Relating Creep Testing to Rutting of Asphalt Concrete Mixes, HR-311, Part 2, 1991
Authors
Publication date
1 January 1991
Publisher
Abstract
The Iowa Department of Transportation began creep and resilient
modulus testing of asphalt concrete mixtures in 1989.
Part 1 of this research reported in January 1990 was a laboratory study of hot mix asphalt (HMA) mixtures made with O, 30,
60, 85 and 100% crushed gravel, crushed limestone and crushed
quartzite combined with uncrushed sand and gravel. Creep test
results from Marshall specimens related well to the percent of
crushed particles and the perceived resistance to rutting.
The objective of this research, part 2, was to determine if
there was a meaningful correlation between pavement rut depth
and the resilient modulus or the creep resistance factor.
Four and six inch diameter cores were drilled from rutted primary
and interstate pavements and interstate pavements with
design changes intended to resist rutting. The top 2 1/2
inches of each core, most of which was surface course, was
used for creep and resilient modulus testing.
There is a good correlation between the resilient modulus of
four and six inch diameter cores. Creep resistance factors of
four and six inch diameter cores also correlated well. There
is a poor correlation between resilient modulus and the creep
resistance factor. The rut depth per million 18,000 pound
equivalent single axle loadings (ESAL) for these pavements did
not correlate well with either the resilient modulus or the
creep resistance factor