.1, 2.1
B3
1.1, 2.1
B4
1.1, 2.1
3.1
B5
2.2
3.2, 4.2
Subbase materials
SB1
Note 1
SB2
1.2, 2.3
SB3
2.3
SB4
2.3
3.3
SB5
2.4
3.4, 4.4
Note 1
LSB2
2.5
LSB3
2.5
LSB4
2.5
3.5
LSB5
2.5
3.5, 4.5
Notes:
1) At this time, material types B1, SB1 and LSB1 are only available for project specific work with the MR project specific
supplementary specification for unbound granular materials. Contact Pavements & Materials branch for advice on
their use.
2) A new MR specification for unbound granular pavement types is being developed. Until the new specification is
issued, the current standard specification types that can be used are given in this table.
2.4
Shoulders
2.4.1
General
There are two broad design alternatives for shoulders. The preferred design alternative is to
continue all layers of the structural pavement for the full width of all trafficked lanes and shoulders.
This alternative is generally more practical to construct with a lower risk of construction variability
and/or moisture ingress.
The second, less preferred alternative is to design and construct the shoulder to a lower structural
standard than the trafficked lanes. Further details on this option are given in Section 2.4.2.
In both cases, the structural section of the pavement (the section beneath the trafficked lanes)
must extend at least 200 mm beyond the delineated edge of the trafficked lanes for HILI
pavements, and at least 100 mm for other pavements.
2.4.2
Where a shoulder of a structural standard lower than that of the trafficked lanes of the pavement is
provided, the following must be adopted:
January 2009
17
a)
Total pavement thickness of the shoulder shall be the same as the adjacent through lane.
b)
Where the adjacent structural section of the pavement is full depth asphalt, deep strength
asphalt or flexible composite, thick asphalt over granular or thick asphalt over stabilised
pavement, the shoulder shall have the same asphalt surface, seal and binder courses as the
structural section. Beneath this, the required thickness of asphalt base, or alternatively, a
Type B1 or B2 unbound granular base with a polymer-modified seal, shall be designed to
ensure that the asphalt does not fatigue. The balance of material down to the top of the
working platform shall be at least a Type SB2 material. A pavement drain shall be provided
at the interface of the two pavements.
c)
Where the adjacent structural section of the pavement is asphalt surfaced granular or sealed
granular pavement, the shoulder shall have the same asphalt surface course(s) and/or seal
as the structural section. The shoulder shall also have the same granular base layer(s) and
materials as the structural section. Other layers required to make up the design thickness for
the shoulder are to be the same thickness and material type as used in the adjacent layers in
the structural pavement. The balance of the thickness of the shoulder to the level of the
lowest pavement layer is to be a select fill material. It must not be a general fill material.
d)
Where the adjacent structural section of the pavement is concrete, the shoulder shall have
the same asphalt surface, seal and binder courses (where they exist) as the structural
section. The minimum total thickness of DG14HS shall be 100 mm. Beneath this, the
required thickness of asphalt base, or alternatively, a Type B1 or B2 unbound granular base
with a polymer-modified seal, shall be designed to ensure that the asphalt does not fatigue.
The balance of material down to the top of the working platform shall be at least a Type SB2
material. A concrete edge drain shall be provided at the interface of the two pavements.
e)
In all cases sealing is to continue to the outside edge of any verge or outside edge of the
shoulder if a verge does not exist.
f)
A lower standard shoulder is not permitted on the high side of one-way crossfalls as this
could result in moisture entering the pavement.
Construction may be more difficult because of increased complexity and narrow working
widths.
Temporary trafficking of the shoulder during construction and future maintenance of the
through lanes may be restricted by the lower structural capacity of the shoulder.
Some shoulders may experience regular trafficking because of the nature of the road
alignment (e.g. curves, end of tapers, narrow through lanes, access points, intersections
and/or no edge lines).
2.4.3
Unsealed shoulders
It cannot be used on any pavement with average daily ESA > 1000 in the design lane in the
year of opening.
b)
The seal must extend at least 200 mm beyond the delineated edge of the trafficked lane.
18
January 2009
c)
The material in the shoulder must provide low permeability (max. 5 x 10-9 m/sec), low swell
(max 1.5% at maximum dry density (MDD) and optimum moisture content (OMC) after ten
days soaking) as well as sufficient strength to support traffic (minimum soaked CBR 40).
Because of the additional cost of the above shoulder material and the additional risk of loss of
service life or failure caused by the infiltration of water, whole-of-life costing must be carefully
assessed when unsealed shoulders are being considered.
January 2009
19
3
3.1
The design procedures in this manual assume that construction and maintenance are carried out
to the appropriate Main Roads standards. Unless such standards are met, the moduli, thicknesses
and/or other critical properties assumed in the design model may not be achieved and reduced
pavement performance could be expected.
3.2
Unbound granular
Unbound granular pavements are particularly susceptible to damage caused by the infiltration of
water resulting from: rain, water ponding and/or flooding during construction; water ponding and/or
flooding during service; and lack of an adequate seal and/or drainage maintenance in service.
Therefore:
Projects including unbound granular material should be programmed such that construction
of the pavement occurs at the time of year with the lowest likelihood of rain.
Weather forecasts must be regularly reviewed and pavements not constructed when rain is
likely and existing construction protected from the infiltration of water.
Contract provisions must allow for delays to construction caused by wet weather.
the pavement layer(s) cannot be constructed and maintained at less than their degree-ofsaturation limits
b)
establish clear responsibility and liability for infiltration of water during construction from
sources including rain, surface and ground water flow, inundation/flooding, and transfer from
new material with a high water content.
Unbound granular pavements in cuttings must have open table drains (see Figure 11.3-3).
During construction, rain gauges must be installed at least every 500 m along the job site. Rain
events must be recorded daily to help determine the possible exposure of the pavement to water
infiltration.
Where water does infiltrate granular material, destructive testing is required to assess the extent
and change to water content and degree of saturation, and hence determine what action is
required. Expensive re-work may be necessary to ensure the materials are brought within the
specified limits before overlying materials are placed.
3.3
Stabilised materials
Achieving the specified compaction standard in stabilised materials is essential for the
development of the stiffness and fatigue characteristics assumed in design, particularly for the
lower layers where maximum tensile stresses occur. To achieve the compaction standard, the
maximum compacted thickness of a single layer is to be 200 mm.
Multi-layer construction should be avoided wherever possible as layers will eventually delaminate.
Multi-layer construction requires the provision of shear resistance (i.e. bonding) between layers to
contribute to them acting together structurally.
Methods used to establish this for materials with a cementitious additive include:
20
January 2009
a)
b)
placement of a prime and a seal with a large cover aggregate (> 14 mm) on top of the lower
layer.
The second and subsequent layers must not be stabilised with in situ stabilisation methods,
even if the first layer is stabilised in situ.
b)
Multi-layer construction shall not be used for HILI pavements (the full thickness, between 150 mm
and 200 mm, must be placed in one layer).
Reflection of shrinkage cracks must be expected where material with cementitious additive is used.
In such situations, crack sealing maintenance work will be required.
3.4
In order to reduce the risk of requiring frequent repairs in difficult to access locations (e.g. under
heavy traffic), temporary connections for HILI pavements must be, as a minimum, asphalt over
cement stabilised (ASt(B)) pavement or asphalt over granular (AG(A)) pavement.
3.5
Asphalt pavements
Water contributes to stripping of the binder from the aggregate in asphalt pavements. To minimise
this, a polymer modified binder seal must be provided beneath all asphalt surface layers in
pavements where the layer beneath the surface layer is also asphalt. For effective waterproofing,
the seal must have a minimum spray rate of 1.2 litres per square metre and cover aggregate with
minimum nominal size of 10 mm. At locations subject to heavy braking and/or tight cornering, such
as intersections, roundabouts and approaches, excluding the seal can reduce the risk of shearing,
but increase the risk of stripping of lower layers. Provision of a seal in these locations is not
mandated. If a seal is provided the spray rate should be reduced to 1.0 to 1.2 litres per square
metre to reduce the risk of shearing.
The binder for the waterproofing seal shall be an S4.5S polymer modified binder.
Use of SBS polymer modified binder in the asphalt can also help minimise stripping.
Moisture ingress during construction can lead to stripping. Dense graded asphalt mixes of 20 mm
nominal size or larger are particularly prone to moisture ingress. To reduce the risk of moisture
ingress, construction sequencing should not leave DG20 layers exposed for more than ten
calendar days and DG28 layers must not be left exposed for more than two calendar days. If this is
unavoidable, a seal or minimum 50 mm DG14 layer should be placed to provide protection from
moisture ingress.
3.6
Working platform
A working platform must be used for all HILI and ASt(A) pavements and is recommended for all
other pavements with average daily ESA 1000 in the design lane in the year of opening.
A working platform must be used for all temporary pavements where the design subgrade CBR is
less than 5%.
The working platform is located below the lowest pavement layer. Its function is to provide:
a)
January 2009
21
b)
c)
The design, construction and maintenance of the working platform are the responsibility of the
Contractor, but must include the specified in-service requirements given in Section 5.5. The inservice requirements are for the sole purpose of providing a satisfactory substrate layer for the full
service life of the pavement.
3.7
Settlement
Neither this manual nor Part 2 of the Austroads guide include provisions to deal with settlement
below the pavement layers. Where required, additional geotechnical investigations and
assessments shall be carried out to determine if and how much settlement may occur. If settlement
is likely, pre-treatment (e.g. drainage and/or surcharge of the formation) is required to reduce the
extent of settlement after the pavement is constructed.
3.8
Pavement surface courses, seals and all drainage must be adequately maintained. Failure to
maintain seals and drainage will cause, at least, loss of service life in most pavements and at
worst, failure. Unbound granular pavements are particularly susceptible to loss of service life and
failure caused by the infiltration of water.
Rain following a long period of dry weather is particularly hazardous because:
a)
During long periods of dry weather there may be no stimulus to adequately maintain seals
and drainage in a budget constrained environment, which could result in pavements that are
not protected upon the onset of wet weather.
b)
Shrinkage of materials may generate cracks that will allow rapid entry of water.
3.9
Pavement damage resulting from temporarily trafficking pavement layers below the final surface
must be included in the pavement design calculations.
3.10
For the purpose of determining survey levels, the thickness of seals and primerseals shall be taken
as the average least dimension (ALD) of the cover aggregate. If the ALD is not known at the time
of design, the ALD can be estimated as 6 mm for 10 mm nominal size cover aggregate and 9 mm
for 14 mm nominal size cover aggregate.
22
January 2009
4
4.1
ENVIRONMENT
General
Water and temperature have a major effect on pavement performance. Temperature directly
affects the performance of seals, asphalt and concrete, and water directly affects the performance
of unbound granular pavements and subgrades. Water can also affect asphalt. Knowledge of
environmental conditions is essential for the design, construction and maintenance of pavements.
4.2
Climatic zones
Figure 4.2-1 illustrates Australian climatic zones on the basis of temperature and humidity. Most of
coastal Queensland is classified as having hot humid summers. Western areas have hot dry
summers with either mild or cold winters. Further information on climate zones and climate
averages is available from the Commonwealth Bureau of Meteorology at www.bom.gov.au.
January 2009
23
4.3
Water environment
Average annual rainfall and evaporation rates for Queensland are shown in Figure 4.3-1 and
Figure 4.3-2.
24
January 2009
MI =
100 ( s d )
PET
It follows that when rainfalls are lower than PET, MI is negative and the climate is dry. When
rainfalls are higher than PET, the MI is positive and climate is wet. The climate classification based
on MI is given in Table 4.3-1.
Figure 4.3-3 shows the MI values for Queensland. A comparison between Figure 4.3-1 and
Figure 4.3-2 shows that regions with a rainfall below 600 mm have a negative MI and hence are
dry as the evapotranspiration exceeds the rainfall. Areas with an annual rainfall less than 500 mm
are semi-arid.
January 2009
25
Table 4.3-1 Climatic types according to the total moisture index (MI)
Symbol
Climatic type
MI
Very humid
Over 100
B4
Humid
80 to100
B3
Humid
60 to 80
B2
Humid
40 to 60
B1
Humid
20 to 40
C2
Sub-humid
0 to 20
C1
Sub-dry
-33 to -0
Semi-arid
-66 to -33
Dry
-110 to -66
26
January 2009
4.4
4.4.1
General
It is not possible to completely prevent the influence of water on pavements and subgrades.
Increased water content in the pavement, including temporary pavements, and/or subgrade can
occur for reasons such as:
a)
b)
inundation
c)
d)
ponded water
e)
construction water
f)
g)
soil suction from areas such as adjacent ponded water and/or water tables. In high capillary
rise soils, water as deep as 10 m can influence the pavement and subgrade.
Selection of pavement type and overall design (cross-section, embankment height, surface and
sub-surface drainage, etc.) depends not only on load intensity, material availability and industry
capacity, but also on exposure to water during construction and service life.
4.4.2
Design requirements
b)
verge with low permeability and low swell on the high side of one-way cross-falls including at
least an additional 100 m at either end from where the transition to a crowned pavement
commences
c)
d)
i)
table drains (when used) located well away from the formation (min. 5 m) in flat or
lightly undulating country or excluding them altogether. Water should always be
directed away from the formation or, if this is not possible, drains should be located at
least 5 m away from the edge of the formation.
ii)
edge drains on embankments and directing the concentrated outflows away from the
formation via drains with impermeable lining
iii)
full-width sealed formation and concrete channel in cuttings or, preferably for unbound
granular pavements, providing table drains in cuttings.
cuttings
Subsoil drains must be provided at all times. There may also be the need for a drainage layer
to intercept water under positive head, break capillary rise and/or provide additional
subsurface drainage to intercept ground water. In cuttings with rock floors a stabilised infill
layer with surface cross-fall must be provided so that water ponding does not occur.
e)
January 2009
27
The minimum embankment height where there is no inundation and/or standing water or
water table, measured to the bottom of the lowest pavement layer at the outside edge, above
the natural surface should be
f)
i)
in regions with Thornthwaite Index 0 and rainfall > 500 mm/year, above the influence
of any water, but not less than 200 mm from the natural ground to the underside of the
lowest pavement layer
ii)
In regions with Thornthwaite Index < 0, in particular for reactive subgrades where there
is no cover to reactive subgrade provided, the thickness should be determined as a
balance between keeping the pavement above water and minimising the potential for
change in subgrade water content that could cause volume change. In such areas, the
minimum height should be 100 mm, unless some unusual condition, such as a perched
water table, irrigation, etc. is likely to exist. The slope of the edge of the pavement
should be 25%.
inundation
Where inundation of any part of a pavement is possible, an assessment of the amount of
water infiltration, either caused by positive head or capillary action, has to be carried out and
the effect on the pavement and subgrade determined. Where it is determined that a loss of
service life and/or pavement damage is likely, alternative designs have to be considered.
These could include re-alignment, higher embankments and/or use of a pavement type that
is less sensitive to water, such as a concrete pavement.
g)
Asphalt surface layers are not impermeable and must have a polymer modified seal
immediately beneath them (refer Section 3.5).
h)
Pavement must be properly compacted right to its edge, and any excess, poorly compacted
paving material beyond the seal edges is to be removed.
i)
kerbed pavements
Subsoil drains must be provided at all times.
j)
4.4.3
During construction
Good surface and subsurface drainage must be provided and maintained at all times. Surfaces
must be left free-draining and compacted following completion of work and before any rain.
A working platform provides protection to the subgrade. Where neither a working platform nor
some other form of positive protection is provided to the subgrade, reworking and/or delay must be
factored into the construction program to overcome the effects of rain and/or inundation during
construction.
Asphalt and unbound granular materials are extremely susceptible to damage resulting from
increased water content during construction.
4.5
Where it is decided to provide a road that is not adequately protected from the infiltration of water,
such as very low volume roads, particularly in arid regions, a high water content management plan
28
January 2009
solution may be adopted with the approval of the General Manager (Engineering & Technology).
This involves monitoring the pavement after rain and/or inundation and/or when water has been
standing and, if necessary, restricting the movement of traffic. Restrictions could include traffic
limitations on the outside edge of the pavement, restricted loads and so on, until the pavement and
subgrade have dried. This relaxation in design must not be applied to roads with average daily
ESA > 100 in the design lane in the year of opening.
For all other cases, a concrete or asphalt surfaced concrete pavement must be provided with a
design subgrade strength that reflects the measures to control volume change as per Clause 5.3.
4.6
Temperature environment
The effect of temperature on asphalt is incorporated into the design method through the use of the
Weighted Mean Annual Pavement Temperature (WMAPT) for the project location. The WMAPTs
for various sites in Queensland are listed in Appendix 2 of this manual.
Unbound granular pavements, except for seals, are normally not influenced by temperature.
The influence of temperature has been accommodated in the specifications for concrete
pavements. However, during construction the whole concrete pavement cross-section must be
completed within a month to minimise problems generated by differential movement.
In Flexible Composite pavements, the asphalt must be placed within a month of placement of the
lean mix concrete subbase. If this is not possible, a SAMI must be provided above the lean mix
concrete subbase, prior to placing any asphalt, as wide shrinkage cracks may occur.
January 2009
29
5
5.1
SUBGRADE
General
The subgrade can comprise alternatives including one or a combination of the following:
a)
working platform
b)
capping layer
c)
drainage layer
d)
select fill
e)
general fill
f)
g)
natural unprocessed in situ material, other than that moved from another location and/or
compacted.
In pavement thickness design calculations, fill and/or in situ untreated subgrade materials to a
minimum depth of 1.5 metres below the underside of the lowest pavement layer must be included.
This manual describes soils according to the Unified Soil Classification System, which uses a twoletter code to indicate soils classification (refer Appendix 1).
5.2
5.2.1
Subgrade assessment
General
b)
suitability of in situ material for any necessary treatments and the subgrade design modulus
to permit the design of the pavement.
Testing of subgrade materials to determine design inputs shall be undertaken in the planning and
design phase.
Subgrade assessment can be made difficult by highly variable natural materials and changes to
the subgrade material during construction. Accordingly, the subgrade materials must be
reassessed immediately prior to pavement construction, in addition to any prior assessments. The
pavement design as a whole must also be subsequently reassessed and amended to reflect any
change. Where prior assessment has been adequate, few changes should be required.
Allowances must be made in the construction contract for changes to the pavement design and
changes to subgrade treatments during the construction phase.
The requirements for subgrade testing prior to pavement construction also apply to temporary
pavements.
Subgrade samples shall be selected and tested for:
a)
plastic limit
b)
liquid limit
c)
d)
e)
weighted plasticity index (WPI), which is the plastic limit multiplied by the percent passing the
AS 0.425 mm sieve
30
January 2009
f)
california bearing ratio (CBR) and swell determined at the density and moisture content as
provided in Section 5.2.2.
The in situ untreated subgrade shall also be tested with a dynamic cone penetrometer (DCP).
Where there is to be any subgrade stabilisation, the subgrade shall be tested in accordance with
AS1289.4.2.1 Soil Chemical Tests Determination of the sulphate content of a natural soil and the
sulphate content of the groundwater-Normal method. The soluble sulphate content shall not
exceed 0.2%.
Many extremely weathered and highly weathered rocks in Queensland (especially sedimentary
rocks such as siltstone, mudstone and shale) tend to break down during construction to form
moisture-sensitive silts and clays. For such subgrade materials, the effects of construction should
be simulated by either repeated cycles of compacting the material or other forms of pre-treatment,
prior to compacting the specimens for testing.
A typical pre-treatment is crushing to the size specified for selected material, then artificial
weathering by 10 cycles of soaking for 1820 hours followed by drying on a hot plate but without
baking, and finally 3 cycles of standard proctor compaction at just under optimum moisture content.
5.2.2
CBR testing of in situ untreated subgrade and fill material to determine the design CBR and swell
shall comprise single point CBR tests in accordance with Q113C. Testing shall target at most
95.0% maximum dry density (MDD) and 100% optimum moisture content (OMC) using standard
compactive effort. The target MDD for testing can be increased to 97.0% for Class A and Class B
fill materials.
Soaking periods for determining both CBR and swell shall be as follows:
a)
testing under ten-day soaked CBR conditions must be undertaken in the following
circumstances
i)
ii)
cuttings at or below the water table level that existed prior to the cutting or where
seepage is likely
iii)
locations where the water table is sufficiently close to the top of the subgrade to
influence the water content of the subgrade and/or pavement materials
iv)
urban areas where infiltration from kerb and channel or unsealed medians is likely
v)
vi)
situations where factors such as high rainfall and high traffic volume and/or previous
experience indicate that soaked conditions should apply.
b)
c)
four-day soaked for locations with circumstances not described under points a) or b) above.
5.2.3
When a statistical analysis of CBR data is used to determine the design CBR, this is to be
undertaken by calculating the lower 10th percentile of the laboratory CBR test results and the lower
10th percentile of the DCP test results. The design CBR is then the minimum of these two values.
Use of an average CBR value for design is not appropriate.
5.2.4
Several MR Regions have considerable experience and performance data on specific soil types in
local climatic and topographic conditions. Use of this information reduces the cost of subgrade
evaluation and also helps ensure a consistent approach to the determination of subgrade CBR
within the local area.
January 2009
31
Use of this approach involves the assessment of subgrades on the basis of geological, topographic
and drainage information, together with regular routine soil classification tests. Once these factors
are assessed, a presumptive design CBR is assigned on the basis of previous test data and
performance for similar soils in similar conditions.
5.2.5
There are numerous factors affecting the moisture content of the subgrade throughout the life of
the pavement. It is therefore often difficult to predict with certainty what the actual operating
moisture content will be. For example seepage from higher ground, either along the pavement or
within cuts, can cause fluctuations in subgrade moisture conditions. Thus, in determining the likely
in-service moisture content, some error is quite possible.
In order to determine the possible consequences of any error, the sensitivity of the subgrade
strength/stiffness to changes in moisture content should be considered. In general, the following
comments apply:
a)
b)
c)
CL or CH clay
Small fluctuations in water content may produce large variations in volume, and there may be
large changes in strength/stiffness, particularly if the moisture content is near or above
optimum. Typically these soils attract and retain water through matrix suction.
Moisture from seepage, infiltration through the surface, and water table fluctuations can be
controlled by installing properly designed pavement and subsoil drains. However, subsoil drains
are effective only when subgrade moisture is subject to hydrostatic head (positive pore pressures).
It is not uncommon in wet regions for fine grained subgrade materials (silts and clays) to have
equilibrium moisture content above optimum moisture content (standard compactive effort).
However, because pore pressures are not positive, they cannot be drained. While subsurface
drainage does play an important role in moisture control, care must be taken not to make
unrealistic assumptions about the effect of subsurface drains on subgrade moisture condition.
5.3
5.3.1
b)
pavement deformation, that can cause loss of density and loss of strength
c)
cracking that can allow the infiltration of contaminants (such as water and incompressible
material) and also loss of strength, particularly fatigue capacity.
A whole-of-life assessment (refer Section 10) should be carried out to determine the most
appropriate action to address potential volume change. Options can include one or a combination
of the following:
a)
b)
32
January 2009
c)
It is generally accepted that minimising volume change is the best solution in cases of:
a)
b)
c)
pavements that include stiff layers (e.g. cement stabilised materials and/or concrete)
d)
b)
c)
5.3.2
As well as reducing the entry of water into the subgrade, the following measures can be instituted
as appropriate to aid in minimising volume changes:
a)
b)
providing an adequate thickness of cover over reactive subgrade, as detailed in Section 5.3.3
c)
in arid and semi-arid regions, providing flat embankment batters (4:1) and low formation
height (underside of lowest pavement layer a minimum of 100 mm above the natural surface
at all points), whenever possible;
d)
using lime stabilisation to improve the volume stability of the upper layer of expansive clay
subgrade
e)
f)
using supplementary specifications to control the moisture content of the top 300 mm of the
untreated subgrade prior to and during the placement of overlying layers, so that the
moisture content after placement of the pavement is as near as possible to the equilibrium
g)
h)
5.3.3
A sufficient cover thickness of non-reactive material over a reactive subgrade can assist in limiting
the amount of shape loss evident at the pavement surface. The required thickness of non-reactive
material is defined as cover over reactive subgrade, and may include select fill, working platform,
drainage layer, treated material and/or capping layer (refer Section 5.6 of this manual).
Cover over reactive subgrade is recommended for all pavements where the untreated subgrade
material has a swell greater than or equal to 0.5%, as follows:
a)
b)
potential swell of the untreated subgrade material 0.5% and < 7.0%
A geotechnical assessment should be carried out and the specified requirements of the
geotechnical assessment applied. If a geotechnical assessment is not carried out, the
minimum thickness shall be as per Table 5.3-1.
January 2009
33
Provision of minimum cover over reactive subgrade is mandatory for HILI pavements. For all other
pavements the minimum cover is recommended but may be reduced where this decision is
justifiable based on acceptance of reduced performance and whole-of-life cost considerations.
Table 5.3-1 Cover over reactive subgrade
Untreated subgrade swell (%)
7.0
1000
600
150
A geotechnical assessment means assessment and advice from a geotechnical engineer. Their
assessment is likely to include shallow boreholes, with continuous undisturbed sampling, to allow
the extents of expansive material, shrink swell index testing, moisture content variations, suction
testing and x-ray diffraction testing to be determined. A review of the maintenance history and
condition of existing pavements and structures should also be undertaken.
5.4
When used as cover over reactive subgrade, the required material properties for select fill and
treated materials (in addition to the requirements in the Standard Specifications) are given in
Table 5.4-1.
Table 5.4-1 Material properties for select fill and treated material
Depth below the working platform1
Property
150 mm
> 150 mm
10
10
75
75
< 1200
< 2200
0.5
2.5
% passing 0.075 mm
430 inclusive
430 inclusive
>4
>4
Swell (%)
1) Where there is no working platform, this is the depth below the bottom of the lowest pavement layer.
2) Tested in accordance with Q113C (97.0% MDD, OMC, standard compactive effort) and soaked for a period of ten days.
Material may be chosen with a minimum CBR greater than specified above, up to 15%, if this is considered to provide a
better overall design solution.
5.5
Working platform
Refer to Section 3.6 of this manual to determine where a working platform is required.
5.5.1
In-service requirements
The working platform is required to meet the following minimum standards necessary for it to
function when it becomes part of the subgrade for the operating service life of the pavement
structure:
a)
be comprised of plant mixed stabilised granular material of a standard no less than Type
SB2, with a minimum 2.0% of either cement, blended cement or cementitious blend
b)
34
January 2009
c)
d)
primed (AMC0) and sealed (10 mm aggregate, Class 170 bitumen) so that its surface is
waterproof, safe and adequate for the Contractors operations
e)
have a surface maintained with a geometric tolerance of 10 mm of the specified height and
a maximum deviation from a 3 m straight edge of 8 mm at all points on the surface.
The above requirements are a minimum only for the purpose of providing a layer beneath the final
pavement, and are not necessarily sufficient for a working platform subject to construction traffic or
a construction platform for the pavement layers. In addition to the above requirements, the
Contractor shall determine what, if any, other standards are needed to meet the Contractors
design requirements listed in Section 5.5.2.
5.5.2
As a minimum, the working platform must satisfy the requirements of Section 5.5.1. In addition, the
working platform shall be designed by the Contractor to meet the particular requirements of the
project including, but not limited to, the following considerations:
a)
b)
the environment including, but not limited to, rainfall, temperature, surface and sub-surface
water conditions including location of the water table and standing water, surface sources of
water and drainage, and sub-surface sources of water and drainage
c)
the Contractors construction traffic and equipment the Contractor intends to use to construct
the pavement and other works
d)
the full operating life of the working platform including, but not limited to
i)
actual period during which the working platform will be required to provide access for
construction traffic
ii)
actual periods during which the working platform will be required to provide a platform
for construction traffic and equipment, including for construction of the pavement layers
iii)
actual periods during which it is not in use prior to the construction of the overlying
pavement
e)
provide protection to the underlying layers, including protection from water and stress
f)
g)
h)
meet in-service requirements as specified in Section 5.5.1 for the overlying pavement
structure
i)
be sufficiently stiff to enable the placement and compaction of the overlying pavement layers
in accordance with their specified requirements.
As part of the design of the pavement and earthworks, the height of the top and bottom of the
working platform shall be specified based on a working platform thickness of 150 mm. If the
Contractor requires a working platform thicker than 150 mm, this can be achieved by either or both
of the following:
a)
b)
5.6
Capping
Capping shall be provided where the in situ untreated subgrade has a design CBR < 3.0%. The
required capping thickness is given in Table 5.6-1. For subgrade design CBR 1.0%, a specific
assessment is required.
January 2009
35
Materials that can be used to make up the required capping thickness include standard
specification unbound granular materials, select fill, treated material and drainage layer material.
Table 5.6-1 Capping thickness
5.7
150
200
300
400
Drainage layer
A drainage layer shall be provided where water exposure occurs, or is likely to occur, from beneath
the pavement (because of capillary rise and/or positive head).
Where the material on which the drainage layer is placed has a CBR 1.0% at the time of
construction, determined by in situ dynamic cone penetrometer testing, the drainage layer shall
consist of a geotextile-wrapped 300 mm thick rock fill.
Where the material on which the drainage layer is placed has a CBR of < 1.0% at the time of
construction, a specific assessment to determine the required rock fill properties and thickness is
necessary.
5.8
One or more subgrade treatments (i.e. cover over reactive subgrade, working platform, capping
and/or drainage layer) may be required and, in some cases, one treatment can perform the
function of another.
A summary of applicability, to be read in conjunction with the definition of the treatment and the
application instructions, is given in Table 5.8-1.
36
January 2009
CBR (%)
Swell (%)
Water exposure
< 3.0 1
3.0
< 0.5
2
0.5
< 0.5
0.5
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
CT1
CT2
CT3
CT4
CT5
CT6
CT7
CT8
Working platform
Treatments
required
(Required
if shaded)
For CBR 1.0%, the composition and thickness of the capping is subject to a specific assessment.
2)
Water exposure is determined by assessing whether water flow from an internal and/or external source and/or soil
suction effects from a high water table can adversely affect the properties of the pavement and/or the working platform,
capping, select fill and/or treated material.
3)
37
If the total thickness of the working platform plus drainage layer is greater than or equal to
the required cover over reactive subgrade thickness, no additional thickness of material is
necessary to satisfy the cover over reactive subgrade requirement. Therefore, the treatment
required is a working platform placed on top of a drainage layer.
b)
If the total thickness of the working platform plus drainage layer is less than the required
cover over reactive subgrade thickness, then additional thickness of material is necessary to
satisfy the cover over reactive subgrade requirement. The additional material can be
additional working platform, drainage layer, select fill and/or treated material.
If the thickness of the drainage layer is less than the required capping thickness, then additional
thickness of material is necessary to satisfy the capping requirement. The additional material can
be additional drainage layer, or other suitable capping material (refer Section 5.6) placed on top of
the drainage layer. Following this consideration:
a)
If the total thickness of the working platform plus drainage layer plus other capping material
is greater than or equal to the required cover over reactive subgrade thickness, no additional
thickness of material is necessary to satisfy the cover over reactive subgrade requirement.
38
January 2009
b)
5.9
If the total thickness of the working platform plus drainage layer plus other capping material
is less than the required cover over reactive subgrade thickness, then additional thickness of
material is necessary to satisfy the cover over reactive subgrade requirement. The additional
material can be additional working platform, drainage layer, select fill and/or treated material.
The procedures presented in Part 2 of the Austroads guide are used to assign subgrade design
moduli, including sublayering. In addition to the Austroads procedures, the adopted design moduli
are limited by the maximum values given in Table 5.9-1.
For working platform, the maximum vertical design moduli must also be limited by the values given
in Table 6.4 of Part 2 of the Austroads guide. Austroads Table 6.5 cannot be used for working
platform.
In assigning Poissons Ratio, subgrade materials with CBR less than or equal to 10% are assumed
to be cohesive, and materials with CBR greater than 10% are assumed to be non-cohesive.
Table 5.9-1 Maximum subgrade design moduli
Subgrade material
Maximum vertical
design moduli (MPa)
Capping
30
100
150
150
Drainage layer
150
Stabilised subgrade
200
200
Where capping is required (refer Section 5.6), any materials (e.g. drainage layer, select fill and/or
treated material where they form part of the capping) used to satisfy the required capping thickness
are not individually modelled in the pavement design. Instead, the pavement thickness design is
based on a design subgrade CBR of 3.0% at the top of the capping.
January 2009
39
6
6.1
6.1.1
PAVEMENT MATERIALS
Unbound granular
General
In unbound granular base layers covered by seals or thin asphalt, the pavement material is subject
to dynamic loading and stress reversals, and has less containment. Under these conditions some
tensile capacity is essential and this is supplied by appropriate grading, type and quantity of clay
and some water content. However, when the water content is too high, unbound granular base
materials will fail rapidly under dynamic loading. Consequently, it is essential that the base layer be
dried back to, and maintained at, less than the specified degree-of-saturation limits.
Lower unbound granular layers are subject to less dynamic loading and stress reversals and have
significant containment. Consequently, a larger range of grading and clay contents can be
accommodated. The following should be considered when choosing a material with the
specification requirements:
a)
Coarse graded materials, particularly those with low clay contents, are permeable and prone
to segregation.
b)
Gap graded materials are more permeable and prone to segregation than coarse graded
materials but can be used with additional care.
c)
Well graded material with appropriate clay content provides the best overall service but may
be more expensive.
d)
Fine graded materials and/or materials with excess fines have less permeability and are less
prone to segregation but may require additional attention to achieve their specified CBR
requirement.
As materials generally used for these layers have high fines and clay, and are more sensitive to
water, adherence to degree-of-saturation limits is necessary.
Where design, construction and maintenance factors such as sealing, embankment height,
drainage/capillary break layers and pavement and/or subsoil drains, and other drainage are
insufficient to maintain the pavement at less than the specified degree of saturation in service,
unbound granular pavements must not be used.
Construction of unbound granular layers is particularly difficult if rain occurs prior to sealing2.
Destructive testing will usually be required to determine if degree-of-saturation limits have been
exceeded, particularly in the lower covered layers. It is essential that adequate drainage, including
surface, side and subsurface drainage be established and maintained and an appropriate
construction program be adopted to minimise exposure to water and prevent inundation. In
particular:
a)
The responsibility and liability for the testing and rework caused by water infiltration must be
clearly established in the contract.
b)
The contract arrangement must be established to recognise the potential need for delay and
protection during rain and construction in the period where it is less likely to rain.
6.1.2
The design moduli for unbound granular materials are determined using the procedures given in
the Austroads Guide. In addition to the requirements of Part 2 of the Austroads guide, the adopted
This may not only increase the water content potentially beyond the degree-of-saturation limits but may
also prevent the pavement drying back to the degree-of-saturation limits from the compaction moisture
content.
40
January 2009
design moduli for materials conforming to Main Roads standards must not exceed the presumptive
maximum values given in Table 6.1-1.
Tables 6.4 and 6.5 in Part 2 of the Austroads guide list maximum vertical moduli for the top
sublayer of unbound granular material under various thicknesses and stiffnesses of overlying
materials. Table 6.5 may be used for Main Roads base Type B1. The values in Table 6.4 may be
used for all other unbound granular materials complying with Main Roads standard specifications.
Table 6.1-1 Maximum vertical design moduli for unbound granular materials
6.2
Material type
Maximum vertical
design modulus (MPa)
B1
500
B2, B3, B4
350
B5, SB1
300
250
SB5, LSB1
200
150
For the purpose of thickness design, modified granular materials are characterised in the same
manner as for unbound granular materials, including sublayering. The vertical design modulus
shall be assessed through repeat load triaxial testing and deflection assessment of a similar
pavement, but shall not not exceed 600 MPa. Where deflection assessment is not undertaken, the
maximum design modulus shall be 350 MPa.
Where cementitiously modified granular materials are used, they must be part of a full depth
modified pavement or covered by either:
a)
b)
6.3
6.3.1
b)
c)
increase stiffness.
January 2009
41
b)
Increasing cement content normally improves the durability of cement materials, but a quantitative
measure of durability and a test to assess it are under development. Where cemented materials
are proposed, a specific assessment of the required additive content is to be carried out.
6.3.2
Cementitiously stabilised materials are assumed to be isotropic with a Poissons ratio of 0.20.
The moduli of cemented materials are dependent on a number of factors, including:
a)
b)
c)
d)
curing regime.
The maximum design moduli of stabilised materials, the unbound materials to be used and the
minimum UCS strengths are given in Table 6.3-1.
Table 6.3-1 Design modulus, material and UCS for stabilised materials
Category
Maximum design
modulus1 (MPa)
Material to be used
Cat 1
3500
Granular B1
3.0 to 4.0
Cat 2
2000
Granular B1 or B2
2.0 to 3.0
Notes:
1) These maximum design moduli assume seven days initial curing with negligible traffic.
2) The minimum and maximum seven day UCS values shown are based on a cementitious blend of 75% cement and 25% flyash.
Where another combination of stabilising agent is to be used, the minimum and maximum seven day UCS values are to be
determined through laboratory testing to ensure 1 year UCS values equivalent to the 75/25 cement/flyash blend.
In a post cracked phase, Cat 1 and Cat 2 stabilised materials are considered to be crossanisotropic (degree of anisotropy of 2) with a presumptive vertical modulus of 500 MPa, Poissons
ratio of 0.35 and no sublayering.
6.3.3
Cracking
Shrinkage cracking in materials with a cementitious additive is inevitable. Cracks that reflect to the
pavement surface allow the entry of water, which frequently accelerates distress through
weakening of pavement and subgrade layers, erosion of cemented material and/or pumping of
fines from below the cemented layers.
The width of shrinkage cracks is minimised by using low plasticity materials and low treatment
strengths.
Section 6.4.4.4 of Part 2 of the Austroads guide and Section 6.3.4 of this manual discuss cracking
reduction measures.
Pavements and/or pavement layers that have been treated with a cementitious agent crack at
intervals, dependent on the volume change, tensile strength, subgrade and loading. The rate of
crack propagation can be explained via fracture mechanics.
Cracking can occur:
a)
where environmentally induced stress exceeds the tensile strength of the bound material.
This is most common where the binding agent is cementitious and can occur early in the life
of the pavement.
42
January 2009
b)
at the end of the fatigue life as a result of applied load applications exceeding the fatigue
limit.
volume change in pavement layers resulting from moisture and/or temperature changes,
where constraint(s) exist (which is normally the case but can be partly reduced, such as
between the base and subbase in concrete pavements)
b)
c)
If cracking occurs on, propagates to, and/or reflects through to the surface of the pavement
(described as surface cracking in the balance of this document), results may include:
a)
detrimental materials such as water and incompressible material entering the pavement and
subgrade, causing damage and failure
b)
c)
6.3.4
Minimising cracks
Where surface cracking is likely to occur in the design period, the design process must provide a
means of minimising the cracking. There is no known mechanism that will guarantee that reflective
cracking will not occur. Examples of treatments that aim to minimise cracking include:
a)
use of overlying layers of other materials in the original structure to minimise the extent
and/or size of cracks. For example, over a cementitiously stabilised layer, placing a polymer
modified seal and either a minimum thickness of 175 mm of dense graded asphalt, or a
combination of granular material and asphalt such that 0.75 x (thickness of granular material
cover in mm) + (thickness of asphalt cover in mm) 175 mm.
b)
use of a slow-setting stabilising agent that results in low early strength to generate closer
spaced cracks, with consequent smaller crack widths. It is generally believed that an
increased number of narrower cracks will lead to less reflective cracking.
c)
specifying within the maintenance requirements crack filling and/or crack sealing and/or
placing a polymer modified seal or geotextile seal and/or overlaying any cracks immediately.
In situations where surface cracking is likely to occur, design options involving cemented materials
should be avoided if:
a)
cracks cannot be filled and/or covered immediately, to prevent damage to the pavement
b)
maintenance is difficult because of constrained access (e.g. high traffic volumes, multi-lane
carriageways, lane closure constraints), or excessive travel time for maintenance resources
c)
d)
6.4
Lean mix concrete is used as a subbase layer for concrete pavements and flexible composite
pavements.
A presumptive modulus of 10,000 MPa is adopted for design purposes. This modulus value is low
when compared with laboratory values as it accounts for the effects of shrinkage cracking and
construction variability. In a post cracked phase, lean mix concrete is considered to be
isotropic with a presumptive modulus of 700 MPa, Poissons ratio of 0.2 and no sublayering.
January 2009
43
6.5
6.5.1
Asphalt
Asphalt types
Asphalt types are to be selected in accordance with the minimum standards in Clause 2.3 and the
requirements to suit the situation, such as degree of horizontal shear.
6.5.2
Section 6.5.3.3 of Part 2 of the Austroads guide provides guidance for estimating design moduli
based on the resilient modulus measured using the standard indirect tensile test (ITT) adjusted to
the in-service temperature (WMAPT), in-service air voids and the rate of traffic loading in the roadbed. Applying this method to Main Roads ITT data resulted in the asphalt design moduli for a
WMAPT of 32C (given in Table 6.5-1), which are to be adopted for Main Roads projects.
Adoption of moduli and/or binder volumes based on test results for specific individual mixes is not
permitted unless all of the following requirements are met:
a)
b)
adequate tests, including modulus and fatigue, are available to assess variability and select a
design modulus with 95% confidence
c)
sufficient additional controls are established to ensure the properties are consistently
achieved.
44
January 2009
Equation 6-1
where,
EWMAPT
E320C
WMAPT
WMAPT in 0C
A modulus of 800 MPa shall be used for open graded asphalt for all WMAPTs and design speeds.
WMAPTs for Queensland are given in Appendix 2.
In the absence of more reliable information about the heavy vehicle operating speed, presumptive
operating speed values for various designated speed limits are given in Table 6.5-2.
Table 6.5-1 Asphalt design moduli at WMAPT of 32oC
January 2009
Asphalt mix
type
Binder
type
Volume of
binder (%)
OG10
A5S
OG14
30km/h
50km/h
80km/h
11
800
800
800
800
A5S
11
800
800
800
800
DG10(320)
C320
11
1000
1250
1500
1800
DG10(A5S)
A5S
11
1000
1000
1150
1350
DG14(320)
C320
10
1000
1550
1850
2200
DG14(600)
C600
10
1250
1900
2250
2700
DG14(A5S)
A5S
10
1000
1150
1400
1650
DG14HM
C600
10
1250
1900
2250
2700
DG14HS
A5S
10
1000
1150
1400
1650
DG20(320)
C320
10
1100
1700
2000
2400
DG20(600)
C600
10
1350
2050
2450
2900
DG20(A5S)
A5S
10
1000
1250
1500
1800
DG20HM
C600
10
1350
2050
2450
2900
DG28(320)
C320
1200
1800
2200
2600
DG28(600)
C600
1450
2150
2600
3100
45
50
30
30
10
10
10
Asphalt is made from materials with highly variable properties. The economics of pavement
materials require the use of local aggregates, hence unique mix designs must be carried out to
achieve desirable characteristics for mixes from a variety of sources.
6.5.3
Recycled asphalt
Recycled asphalt shall not be used for the purposes of this manual.
6.5.4
Virtually all asphalt is permeable to some extent, particularly when first laid. Permeability of the
surfacing, if not tightly controlled, can lead to:
a)
weakening of granular paving materials and subgrade, and subsequent rutting or shear
failure
b)
saturation of paving material, build-up of positive pore pressure and rapid failure
c)
d)
e)
Each of these usually leads to dramatically reduced pavement performance. Therefore, the
pavement design and construction should ensure that a surfacing with the lowest possible
permeability is provided.
A polymer modified sprayed seal must be placed under all asphalt surface layers.
The construction process must be such that no intermediate asphalt layer is left exposed where
rain is likely, or for longer than five working days where rain is not expected.
6.6
6.6.1
Concrete
Base concrete
The 28-day design flexural strength of the concrete shall be 4.5 MPa. This is the value for design
and is less than the specified value, as detailed in Austroads (2004). For steel fibre reinforced
concrete, the 28-day design flexural strength shall be 5.5 MPa.
46
January 2009
DESIGN TRAFFIC
7.1
The average daily ESA in the design lane in the year of opening (ESA/day) is calculated using
Equation 7-2, where the parameters are as defined in Part 2 of the Austroads guide.
Equation 7-1
The design periods and assessment periods given in Table 7.2-1 shall be used to determine the
design traffic and carry out whole-of-life costing.
Table 7.2-1 Minimum design period and assessment period
Average daily ESA in design
lane in year of opening
Minimum assessment
period (years) 1,2
1000
40
40
20
40
< 100
10
103
Notes
1)
The design and/or assessment periods can be reduced to equal the life of the alignment where the life of
the alignment is less than the minimum requirements.
2)
3)
For temporary pavements, the design period shall be selected based on the intended period of
use, with a maximum design period of 2 years. In addition, for temporary pavements where the
average daily ESA in the design lane in the year of opening is 1000 or more, the minimum design
period shall be 6 months.
7.3
Pavement designs are based on the cumulative number of heavy vehicles in the design lane. In
most cases, the design lane is the most heavily trafficked lane (e.g. the left/slow lane on a typical
multi-lane rural road). In some cases the design lane may not be the most heavily trafficked lane,
such as when designing inside widening of a multi-lane carriageway.
7.4
The heavy vehicle traffic volume in the year of opening may be determined by multiplying traffic
volumes from a previous year by a growth factor (g) as shown Equation 7-2.
Equation 7-2
g = (1 + 0.01 r ) x
where,
g
January 2009
growth factor
47
time period (years) between previous year traffic volumes and year of opening
7.5
In accordance with recent growth and the predicted doubling of the road freight task from 2000 to
2020 (DOTARS, 2002), all motorways (including ramps), highways and arterial roads shall be
designed with a minimum heavy vehicle growth rate of 4% per annum, unless detailed traffic
modelling is undertaken which specifically considers the future freight task for the pavement being
designed.
7.6
Whenever possible, designers should use project-specific weigh-in-motion data rather than
presumptive values to determine relevant design traffic parameters.
7.7
This section is only to be used for sealed unbound granular pavements that satisfy the following
conditions:
a)
b)
where there are justifiable reasons for allowing a higher level of performance risk
c)
where allowance is made in the whole-of-life costing for additional maintenance treatments.
This procedure uses only roughness as an indicator of the effect of the reduced standard. It does
not include other elements such as rut depth, volume change, or durability, for example. These
must be independently addressed and assessed.
The empirical design procedure for granular pavements with thin bituminous surfacings (Section
8.3) is based on the premise that pavement roughness at the end of the design period (the terminal
roughness) will be approximately 150 NAASRA counts/km, assuming that the initial roughness is
approximately 50 NAASRA counts/km.
Where a reduced standard is adopted, the design traffic (DESA) can be modified so that the
pavement design allows for alternative variations in the initial pavement condition and choice of
terminal pavement condition. This is done by using the ratio of terminal roughness to initial
roughness. A suitable initial roughness value can be estimated from measurements of recently
constructed pavements under similar conditions.
The modified design traffic is determined from Figure 7.7-1 using the unmodified design traffic and
the desired ratio of terminal to initial roughness. For example, if the unmodified design traffic is 1 x
106 ESA and the designer seeks a pavement design that will result in terminal roughness being
four times the initial roughness, the value of the modified design traffic is 4 x 105 ESA.
48
January 2009
1.0E+08
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
6.0
1.0E+06
1.0E+05
1.0E+04
1.0E+04
1.0E+05
1.0E+06
1.0E+07
1.0E+08
Figure 7.7-1 Modified design traffic based on the ratio of terminal to initial roughness
January 2009
49
8
8.1
8.2
Mechanistic procedure
Refer to pavement types and standards discussed in Section 2.3 of this manual and Section 2.2.2
of Part 2 of the Austroads guide.
8.2.2
The post-cracking phase may be included for deep strength asphalt, flexible composite and ASt(A)
pavements where the average daily ESA in the design lane in the year of opening is < 1000. For
higher traffic levels the post-cracking phase is not to be included.
8.3
The total thickness of a granular pavement is made up of a base and may include any number of
subbase courses.
The required minimum base thickness is obtained from Figure 8.4 in Part 2 of the Austroads guide,
except for the SG(A) pavement type (refer to Table 2.3-4) for which the base shall comprise two
100 mm thick granular B1 layers.
If a thin (< 40 mm thick) dense graded asphalt surfacing is provided, the thickness of the surfacing
may be deducted from the required total granular thickness. However, the minimum base thickness
requirements still apply.
50
January 2009
The thickness of any base, sub-base or lower sub-base layer shall not be less than 100 mm as
construction quality may be adversely affected for lesser thicknesses.
8.4
Thickness design of modified granular pavements is to be based on either Figure 8.4 in Part 2 of
the Austroads guide, or mechanistic design using the same modelling procedures as for unbound
granular pavements.
8.5
The example design charts in Part 2 of the Austroads guide may be used to establish a trial
thickness for a given subgrade design CBR and design traffic for commencement of the normal
iterative mechanistic design procedure. These are based on a number of design assumptions so
their relevance to a particular project may be limited.
January 2009
51
9
9.1
RTA 1992, Concrete Pavement Manual: Design and Construction, 2nd edn, Roads and
Traffic Authority, Sydney.
b)
RTA 2004, TP-GDL-012: Concrete Roundabout Pavements: A Guide to their Design and
Construction, Roads and Traffic Authority, Sydney.
c)
RTA, Rigid Pavements: Standard Details for Design, Roads and Traffic Authority, Sydney.
9.2
Pavement types
9.3
Concrete channels
A separately placed channel made of structural grade concrete may provide some edge support to
the pavement, but less than a full concrete shoulder. Therefore, a separately placed channel does
not warrant a reduction in pavement thickness. In this case, a no shoulder design condition is to
be adopted.
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January 2009
9.4
The example design charts in Part 2 of the Austroads guide may be used to establish a trial
thickness for a given subgrade design CBR and design traffic for commencement of the normal
iterative rigid pavement design procedure. These are based on a number of design assumptions
so their relevance to a particular project may be limited.
January 2009
53
10 COMPARISON OF DESIGNS
10.1
General
When comparing various alternative pavement types and configurations, cost is a prime
consideration. For most lightly trafficked roads, a granular pavement with a sprayed seal will
usually prove to be the most cost-effective pavement. However, for medium to heavy traffic loads,
particularly over weak subgrades, other pavement types may be more cost effective. To determine
the most cost-effective pavement, a whole-of-life cost comparison must be made.
Technical and financial considerations influence the types of pavement selected for consideration
on a project. An analysis of these factors is needed prior to undertaking an economic evaluation.
Financial considerations may limit the acceptable pavement options.
The various features of alternative designs need to be explored and agreed upon at this stage.
These include:
maintenance scenario(s)
assessment period
In order to determine the acceptability of the proposed scope and parameters of the analysis, and
to minimise rework, these should be recorded, reviewed and accepted by the decision-maker who
is to consider the study results. If some of the above cannot be determined at this stage, an outline
of how these issues will be treated, whether by assumption or further investigation in the study,
should be documented. The parameters, once agreed, may be varied later during the study by
agreement with the decision-maker as further information becomes available.
For heavy-duty pavements, comparison of alternative pavement types and configurations shall be
undertaken in accordance with A Guide to the Whole-of-Life Costing of Heavy Duty Pavements
(QDMR 1998).
10.1.1
Assessment period
The assessment period for road pavements, usually expressed in calendar years, starts from the
initial trafficking of the original structure and has a duration that is the least of either:
a)
the period for which the models for pavement design traffic determination and/or pavement
design are considered accurate (usually accepted as 40 years)
b)
the period for which the use of the pavement and/or the road alignment can be assured.
Pavements consist of many elements, each of which has a different design life. Some of these
design lives are short and less than the expected service life of the overall pavement. To maintain
the functional requirements of the pavement, planned interventions that extend the life of particular
elements will usually be required. These interventions may include, but are not limited to:
54
enrichments
January 2009
reseals
overlays
retexturing
maintenance.
There can also be interventions after the original design period to further extend the life of the
pavement if it is still required. These are usually categorised as rehabilitation (refer to MR
Pavement Rehabilitation Manual for further details).
In determining the design lives of individual elements, the design charts or mechanistic design are
only one indicator of possible life. Many other considerations, including other loads, such as
horizontal shear, could significantly influence the design life.
Pavement alternatives within the assessment period provide different options in respect of:
risk
The alternative that satisfies the owners particular needs (including affordability) at the time is the
appropriate design.
The assessment period must not be selected on the basis of available budgets, present and/or
future. Budget influences, along with risk and intervention costs, are accommodated in the choice
of pavement alternatives, assisted by reference to the dominant criteria, as indicated below.
Design period or design life as used in this supplement is not the life of the whole pavement, but
the service life of a particular pavement element, for example: the fatigue life of a concrete or
asphalt layer, the terminal rut condition, the life before excessive oxidation of a surface bituminous
layer.
10.1.2
Design inclusions
A pavement design must include not only the original structure but also all those interventions in
the assessment period necessary for the pavement to maintain its function to the end of the
assessment period. These include:
a)
initial structure
b)
ii)
staged construction activities (such as incremental overlays) if these have been part of
the design
iii)
treatment of surface layers (such as reseal, recycle, remove and replace) on a regular
basis where surface layers cannot be designed to last the full assessment period.
A pavement design must include all activities considered necessary for the design to last for the
specified assessment period, and not just those activities required for the initial structure.
10.1.3
The optimal pavement design solution is that which best satisfies the design requirements for the
specified inputs at minimum cost for the whole life of the pavement, and allows for the following
constraints:
a)
design considerations that cannot readily be quantified and taken into account by the design
procedures in this manual
January 2009
55
b)
c)
road safety
d)
future maintenance
e)
f)
drainage
g)
The cost criterion to be applied for comparison of alternatives is minimum whole-of-life cost, which
allows for discounted future maintenance and rehabilitation costs. However, certain design
constraints which are not easily quantified must be applied to allow for factors that influence
maintenance, safety and user costs. These constraints may override cost considerations.
10.1.4
Selection constraints
The following examples illustrate practical constraints on the choice of design options:
Although asphalt surfaces are more costly than sprayed surface treatments, they are
provided on heavily trafficked roads because of the costs of traffic disruption and the dangers
to traffic and workers associated with maintaining a sprayed seal.
Certain combinations of pavement and shoulder materials and their configuration in the
pavement may be required to promote pavement drainage.
Where the pavement is likely to be exposed to soaked conditions for extended periods,
cement or bituminous bound material will be required to protect the structural integrity and
service standard of the pavement, despite possible additional costs.
When comparing the cost of structurally equivalent alternatives, consideration must be given
to non-productive costs associated with establishment, overheads, provision for traffic and
wet weather. These may be different for each alternative.
The type and configuration of the pavement selected may impact more than just the
pavement and direct pavement costs. For example the selection of a dense graded asphalt
overlay may necessitate the construction of noise mounds/barriers adding to total project
cost. Ancillary or indirect impacts must be considered.
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January 2009
11.1
(1)
trafficked lane
trafficked lane
(1)
C
L
Surface Seal
Binder
Base
Working
platform
Subgrade Treatments
- cover over reactive subgrade
- capping layer
- drainage layer
Note:
1. These are minimums relating to structural requirements.
(2)
0.6
3.0
3.5
3.5
C
L
(1)
Surface (asphalt)
[continuously reinforced only]
Base
Lean mix subbase
Working platform
Drain
Subgrade Treatments
- cover over reactive subgrade
- capping layer
- drainage layer
Notes:
1. These are minimums relating to structural requirements.
2. Minimum width of base for designs with shoulders.
min. 2.0
(1)
trafficked lane
trafficked lane
min. 2.0
min. 1.0 (median)
C
L
Full width seal
Pavement structure
Working platform (if specified)
min 200 mm from
bottom of working
platform
Subgrade Treatments
- cover over reactive subgrade
- capping layer
- drainage layer
Note:
1. These are minimums relating to structural requirements.
January 2009
57
11.2
Pavement structures
58
January 2009
January 2009
59
11.3
60
January 2009
12 REFERENCES
Austroads 2003, AP-G63/03: Guide to the Selection of Road Surfacings, 2nd edn,
Austroads, Sydney.
Austroads 2004a, AP-G76/04: Sprayed Sealing Guide, Austroads Pavement Technology Series,
Austroads, Sydney.
Austroads 2004b, AP-T33/04: Technical Basis of the Austroads Pavement Design Guide,
Austroads, Sydney.
Austroads 2008, Part 2: Pavement Structural Design, Guide to Pavement Technology, Austroads,
Sydney.
DOTARS 2002, AusLink: Towards the National Land Transport Plan, Green paper, Department of
Transport and Regional Services, Canberra.
Powell, W.D., Potter, J.F., Mayhew, H.C. 1984, Laboratory Report 1132: The Structural Design of
Bituminous Roads, Transport and Road Research Laboratory, Crowthorne, Berks, UK.
QDMR 1998, A Guide to the Whole-of-Life Costing of Heavy Duty Pavements. Queensland
Department of Main Roads, Pavements, Materials and Geotechnical Division, Brisbane.
RTA 1992, Concrete Pavement Manual: Design and Construction, 2nd edn, Roads and Traffic
Authority, Sydney.
RTA 2004, TP-GDL-012: Concrete Roundabout Pavements: A Guide to their Design and
Construction, Roads and Traffic Authority, Sydney.
RTA, Rigid Pavements: Standard Details for Design, Roads and Traffic Authority, Sydney.
Standards Australia 1997, AS 1289.4.2.1: Method 4.2.1: Soil chemical testsDetermination of the
sulfate content of a natural soil and the sulfate content of the groundwaterNormal method,
Methods of testing soil for engineering purposes, Standards Australia, Sydney.
January 2009
61
Appendix 1
Unified soil classification system (simplified and metricated)*
Group
symbol
Clean
gravels
Gravels
with
fines
Clean sands
GW
Well graded
GRAVEL
GP
Poorly graded
GRAVEL
GM
SILTY GRAVEL
CG
CLAYEY GRAVEL
SW
SP
Poorly graded
SAND
SM
SILTY SAND
SC
CLAYEY SAND
> 50
Liquid Limit
Typical names
< 50
Sands
with
fines
Coarse-grained soils
Fine-grained soil
Field identification
Shine
Dilatancy1
Toughness1
None to very
dull
Quick to slow
None
ML
INORGANIC SILT
Moderate
None to very
slow
Medium
CL
INORGANIC CLAY
of low to medium
plasticity
None to very
dull
Slow
Slight
OL
Dull
Slow to none
Slight to
medium
MH
INORGANIC SILT
of high plasticity
Very glossy
None
High
CH
INORGANIC CLAY
of high plasticity
Moderate to
very glossy
None to very
slow
Slight to
medium
OH
ORGANIC CLAY of
medium to high
plasticity
PT
A) The system excludes the cobble and boulder fractions (> 60 mm) of the soil for classification.
B) It adopts the particle size limits given in AS1289.
C) For laboratory classification, the closest AS sieve to sizes shown should be used.
Notes:
1)
Prepare pat of moist soil, adding water to make soft but not sticky.
ii)
Place pat in palm of hand, shake horizontally by striking vigorously against other hand.
Position Reaction: Appearance of water on surface of pat, which becomes glossy when squeezed between fingers; water and gloss disappear,
pat stiffens and may crumble.
Toughness (consistency near plastic limit):
i)
ii)
Roll into thin (3 mm) thread, fold and re-roll repeatedly until thread crumbles at plastic limit.
January 2009
Appendix 2
Weighted mean annual pavement temperatures
ii
Town
WMAPT (oC)
Town
WMAPT (oC)
Ayr
35
Julia Creek
39
Baralaba
35
Kingaroy
29
Barcaldine
36
Longreach
37
Beaudesert
31
Mackay
34
Biloela
32
Maryborough
32
Birdsville
37
Miles
32
Blackall
36
Mitchell
32
Bollon
33
Monto
32
Boulia
38
Mt Isa
39
Bowen
36
Nambour
31
Brisbane Region
32
Normanton
40
Bundaberg
33
Palmerville
38
Cairns
37
Pittsworth
28
Caloundra
31
Quilpie
36
Camooweal
39
Richmond
38
Cardwell
36
Rockhampton
35
Charleville
34
Roma
33
Charters Towers
36
Southport
31
Clermont
35
St. George
33
Cloncurry
39
St. Lawrence
35
Cooktown
38
Stanthorpe
25
Cunnamulla
34
Surat
33
Dalby
30
Tambo
33
Emerald
35
Taroom
33
Gayndah
33
Thargomindah
35
Georgetown
38
Toowoomba
27
Gladstone
34
Townsville
37
Goondiwindi
32
Urandangie
38
Gympie
32
Warwick
28
Herberton
30
Weipa
39
Hughenden
37
Windorah
37
Ipswich
32
Winton
38
Isisford
36
January 2009