Nurela Abera (MSc) address: nuralaabera@gmail.com Road Cross-Section Elements Flexible Pavement Structure Rigid Pavement Structure 1. Road Construction Earthwork Operations & Equipment Construction of Subbases, Bases & Low-cost Surfaces and Bituminous Pavements 1.1 Earthwork Operations & Equipment Preparation of Right-of-Way (ROW) The initial operation in the construction of a highway facility All obstructions & Objectionable Materials like trees, undergrowth, abandoned utilities, drainage structures etc.. , are to be removed and disposed of in accordance with the governing specifications The Contractor is responsible for the protection and the preservation of all property, both in and adjacent to the right-of-way. The boundaries of all areas in which the project work is to be performed should be clearly marked A careful investigation should be made to determine the location of all underground facilities within the right-of-way Clearing & Grubbing: All trees, undergrowth, stumps, shrubs, etc… not designated to remain in place shall be cleared & grubbed Trees & shrubs which will not interfere with the use of a highway & its drainage system are often selected to remain in place for their scenic, historical, and other values All holes, ruts, etc… remaining after clearing & grubbing, should be backfilled and compacted to prevent ponding of water Disposal of Materials obtained from clearing & grubbing Removing Structures & Obstructions Remove, salvage, or dispose of materials promptly. Backfill basements or cavities to the surrounding ground level Remove Bridges, Culverts & Other drainage structures. Dismantle designated Agency-retained material without damage Dispose of designated concrete pavement, base course, sidewalks, curbs, gutters, foundations, gravel, bituminous material, etc.. Store salvageable ballast, gravel, bituminous material, and other pavement materials at designated locations Ensure stored material is free from dust and other foreign matter PREPARATION OF ROADBED AND PROTECTION OF EARTHWORKS covers all work in connection with the preparation of the road bed, prior to the construction of the embankments or capping layers, and the preparation of the subgrade prior to the construction of the pavement layers The existing ground beneath embankments or the bottoms of cuttings classified as suitable material which has a density of less then 95% of the maximum dry density be scarified to a minimum depth of 150mm, watered and re-compacted in accordance with the requirements Con't After areas of the existing ground that are to be covered by fill have been cleared and grubbed, or after excavation in cut has reached the top of road bed, the existing ground in fill sections, or the roadbed materials in cut sections should be treated as hereunder: Removal of Unsuitable Material Three-pass roller Compaction Preparation and compaction of existing ground in fill sections and of roadbed material in cut sections Draining of existing ground and road bed In-situ treatment of roadbed Widening the roadbed Excavation & Embankment The construction of a graded roadbed, upon which the subbase, base and wearing courses will be built, is called earthwork. Excavation is that part of the earthwork that is dug up, hauled, and then used to form the embankment section of the roadbed. Roadway excavation, which is that material obtained from within the right-of-way, exclusive of channel and structural excavation, may be composed of common earth, solid rock, loose rock, or any combination of these materials When there is not enough suitable roadway excavation , together with suitable excess channel and structural excavation, to complete the embankment to the required line and grade, then borrow excavation must be imported to make up the difference Con't Excavation involves the loosening, digging, loading, hauling, disposal of material obtained from roadway cuts, channel changes, ditches, structure foundations, and/or borrow pits. Disposal of the materials is accomplished by incorporating it into an embankment or wasting the surplus amount or material of unsuitable nature Excavation includes the constructing, shaping, and finishing of all earth work for the entire length of the roadway, and its approaches in conformity to the required lines, grades, typical sections, and pertinent specifications Excavate, haul, dispose of, place, and compact specified materials necessary to construct the project Different types of Excavation: Common Excavation: Excavate and use or dispose of all material encountered. Clear, grub, and remove topsoil before beginning excavation, grading and embankment operations. Dispose of surplus or unsuitable excavated material Rock Excavation: includes all masses of material, which cannot be removed without blasting or ripping, and all detached stones or boulders having a volume of 2 m3 or more Borrow Excavation: that material coming from approved sources normally outside the limits of the project Unsuitable Excavation: used to provide the removal and disposal of saturated or unsaturated mixtures of soil and organic matter not suitable for foundation material. Unsuitable Materials: such materials are unstable in their natural state because of excessive moisture content. Such materials should be wasted, or used to flatten slopes, unless an economical method of treatment is available to make them satisfactory Con't Surplus Material: the one obtained when the required excavation yields more material than the proposed embankment construction requires. This surplus material is normally classified as waste Embankment Construction: construction methods which ensure, to the extent economically feasible, uniformity of material, layer thickness, moisture content, and compactive effort are vital in the accomplishment of proper embankment construction The proper breakdown of clods and blending of materials using disc plows, blade graders, or similar equipment ordinarily will accomplish the desired result in most soils. When feasible, poorer materials should be used in the lower portion of the embankment Hauling, Spreading and Shaping More uniformity of compaction is ordinarily obtained when earth embankment layers are relatively thin The success of compaction operation is dependent to a large extent on proper moisture control Usually it is better to begin compaction with the moisture content slightly high; however, in humid areas it may be better to begin with the moisture content at optimum Con't Embankment solids must be compacted to densities which will provide adequate stability under the conditions to which the finished highway will be subjected Density Tests for Control of Compaction Control of Compaction by Ordinary Methods: Particular attention should be given towards maintaining proper loose layer thickness, proper moisture content, and adequate coverage with the specified rollers When feasible the finished earthwork should have a pleasing contour and be reasonable smooth in all respects The work of finishing earth work can be held to a minimum and better construction will result if every reasonable effort is made during excavation of cuts and construction of embankments to maintain slopes, shoulders, and ditches as this work progresses Subgrade Preparation: consists of scarifying at least the top 15cm of the subgrade, mixing until uniform in color and texture, compacting to a higher density than normal embnkment layers at a specified moisture content, and shaping to the required typical section within specified tolerances It is essential that every possible measure is taken to control erosion during highway construction. The effective way to control erosion and siltation is early treatment of slopes-both cut and fill. Early treatment means treating cut slopes as excavation progresses and fill slopes as embankment construction proceeds. Slope treatment generally consists of seeding and mulching Con't Protection of Earthworks Earthworks shall be protected from the weather at all times. The compacted layers of fill and the bottom of excavations shall be adequately drained and shaped to prevent free water standing on or scouring the completed layer or the in-situ material. Any windrows or ridges, which will impede the free drainage of water, shall be removed from the surface. No fill material for a succeeding layer has been shall be placed if the underlying layer has been softened by excessive moisture. All permanent drains, plus additional necessary temporary drains, shall be constructed as soon as possible to protect the earthworks. Ruts, potholes and other damaged sections of earthworks and slopes shall be reinstated. Drains shall be so constructed as to avoid damage, caused by erosion, to embankments. 1.2 Construction of Subbases, Bases & Low-cost Surfaces Subbases: The materials used for the construction of subbases could be either: Natural Gravel Scoria (Cinder Gravel) Weathered Rock Crushed Gravel Crushed Rock or Crushed Boulders Recycled Pavement Material And any other granular material complying with the requirements of subbases Material requirements for Gravel Subbase could be obtained from approved sources in borrow areas, cuts or existing pavement layers The complete subbase should contain no material having a maximum dimension exceeding two-thirds of the completed layer thickness Gravel Subbase materials should conform to the following requirements Grading Limits: the material should have a smooth continuous grading within the limits of grading Grading Modulus (GM) Plasticity Index (PI) Con't California Bearing Ratio (CBR) Compaction Requirements Los Angeles Abrasion (LAA) Particle Shape; Flakiness Index (for crushed stone sub-base) Construction Requirements for Sub-bases using Recycled Pavement Material Milling/Scarifying Before scarification or milling is commenced, the surface of the existing pavement should be clean and free from soil and other deleterious matter The existing pavement should be broken up to the required depth either by scarifying or by the use of an approved milling machine Placing, Spreading and Compacting Any material which is required to be added, to either supplement or modify the scarified milled material, should be evenly spread and thoroughly mixed into the scarified/milled material to form a homogenous material prior to compaction Construction Requirements Sub-base material should be spread on the approved subgrade by mechanical means without segregation. The material should be loosely spread in layers to give a compacted thickness not exceeding 200mm and not less than 100mm. The final compacted layer should be free from concentrations of coarse or fine materials. The surface of each completed layer should be moistened prior to the construction of the succeeding layer. Spread and shape the mixture on the prepared surface in a uniform layer The material should be compacted by the use of rollers progressing gradually from the outside towards the center of the layer, except on super elevated curves, where the rolling should begin at the low side and progress to the high side. Rolling should continue until the entire thickness of each layer is thoroughly and uniformly compacted to the specified density Con't Subbase as a filter or separating layer This may be required to protect a drainage layer from blockage by a finer material or to prevent migration of fines and the mixing of two layers. Road Bases: The materials used for the construction of road base layers could be one of the following: Crushed Rock or Stone Naturally Occurring Granular Materials, Boulders, Weathered Rock Dense Bitumen Macadam Graded Crushed Stone Base (GB1) This material is produced by crushing fresh, quarried rock and may be a crusher-run or the material may be separated by screening and recombined to produce a desired particle size distribution The material should be clean and free from organic matter, lumps of clays or other deleterious substances. The material should be in such a nature that it can be readily transported, spread and compacted without segregation Crushed Stone Base materials should conform to the following requirements Grading Plastic Index California Bearing Ratio (CBR) ACV ( Aggregate Crushing Value) Con't Mechanical Strength Requirements (TFVT) Limits on the maximum loss in strength following a period of 24 hours of soaking in water. The likely moisture condition in the pavement are taken into account in broad terms based on annual rainfall Flakiness Index Graded Natural Gravel (GB2, GB3) Lateritic, calcareous and quartzite gravels, river gravels, boulders and other transported gravels, or granular materials resulting from the weathering of rocks can be used successfully as base course materials. These materials should be of such a nature that it can be readily transported, spread and compacted without segreggation Graded Natural Gravel Base materials should conform to the following requirements: Grading Plasticity Index CBR ACV Abrasion Flakiness Index Crushed Ratio Grading Modulus Dense Bitumen Macadam Bitumen macadam in which the aggregates and filler are so graded as to form a close textured mixture, of low permeability, when spread and compacted. Material Requirements: Coarse aggregates: should consists of hard durable particles produced by crushing rock or boulders ACV LAA Soundness Flakiness Index Crushed Ratio Water Absorption Coating of Chippings Fine Aggregates Filler: where necessary to improve the combined grading or other properties of the mix, a filler of either hydrated lime, cement or crushed rock or crushed boulder dust may be added Binder: 60/70 penetration grade bitumen Mix Design Parameters for Dense Bitumen Macadam Construction Requirements The material should be laid either by a self propelled paving machine or by means of a grader The equipment should be of adequate rated capacity & in good working order The mixing plant could be either a batch type or continuous type and equipped with means of accurately controlling the proportions of all constituent material Compaction should be carried out using 8-10 smooth wheel rollers or multi wheeled pneumatic tyred rollers Road base material should be spread by mechanical means without segreggation The material should loosely be spread in layers to give a compacted thickness within 10-20cm. The surface of each completed layer should be moistened prior to the construction of the succeeding layer Prior to compaction the moisture content of the spread material should be adjusted either by the uniform application of water or drying out to achieve the OMC The surface of the completed layer should be tightly bound, free from movement under the compaction plant, and free from laminations, ridges, cracks, or loose or segregated materials The in-situ density of the completed layer should achieve the desired MDD The completed road base layer should not be used by construction or public traffic prior to the application of prime coat Vehicles used for transporting dense bitumen macadam base should have tipping bodies capable of discharging directly into the paving machine Dense Bitumen Macadam material should be laid by spreading/finishing machine capable of laying to the required widths, thicknesses & cross-sectional profiles without causing segregation or other surface defects The maximum temperature of material during mixing should not exceed 165°c. On discharge from the mixer plant the aggregate should be completely coated with binder and the fine aggregate should be evenly distributed throughout the mix During transport the material should be insulated against heat loss and protected from the ingress of moisture by the use of covers The temperature of the spread material at the time of compaction commences should not be less than 135°c. the compaction should be completed before the temperature of the laid material falls below 105°c. The density achieved in the completed layer should not be less than 97% of the Marshal Density Dense Bitumen Macadam Road Base and priming should not be carried out in the following adverse weather conditions During foggy or wet conditions When rain is imminent when wind is sufficiently strong to cause uneven spraying; When the surface on which the layer is to be constructed is wet When the temperature of the surface on which the layer is to be constructed is less than 10°c Construction Tolerances Level & Grade Width Thickness Cross-Section Prime Coat Material The material used for priming could be MC-30, MC-70, or MC-250 cutback bitumen The aggregate used for blinding the primed surface should consist of fine crushed rock or river sand Safety The handling and application of bituminous binders are hazardous operations. Attention is drawn to the risk of fire and toxic fumes, which may cause extensive damage to the equipment and injury to the equipment operators. Crewmen should wear heat-resistant gauntlet gloves. Facemasks should be worn when a spray lance is used because of possible rupture of the armored hose. Equipment Bitumen Distributer The distributor should be free from binder or fuel leaks; The distributor should be fitted with an accurate means of measuring and indicating the roads peed of the vehicle at operational speeds. Pipes shall be provided with suitable couplings to ensure the safe transfer of binder to and from the distributor for loading and unloading. The bitumen tank shall have an inspection manhole and a calibrated dipstick registering the volume of the binder in the tank. The type of spray nozzles, the spacing of the nozzles along the spray bar and the height of the spray bar above the road surface should be such that the distribution of the binder over the sprayed width of the road is of the required uniformity Before each separate application of binder, the spray bar shall be reset to the height required to ensure the necessary uniformity of nozzle spray overlap (double or triple) and distribution is maintained. Air Blower/Compressor Used to assist in the removal of loose or deleterious material from the surface of pavement layers Preparation of the layer to be primed the layer to be primed shall be broomed and cleaned of all loose or deleterious material by means of a rotary broom and hand brooms. Brooming and cleaning shall be done carefully so as to avoid any damage to the layer. A light spray of water, sufficient to dampen the surface, shall be applied uniformly to the layer immediately before the application of the prime. Application of the Prime Coat In general, the rate of application of prime shall be in the range of 0.6 – 1.0 litre/m2 residual bitumen Wherever feasible, the prime shall be applied in one or more lanes evenly over the full width of the road and allowed to penetrate and cure until traffic can pass over the surface without the wheels picking up the prime. All traffic shall be kept off the surface until this condition is obtained. If prime is applied in more than one lane, allowance shall be made for overlapping the lanes by 100 mm. Care shall be taken to protect any kerbing, guardrails, channeling, and gutters from the prime by covering with a suitable protective material when spraying. After the prime has penetrated sufficiently, surplus prime shall be covered with damp crusher sand, which shall be worked into it by means of hand brooms in order to absorb the surplus prime. Tack Coat Material RC-70 cutback bitumen Bitumen emulsion safety, equipment, preparation of the surface are similar to the prime coat Application of the tack coat In general, the rate of application of tack coat shall be in the range of 0.1 to 0.2 kg/m2 of residual bitumen Surface Treatments Material Bituminous Binders Conventional Bituminous Binders Non-homogeneous (heterogeneous) Modified Bituminous Binders (Bitumen Rubber Binders) Penetration-grade bitumens Cutback bitumens Anionic bitumen emulsions Cationic bitumen emulsions Base bitumen: 60/70, 80/100 or 150/200 penetration-grade bitumen Rubber: obtained by processing and recycling pneumatic tyres. The rubber crumbs shall be produced by a mechanical comminuting process Water for the production of bitumen emulsion Chippings for surface treatements Grading Hardness Shape Aggregate for slurry seal Plant & Equipment Bitumen Distributor Chip Spreaders spreading the stone uniformly, both transversely and longitudinally, over widths from 1.5m to 4.0m; adjustment to permit variation of the rate of application stopping and starting without forming a joint line keeping pace with the binder distributor. Rollers Brooms: enable the chippings to be distributed evenly over the surface without dislodging chippings from the binder Trucks for transportation of chippings Mixer for Slurry Seal Spreader Box for Slurry Seal Pre-coating plant Weighing devices • Bituminous Surfacings Materials Bituminous binders Aggregates Resistance to crushing (ACV) Shape of the aggregate (flakiness index) Polishing Adhesion Absorbtion Sand equivalent Design requirements Grading Rolled-in chippings Fillers If the grading of the combined aggregates for asphalt surfacing mixes shows a deficiency in fines, an approved filler may be used to improve the grading Plant & Equipment Mixing Plant Spreading equipment • Paver • Chip spreader Rollers Binder distributors Trucks General Limitations Weather conditions • Asphaltic mixes may be mixed and placed only under favorable weather conditions, and should not be mixed or placed when rain is imminent or during misty or wet conditions Moisture • The mixing and placing of asphaltic mixes will not be allowed if: • (i) the moisture content of the aggregate affects the uniformity of temperature; • (ii) free water is present on the working surface; Surface Requirements Correction of roadbase Cleaning of Surface Tack Coat Preparation for placing the overlays Storage Production & Transport Using batch plants Heating the aggregate Batching The aggregate shall be dried and heated to the required temperature Each fraction of the aggregate and binder shall be measured separately and accurately in the proportions by mass in which they are to be mixed Mixing The aggregate, filler and binder shall be mixed until a homogeneous mixture is obtained in which all particles are uniformly coated Using drum type mixer plants The aggregate and filler shall be accurately proportioned and conveyed into the drum mixing unit. The calibrated amount of binder shall be sprayed onto the aggregates at the correct position so that no hardening of the binder shall take place. A homogeneous mixture and uniform coating of binder must be achieved Transporting the mixture Loads shall be covered by waterproof canvas or insulated metal sheets when the haul exceeds 10 km or during cold, windy or rainy weather Any asphalt which has become wet due to rain or any other cause shall be rejected. Hauling over freshly laid material is not permitted. Spreading the mixture The mixture shall be delivered to the paver in such a manner that the paver will never be forced to stop for lack of asphalt The temperature of the mixture shall be controlled by measuring in a random pattern in the truck immediately before emptying and shall not be more than 10° C below the minimum temperature specified for mixing The addition and removal of material behind the paver shall normally not be allowed and the paver shall be capable of spreading the mixture to the correct amounts that will provide the required compacted thickness the paver shall be equipped to provide automatic control of levels and cross section The mixer capacity and the operating speed of the paver are to be so co-ordinated as to ensure continuous laying and to avoid intermittent stopping of the paver. Compaction The material shall not be excessively displaced in a longitudinal or transverse direction especially when changing gears, stopping or starting rollers. No cracks or hair cracks shall be formed and the bond with the underlying layer shall not be broken. Rollers shall not be left standing on the asphalt layer before it has been fully compacted and before the layer surface temperature has dropped below 60cc The mix shall be rolled as soon as possible after it has been laid by a combination of vibratory and non-vibratory steel-tired flat rollers and pneumatic-tyred rollers in a sequence predetermined and approved during the laying of trial sections Final words and Questions?