Everything about Paving totally explained
Pavement (
American English) or
road surface (
British English) is the durable surface material laid down on an area intended to sustain traffic (vehicular or foot traffic). Such surfaces are frequently
marked to guide traffic. The most common modern paving methods are
asphalt and
concrete. In the past, brick was extensively used, as was metaling. Today,
permeable paving methods are beginning to be used more for low-impact roadways and walkways.
Metalling
Metal or metalling has had two distinct usages in road paving. Metalling originally referred to the process of creating a carefully engineered gravel roadway. The route of the roadway first would be dug down several feet. Depending on local conditions,
French drains may or may not have been added. Next, large stone was placed and compacted, followed by successive layers of smaller stone, until the road surface was a small stone compacted into a hard, durable surface.
Road metal later became the name of
stone chippings mixed with
tar to form the road surfacing material
tarmac. A road of such material was called a "metalled road" in British usage, although this would be very rare in modern usage. It would be more common to refer to a
macadam road. The word
metal is derived from the
Latin metallum, which means both "mine" and "quarry", hence the roadbuilding terminology.
Asphalt paving
Asphalt (specifically,
asphalt concrete) has been widely used since 1920-1930, though in ancient times
asphalt was already used for road-building. The viscous nature of the
bitumen binder allows asphalt concrete to sustain significant
plastic deformation, although
fatigue from repeated loading over time is the most common failure mechanism. Most asphalt pavements are built on a gravel base which is generally at least as thick as the asphalt layer, although some 'full depth' pavements are built directly on the native
subgrade. In areas with very soft or expansive subgrades such as
clay or
peat, thick gravel bases or stabilization of the subgrade with
Portland cement or
lime can be required. In some countries with soft
soils, a
foundation of
polystyrene blocks is used instead. The actual material used in paving is termed HMA (Hot Mix Asphalt), and it's usually applied using a
free floating screed.
Advantages of asphalt roadways include relatively low noise, relatively low cost compared with other paving methods, and ease of repair. Disadvantages include less durability than other paving methods, less tensile strength than concrete, the tendency to become slick and soft in hot weather and a certain amount of
hydrocarbon pollution to soil and
groundwater or
waterways.
Concrete paving (white paving)
Concrete pavements (specifically, Portland cement concrete) are created using a concrete mix of
Portland cement,
gravel, and
sand. The material is applied in a freshly-mixed slurry, and worked mechanically to compact the interior and force some of the thinner cement slurry to the surface to produce a smoother, denser surface free from honeycombing.
Concrete pavements have been refined into three common types: jointed plain (JPCP), jointed reinforced (JRCP) and continuously reinforced (CRCP). The one item that distinguishes each type is the jointing system used to control crack development.
Jointed Plain Concrete Pavements (JPCP) contain enough joints to control the location all of the expected natural cracks. The concrete cracks at the joints and not elsewhere in the slabs. Jointed plain pavements don't contain any steel reinforcement. However, there may be smooth steel bars at transverse joints and deformed steel bars at longitudinal joints. The spacing between transverse joints is typically about 15 feet for slabs 7-12 inches thick. Today, a majority of the U.S. state agencies build jointed plain pavements.
Jointed Reinforced Concrete Pavements (JRCP) contain steel mesh reinforcement (sometimes called distributed steel). In jointed reinforced concrete pavements, designers increase the joint spacing purposely, and include reinforcing steel to hold together intermediate cracks in each slab. The spacing between transverse joints is typically 30 feet or more. In the past, some agencies used a spacing as great as 100 feet. During construction of the interstate system, most agencies in the Eastern and Midwestern U.S. built jointed-reinforced pavement. Today only a handful of agencies employ this design, and its use is generally not recommended as JPCP and CRCP offer better performance and are easier to repair.
Continuously Reinforced Concrete Pavements (CRCP) doesn't require any transverse contraction joints. Transverse cracks are expected in the slab, usually at intervals of 3-5 ft. CRCP pavements are designed with enough steel, 0.6-0.7% by cross-sectional area, so that cracks are held together tightly. Determining an appropriate spacing between the cracks is part of the design process for this type of pavement.
Continuously reinforced designs generally cost more than jointed reinforced or jointed plain designs initially due to increased quantities of steel. However, they can demonstrate superior long-term performance and cost-effectiveness. A number of agencies choose to use CRCP designs in their heavy urban traffic corridors.
Advantages of cement concrete roadways include that they're typically stronger and last longer than asphalt concrete pavements. They also can easily be grooved to provide a durable skid-resistant surface. Disadvantages are that they've a higher initial cost, are more difficult to repair, and are also somewhat noisy if jointed, but unjointed concrete pavement is actually a method of
roadway noise mitigation.
Additionally, in areas with cold winters, road salt can damage concrete roadbeds; due to the high cost of replacing the bed, exposed concrete roadbeds are infrequently seen in areas with harsh winters. However, reinforced concrete slabs are more resistant to frost-related ground heaves and pothole formation; heavily used roads in winter-prone urban areas often have concrete roadbeds covered with a thin (3cm) layer of asphalt concrete. This layer can be "skimmed off" and replaced very cheaply when it wears and deteriorates, while the concrete beneath is protected from the harsh elements. In these conditions, concrete roadbeds can last upwards of 50 years when a pure asphalt roadbed is expected to need to be completely replaced several times in this time period, offsetting the higher initial cost.
The first street in the United States to be paved with concrete is Court Avenue in
Bellefontaine, Ohio, but the record for first mile of concrete pavement to be laid in the United States is claimed by
Michigan.
Bituminous Surface Treatment (BST)
Bituminous Surface Treatment (BST) is used mainly on low-traffic roads, but also as a sealing coat to rejuvenate an asphalt concrete pavement. It generally consists of aggregate spread over a sprayed-on asphalt
emulsion or cut-back asphalt cement. The aggregate is then embedded into the asphalt by rolling it, typically with a rubber-tired
roller. BSTs of this type are described by a wide variety of regional terms including
"chip seal", "tar and chip", "oil and stone", "seal coat" or "surface dressing".
BST is used on hundreds of miles of the
Alaska Highway and other similar roadways in
Alaska, the
Yukon Territory, and northern
British Columbia. The ease of application of BST is one reason for its popularity, but another is its flexibility, which is important when roadways are laid down over unstable terrain that thaws and softens in the spring.
Other types of BSTs include micropaving, slurry seals and Novachip. These are laid down using specialized and proprietary equipment. They are most often used in urban areas where the roughness and loose stone associated with chip seals is considered undesirable.
Other paving methods
Pavers, generally in the form of pre-cast concrete blocks, are often used for aesthetic purposes, or sometimes at
port facilities that see long-duration pavement loading. Pavers are rarely used in areas that see high-speed vehicle traffic.
Brick,
cobblestone and
wood plank pavements were once common in
urban areas throughout the world, but due to their high manual labor requirements they're in some countries typically only maintained for historical reasons, while in other countries they're still common in local streets. They make maintenance of cabling and pipelines under the pavement easier but are also harder to walk on.
Likewise,
macadam and
tarmac pavements can still sometimes be found buried underneath asphalt concrete or Portland cement concrete pavements, but are rarely constructed anymore.
Acoustical implications
Roadway surfacing choices are known to affect the intensity and spectrum of sound emanating from the tire/surface interaction. Initial applications of this knowledge occurred in the early 1970s. Roadway surface types contribute differential noise effects of up to four dB, with chip seal type and grooved roads being the loudest and
concrete surfaces without spacers being the quietest.
Asphaltic surfaces perform intermediately relative to concrete and
chip seal. These phenomena are, of course, highly influenced by vehicle speed.
Image:Small cobbles.jpg|Cobbles
Image:Wallpaper group-cmm-1.jpg|Although this is a wall, this image shows a common pattern for pavement, in the symmetry category "wallpaper group cmm"; the same pattern is possible with other length/width ratios; square tiles are also common
Image:Wallpaper group-pgg-2.jpg|Bricks in a Herringbone pattern, in the symmetry category "wallpaper group pgg"; the same pattern is possible with any length/width ratio
Image:Wallpaper_group-p3-1.jpg|Street pavement in Zakopane, Poland in the symmetry category "wallpaper group p3"
Pavement deterioration
As pavement systems primarily fail due to
fatigue (in a manner similar to
metals), the damage done to pavement increases with the fourth power of the axle load of the vehicles traveling on it.
Civil Engineers consider truck axle load, current and projected truck traffic volume, supporting
soil properties and sub-grade
drainage in design. Passenger cars are considered to have no practical effect on a pavement's service life, from a fatigue perspective.
Other pavement failure modes include ageing and surface abrasion. As years go by, the binder in a bituminous wearing course gets stiffer and less flexible. When it gets "old" enough, the surface will start loosing aggregates and
macrotexture depth increase dramatically. If no maintenance action is done quickly on the wearing course (
seal coating,
surface dressing, etc.) isn't quickly, potholing will take place. In areas with cold climate, studded tires may be allowed on passenger cars. In Sweden and Finland, studded passenger car tires account for a very large share of pavement rutting.
Several pavement design methods have been developed to determine the thickness and composition of pavement required to carry predicted traffic loads for a given period of time. Pavement design methods are continuously evolving. Among these are the
Shell Pavement design method, and the
AASHTO 1993 "Guide for Design of Pavement Structures". A new mechanistic-empirical design guide has been under development by NCHRP (Called Superpave Technology) since 1998. A new design guide called Mechanistic Empirical Pavement Design Guide (MEPDG) was developed and it's about to be adopted by AASHTO.
According to the
AASHO Road Test, heavily loaded
trucks can do more than 10,000 times the damage done by a normal passenger car.
Tax rates for trucks are higher than those for cars in most countries for this reason, though are not levied in proportion to the damage done.
The physical properties of a stretch of pavement can be tested using a
falling weight deflectometer.
Further research by
University College London into pavements has led to the development of an indoor 80 sq metre artificial pavement at a research centre called
Pedestrian Accessibility and Movement Environment Laboratory (PAMELA). It is used to simulate everyday scenarios, from different pavement users to varying pavement conditions.
Further Information
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