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A P P E N D I X A 1. Scope 1.1 This practice describes methodology for predicting the endurance limit for hot mix asphalt for long-life pavement design. 1.2 This standard may involve hazardous materials, operations, and equipment. This standard does not purport to address all of the safety problems associated with its use. It is the responsibility of the user of this procedure to establish appropriate safety and health practices and to determine the applicability of regulatory limitations prior to its use. 2. Referenced Documents 2.1 AASHTO Standards ⢠T 321, Determining the Fatigue Life of Compacted Hot-Mix Asphalt (HMA) Sub- jected to Repeated Flexural Bending. ⢠R 30, Mixture Conditioning of Hot Mix Asphalt (HMA) 2.2 Other Publications ⢠NCHRP 9-38, âEndurance Limit of Hot Mix Asphalt Mixtures to Prevent Fatigue Cracking in Flexible Pavements,â Draft Final Report. 3. Terminology 3.1 Endurance limit â the strain level, at a given temperature, below which no bottom-up fatigue damage occurs in the HMA. 3.2 Long-Life Pavement Design â a pavement designed to last a minimum of forty years without bottom-up fatigue failure, or need for structural strengthening. 3.3 Normal strain levels â strain levels where failure (50 percent of initial stiffness) occurs in less than 12 million cycles. For tests conducted at 20°C, strain levels of 300 micro- strain or greater generally meet this requirement. Proposed Standard Practice for Predicting the Endurance Limit of Hot Mix Asphalt (HMA) for Long-Life Pavement Design AASHTO Designation: PP XX-XX 97
98 3.4 Low Strain levels â strain levels where failure (50 percent of initial stiffness) does not occur by 12 million cycles. The failure point of low strain tests generally needs to be extrapolated by one of the methods described in this document. 4. Summary of Practice 4.1 This practice describes the analysis needed to determine the endurance limit for hot- mix asphalt concrete mixtures. It involves collecting beam fatigue test data at speciï¬ed strain rates, predicting the endurance limit based on a log-log extrapolation, and then running tests at the predicted strain level to conï¬rm endurance limit behavior. Since the tests conducted at the predicted strain level should not fail, the failure point is extrapolated from the test data by use of one of several different techniques to conï¬rm the endurance limit of the asphalt mixture. 5. Significance and Use 5.1 The endurance limit can be used during pavement design to determine a pavement thickness which will prevent bottom-up fatigue cracking. 6. Apparatus 6.1 Specimen Fabrication Equipment â Equipment for fabricating beam fatigue test speci- mens as described in AASHTO T 321, Determining the Fatigue Life of Compacted Hot- Mix Asphalt (HMA) Subjected to Repeated Flexural Bending. 6.2 Beam Fatigue Test System â Equipment for testing beam fatigue samples as described in AASHTO T 321, Determining the Fatigue Life of Compacted Hot-Mix Asphalt (HMA) Subjected to Repeated Flexural Bending. 6.3 Analysis Software â Data is collected during the test using a data acquisition system described in section 6.2. Data analysis can be conducted using a spreadsheet program, or a variety of statistical packages. 7. Hazards 7.1 This practice and associated standards involve handling of hot asphalt binder, aggregates and asphalt mixtures. It also includes the use of sawing and coring machinery and servo- hydraulic or pneumatic testing equipment. Use standard safety precautions, equipment, and clothing when handling hot materials and operating machinery. 8. Standardization 8.1 Items associated with this practice that require calibration are included in the documents referenced in Section 2. Refer to the pertinent section of the referenced documents for information concerning calibration.
99 9. Beam Fatigue Test Data 9.1 Test Specimen Fabrication 9.1.1 Prepare at least twelve test specimens to the target air void content in accordance with AASHTO T 321. Samples should be short-term oven aged according to AASHTO R 30 for four hours at 135°C prior to compaction. The target air void content should be representative of that expected to be obtained in the ï¬eld. A target air void content of 7 percent was used for mixes produced at optimum asphalt content in the NCHRP 9-38 research. A reduced air void content would be expected for optimum plus or so-called rich-bottom type mixes. Note 1 â A reasonable air void tolerance for test specimen fabrication is ± 0.5 %. Note 2 â The following are estimated based on a limited round robin. The coefï¬cient of variation of the log (base 10) of the fatigue life of a properly conducted beam fatigue tests at normal strain levels is 5.4 and 6.8 percent, respectively, for within- and between- lab variability. The difference between the logs of the fatigue lives (log sample 1 â log sample 2) of two properly conducted test should not exceed 0.69 for a single operator or 0.89 between two labs. 9.2 Testing Conditions 9.2.1 Separate the test specimens into four groups with approximately equal air voids. Deter- mine the number of cycles to failure (50 percent of initial stiffness) of each specimen in one group using the beam fatigue test system at a strain level of 700 micro-strain. Deter- mine the number of cycles to failure in a second group at a strain level of 500 micro- strain. Determine the number of cycles to failure in the third group at a strain level of 300 micro-strain. The test results at the normal strain level should not be extrapolated; all nine sample should be tested to failure. Note 3 â The original research, including round robin testing, was based on testing three samples each at 800 and 400 micro strain. Additional samples were added to improve the estimation of the endurance limit due to the sensitivity of pavement thick- ness to the endurance limit. 9.3 Beam Fatigue Data Summary to Predict Endurance Limit 9.3.1 Transform the data by taking the log (base 10) of both the micro-strain levels and cycles to failure. Research has shown that the log-log transformation of the data from tests conducted at normal strain levels (above the endurance limit) produce a straight line. Perform a simple linear regression on the transformed data using fatigue life as a pre- dictor for micro-strain level. Using the regression coefï¬cients determined from the regression analysis, determine the micro-strain level corresponding to a fatigue life of log 50,000,000 cycles = 7.69897. Designate this value yo. Calculate the one-sided lower 95% prediction interval according to Equation 1. where: tα = value of t distribution for n â 2 degrees of freedom = 1.89458 for n = 9 with α = 0.05%, Lower Prediction Limit = â + + â( ) yË t s n x x S o o α 1 1 2 xx ( )1
100 s = estimate of standard deviation from the regression analysis, also referred to in Microsoft Excel as the standard error, n = number of samples = 9, (Note: log of fatigue lives), x0 = log 50,000,000 = 7.69897, x _ = average of the fatigue life results determined in 9.2.1. Note 4 â A simple spreadsheet has been developed to perform the calculations described above. 9.3.2 Conduct the beam fatigue test at the strain level corresponding to the 95% one-sided lower prediction limit for a fatigue life of 50,000,000 cycles to 10,000,000 cycles. Research has shown that tests conducted to a minimum of 10,000,000 cycles can extrapolate to estimate long-life fatigue lives. 10. Data Analysis to Extrapolate Long-life Fatigue Tests Beam fatigue tests conducted at low strain levels are unlikely to fail in a reasonable number of cycles. This is particularly true for tests conducted at the 95% one-sided lower prediction limit for the endurance limit determined in section 9.3.1. In order to conï¬rm the existence of the endurance limit, the test data needs to be extrapolated to predict a failure point. This section provides three procedures for extrapolating the beam fatigue failure point for low-strain tests. 10.1 Data Extrapolation Using the Single-Stage Weibull Survivor Function 10.1.1 General Form. The general form of the Weibull Survivor function is shown as Equa- tion 2: where: R(t) = the reliability at time t where t might be time or another life parameter such as loading cycles, γ = the slope, δ = the minimum life, and θ = the characteristic life. 10.1.2 Simplified Form. A specialized case of the Weibull function assumes the mini- mum life, δ, equals zero. Therefore, the hazard function would equal 1/γ, which simplifies Equation 2 into Equation 3. Since the beam fatigue loading cycles are applied at a constant frequency of 10 Hz, the loading cycles, n, can be substituted for time, t. S n n( ) = â Ã( )exp ( )λ γ 3 R t t( ) = â â â âââ ââ â â¡ â£â¢ ⤠â¦â¥ exp ( ) δ θ δ γ 2 S x xxx i i n = â( ) = â 2 1
101 where: S(t) = probability of survival until time t, n = number of loading cycles, λ = scale parameter (intercept), γ = shape parameter (slope). 10.1.3 Final Form. The stiffness ratio (SR) is used to characterize fatigue damage. The stiff- ness ratio is the stiffness measured at cycle n, divided by the initial stiffness, determined at the 50th cycle. Tsai reports that at a given cycle n, the beam being tested has a prob- ability of survival past cycle n equal to the stiffness ratio times 100 percent. Thus, SR(n) can be substituted for S(t). Equation 4 allows the scale and shape parameters for labo- ratory beam fatigue data to be determined by linear regression. 10.1.4 Plot the left-hand side of Equation 4 versus the natural logarithm of the number of cycles, n so a straight line regression can be determined. If the measured stiffness at a given number of cycles is greater than the initial stiffness, e.g. SR > 1.0, ln(-ln(SR)) can- not be computed. Eliminate these data from the regression analysis. Using the shape (slope) and scale (intercept) parameters determined from the simple linear regression, solve Equation 4 for n which produces an SR of 0.5. This can be readily done using a solver function or by trial and error in a spreadsheet. This value of n is the extrapolated fatigue life for 50 percent initial stiffness. 10.1.5 The endurance limit is conï¬rmed by the divergence of the test data below the regres- sion line at a high number of cycles. Figure 1 illustrates this divergence. ln ln ln ln ( )â ( )( ) = ( )+ à ( )SR λ γ n 4 y = 0.401x -8.214 R² = 0.722 -10 -9 -8 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 Ln (-L n(S tiff ne ss R ati o)) Ln (Cycles) PG 64-22 at Optimum Sample 13 Linear (Sample 13) Upper divergence, indicating endurance limit Figure 1. Weibull functions.
102 10.2 Data Extrapolation Using Three-Stage Weibull Survivor Function 10.2.1 To improve upon the accuracy of the single-stage Weibull function, Tsai et al. (2) developed a methodology for ï¬tting a three-stage Weibull curve. Tsai et al. (2) theo- rized that a plot of loading cycles versus stiffness ratio could be divided into three stages: initial heating and temperature equilibrium, crack initiation, and crack propa- gation. In the case of low strain tests (below the endurance limit), the third stage does not appear to represent crack propagation, but rather concave down stage with a reduced rate of damage. In most cases, low strain fatigue tests can be most accurately extrapolated using the single- stage Weibull function. However, in some cases, there are three distinct slopes to the transformed data, in which case the three-stage Weibull function may be used to pro- vide a better estimate of the fatigue life. 10.2.2 First, plot the data as described in Section 10.1.4. Visually examine the data to deter- mine three stages, determined by groups of data exhibiting distinct slopes. Assign a data series to each group of data, representing a single slope. Perform a linear regression on the transformed data for each stage. The regression coefï¬cients become seed values for either a compiled Fortran program or Microsoft Excel spreadsheet solution. An exam- ple is shown in Figure 2. y = 0.5158x -6.51 R² = 0.6636 y = 0.1605x -3.949 R² = 0.9193 y = 0.0583x -2.554 R² = 0.5874 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 Series 1 Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Linear (Stage 1) Linear (Stage 2) Linear (Stage 3) Figure 2. Estimation of three Weibull stages by inspection.
103 10.2.3 A Weibull function is ï¬t to each of these stages as shown in Equation 5: 10.2.4 Coefï¬cients α1, α2, α3, β1, β2, β3, n1, and n2 are illustrated in Figure 3. Using a series of mathematical manipulations (2), n1, γ1, n2, and γ2 can be calculated sequentially as follows: n2 1 3 2 3 2 3 1 2 3 8= + à â ââ â â â ⡠⣠â¢â¢ ⤠⦠â¥â¥ â γ α α β β β β β ( ) γ ββ1 2 1 11 7= â â¡ â£â¢ ⤠â¦â¥ Ãn ( ) n1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 6= à â ââ â â â ⡠⣠â¢â¢ ⤠⦠â¥â¥ âα α β β β β β ( ) SR for 0 SR 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 5= ⤠< = â Ã( ) â à â( ) e n n e n n α β α γ β ( ) 2 1 2 3 3 2 3 2 ( ) â à â( )( ) ⤠< = ⤠< for SR for n n n e n n nα γ β n3 y = 0.5427x -6.6613 R² = 0.547 y = 0.1769x -4.1281 R² = 0.9075 y = 0.0667x -2.6913 R² = 0.7617 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 Ln ( - Ln (S tif fn es s R ati o) ) Ln (Loading Cycles) PG 76-22 Optimum Plus Sample 9 at 200 ms Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 1 Initial Heating Stage 2 Stage 3 LN (n1) Ln (n2) 1 Intercept = Ln α2 β2 β1 β3 Intercept = Ln α3 Intercept = Ln α1 1 1 Figure 3. Three-stage Weibull curve definitions.
104 10.2.4 The trial values for α1, α2, α3, β1, β2, β3 and he test data are entered into a FORTRAN program, N3stage.exe, developed by Tsai or into a spreadsheet developed as part of NCHRP 9-38. N3stage.exe provides a robust solution, but can take up to 45 minutes to run. The spreadsheet uses Microsoft Excelâs Solver Function and takes less than a moment, but in a few cases does not identify a solution. The N3stage.exe program can be obtained from: BWTsai@Berkeley.edu 10.2.5 Using the results from the NStage3.exe program or NCHRP 9-38 spreadsheet, the pre- dicted fatigue life can be calculated according to Equation 10. 11. Report 11.1 For each sample, report the following: 11.1.1 Sample air voids 11.1.2 Test Temperature 11.1.3 Initial ï¬exural stiffness (measured at 50 cycles) 11.1.4 Normal Strain Tests 11.1.4.1 Micro-strain level 11.1.4.2 Number of cycles (measured) to 50 percent of initial stiffness 11.1.5 Low Strain Tests 11.1.5.1 Method of Extrapolation 11.1.5.2 Equation used for extrapolation and R2 value for equation 11.1.5.3 Extrapolated fatigue life Nf for 50 percent of initial stiffness 11.1.6 Endurance Limit 11.1.6.1 Log-Log plot of data with cycles to failure on x-axis and micro-strain on y-axis. 11.1.6.2 Best-ï¬t regression line/equation of normal-strain data should be included on graph. 11.1.6.3 Predicted endurance limit from normal-strain regression with Nf = 50,000,000 cycles 11.1.6.4 Lower one-sided 95 percent conï¬dence interval for micro-strain level corresponding to Nf = 50,000,000 cycles, termed predicted endurance limit. N ef = + â ( ))(( â âââ â â â â ââ â â âln ln . ln ( )0 5 3 3 2 10 α β γ γ ββ β β γ2 3 2 2 3 2 11 9= â â ââ â â â à + Ãn ( )
105 12. Keywords 12.1 Beam fatigue, endurance limit, long-life pavement 13. References 13.1 Tsai, B-W, âHigh Temperature Fatigue and Fatigue Damage Process of Aggregate- Asphalt Mixes.â Report to California Department of Transportation, Pavement Research Center, Institute of Transportation Studies, University of California at Berkeley. 13.2 Tsai, B.-W., J. T. Harvey, and C. L. Monismith. âUsing the Three-Stage Weibull Equa- tion and Tree-Based Model to Characterize the Mix Fatigue Damage Process.â In Transportation Research Record No. 1929, Transportation Research Board, Washing- ton, DC, 2005, Pp 227-237.