Calculation Derivation and Test Verification of Indirect Tensile Strength of Asphalt Pavement Interlayers at Low Temperatures
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Establishment of the Mechanical Model for the Interlayer Bond Indirect Tensile Test
- (1)
- To optimize the uniform stress distribution, an arc loading is applied on the plane along the x-axis. In accordance with Saint-Venant’s principle and the researches done by Kourkoulis et al., this loading mode can effectively abate the stress concentration [28,29,30]. Kourkoulis et al. conducted a series of standard Brazilian disk tests employing a new three-dimensional digital image correlation system. It was found that when the center angle of the arc loading surface was 24°, the stress was evenly distributed along the contact ring [30]. Therefore, the center angle of the arc loading surface in this study is selected 24°.
- (2)
- To ensure the uniform internal stress transfer in the specimen, the specimen should be homogeneously isotropic elastic [31]. When the asphalt mixture specimen is loaded at low temperatures, the material displays elastic properties. Therefore, the specimen can be regarded as homogeneous isotropic [32,33,34].
- (3)
3. Theoretical Analysis of the Indirect Tensile Test of the Interlayer Bond
3.1. Stress Solution on the Boundary of the Indirect Tensile Test Model of the Interlayer Bond
3.2. Stress Solution in the Indirect Tensile Test Model of the Interlayer Bond
3.3. Tensile Strength of the Interlayer Bond in the Indirect Tensile Test Model
4. Experimental Verification of the Indirect Tensile Test of the Interlayer Bond
4.1. Design of the Test
4.2. Analysis of Test Results
5. Conclusions
- I.
- The interlayer bond strength of asphalt pavement can be determined by an indirect tensile test, which effectively reduces the workload of the direct tensile test and the waste of resources.
- II.
- The finite element or discrete element theoretical solution was utilized in most existing researches to express the stress state in the specimen. Different from these researches, based on the two-dimensional elastic theory, the calculation formula of indirect tensile strength of the interlayer bond is derived in this paper. The calculation formula supplements the deficiency of the mechanical theoretical analysis of the indirect tensile test of the interlaminar bind.
- III.
- The failure mode of the specimen verifies the validity of the test introduce, i.e., under the indirect tensile loading conditions designed, the crack starts from the center of the XOY plane in the specimen.
- IV.
- At 5 °C and 10 °C, the ranking of the direct tensile strength for the three bonding is SW > SBR > SBS. This sequence is also confirmed in the indirect tensile test, which reduces the workload and the waste of materials. Therefore, the indirect tensile test can better replace the direct tensile test at low temperatures. It also conforms to the premise of the theoretical deduction.
- V.
- The indirect tensile test at low temperatures can better diminish the deviation of the test data. The main reason is that the temperature change can caus a stress redistribution in the sample. Due to the existence of internal pores of asphalt mixture, the stress redistribution could affect the internal stress transmission in the sample. Since the stress transmission path under the direct tensile mode is longer, therefore, the impact is more significant than that under indirect tensile mode. That’s why the deviation coefficient of the direct tensile test data is greater than that of the indirect tensile test.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Temperatures | Bonding Materials | Indirect Tensile Strength (MPa) | Direct Tensile Strength (MPa) |
---|---|---|---|
5 °C | SBR | 2.645 | 1.762 |
SBS | 2.318 | 1.629 | |
SW | 2.816 | 1.863 | |
10 °C | SBR | 2.279 | 1.480 |
SBS | 2.001 | 1.352 | |
SW | 2.319 | 1.537 |
Items | Temperatures | Deviation Coefficient (%) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SBR | SBS | SW | Mean Value | ||
Indirect tensile strength | 5 °C | 4.96 | 4.13 | 3.02 | 4.04 |
10 °C | 9.92 | 8.88 | 7.47 | 8.76 | |
Direct tensile strength | 5 °C | 15.49 | 16.77 | 12.80 | 15.02 |
10 °C | 16.20 | 17.14 | 12.21 | 15.18 |
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Zhang, Q.; Fang, Z.; Xu, Y.; Ma, Z. Calculation Derivation and Test Verification of Indirect Tensile Strength of Asphalt Pavement Interlayers at Low Temperatures. Materials 2021, 14, 6041. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14206041
Zhang Q, Fang Z, Xu Y, Ma Z. Calculation Derivation and Test Verification of Indirect Tensile Strength of Asphalt Pavement Interlayers at Low Temperatures. Materials. 2021; 14(20):6041. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14206041
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Qian, Zhihe Fang, Yiheng Xu, and Zhao Ma. 2021. "Calculation Derivation and Test Verification of Indirect Tensile Strength of Asphalt Pavement Interlayers at Low Temperatures" Materials 14, no. 20: 6041. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14206041
APA StyleZhang, Q., Fang, Z., Xu, Y., & Ma, Z. (2021). Calculation Derivation and Test Verification of Indirect Tensile Strength of Asphalt Pavement Interlayers at Low Temperatures. Materials, 14(20), 6041. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14206041