| |
Evaluation Categories
Pavement performance is a function of its relative ability to serve traffic
over a period of time. Typically, a system of objective measurements is
used to quantify a pavement's condition and performance. These systems are
used to aid in making the following types of decisions (Hicks and Mahoney,
1981):
Establish maintenance priorities. Condition data such as
roughness, surface distress, and
deflection are used to establish the projects most in need of
maintenance and
rehabilitation. Once identified, the projects in the poorest condition
are more closely evaluated to determine repair strategies.
Determine maintenance and
rehabilitation strategies. Data from
surface distress surveys are used to develop an action plan on a year-to-year basis; i.e., which strategy (patching,
BSTs,
overlays,
recycling, etc.) is most appropriate for a given pavement condition.
Predict pavement performance. Data, such as
roughness, skid resistance,
surface distress, or a combined rating, are projected into the future to assist in preparing long-range budgets or to estimate the condition of the pavements in a network given a fixed budget.
Pavement roughness is an expression of irregularities in the pavement surface that adversely affect
a vehicle's ride quality.
Roughness is an important pavement characteristic because it affects not only
ride quality but also vehicle operating costs, fuel consumption and
maintenance costs. The World Bank found road roughness to be a
primary factor in the analyses and trade-offs involving road quality vs. user
cost (UMTRI, 1998).
WSDOT uses the international roughness index (IRI), developed by the World Bank in
the 1980s, to quantify roughness. IRI is based on the accumulated suspension of a vehicle (inches
or mm) divided by the distance traveled by the vehicle during the measurement (miles
or kilometers). The open-ended IRI scale is shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1: IRI Roughness Scale (replotted from Sayers et al.,
1986)
Roughness measurements can be made in a variety of ways including surveying
instruments, portable inclinometers, profilographs,
response type road roughness meters (RTRRMs) and profiling devices.
The most common methods involve profilographs and profiling devices. For
pavement condition surveys, WSDOT makes roughness measurements using laser equipment mounted
in their data distress collection van (see Figure 2). In addition
to collecting IRI data, this van also records rutting and video images of the
pavement surface, ahead view, and shoulder view.

Figure 2: WSDOT's Data Distress
Collection Van
Surface distress is "Any indication of poor or unfavorable pavement performance or signs of impending failure; any unsatisfactory performance of a pavement short of failure"
(Highway Research Board, 1970). Surface distress modes can be broadly classified into the following
three groups:
- Fracture. This could be in the form of cracking or spalling
resulting from such things as excessive
loading,
fatigue,
thermal changes,
stripping, slippage or contraction.
- Distortion. This is in the form of deformation, which can
result from such things as excessive
loading, creep, densification,
consolidation, swelling, or
frost action.
- Disintegration. This is in the form of
stripping
or raveling, which can result from such things as loss of bonding, chemical
reactivity, traffic abrasion, aggregate degradation or
binder aging.
Thus, surface distress will be somewhat related to roughness (the more
cracks, distortion and disintegration - the rougher the pavement will be) as
well as structural integrity (surface distress can be a
sign of impending or current structural problems).
Surface distress measurement techniques are largely visual. Simpler,
less expensive techniques, use individuals or teams of individuals to
subjectively rate pavement sections based on observed distress. More
advanced techniques record pavement surface video images at highway speed using
high resolution cameras on a specially equipped van (see Figure 2).
Evaluation is either done manually by playing the video back on specially
designed workstations while trained crews rate the recorded road surface or
automatically by computer software.
Skid resistance is the force developed when a tire that is prevented from rotating slides along the pavement surface
(Highway Research Board, 1972). Skid resistance is an important pavement evaluation
parameter because:
- Inadequate skid resistance will lead to higher incidences of skid related
accidents.
- Most agencies have an obligation to provide users with a roadway that is "reasonably" safe.
- Skid resistance measurements can be used to evaluate various types of materials and construction practices.
Skid resistance changes
over time. Typically it increases in the first two years following
construction as the asphalt binder is worn away by traffic, then decreases over
the remaining pavement life as aggregates become more
polished. Skid resistance is also typically higher in
the fall and winter and lower in the spring and summer. This seasonal
variation is quite significant and can severely skew skid resistance data if not
properly compensated (Jayawickrama and Thomas, 1998).
WSDOT measures skid resistance using a locked-wheel skid tester (see Figure
3), which basically employs a locked wheel skidding along a tested surface to
measure friction resistance.

Figure 3: WSDOT's Locked Wheel
Skid Tester
The magnitude and shape of pavement deflection is a function of
traffic (type
and volume), pavement structural section, temperature affecting the pavement
structure and moisture affecting the pavement structure. Thus, many
characteristics of a HMA pavement can be determined by measuring its
deflection in response to load. Surface deflection is measured as a pavement surface's vertical deflected
distance as a result of an applied (either static or dynamic) load. The
more advanced measurement devices record this vertical deflection in multiple
locations, which provides a more complete characterization of pavement
deflection. The area of pavement deflection under and near the load
application is collectively known as the "deflection basin".
The most common type of measurement equipment in Washington
is the falling weight deflectometer (FWD) (see
Figures 4 and 5). The FWD can either be mounted in a vehicle or on a
trailer and is equipped with a weight and several velocity transducer sensors.
To perform a test, the vehicle is stopped and the loading plate (weight) is
positioned over the desired location. The sensors are then lowered to the
pavement surface, the weight is dropped, and the surrounding pavement vertical
deflection is recorded.
 |
 |
| Figure 4: WSDOT FWD Van and
Trailer |
Figure
5: FWD Impulse Loading Mechanism (foreground) and
Sensors (background) |
|
|