Dynamic Modulus Characteristics of Bound Cement-Treated Crushed Rock Base course

Cement-treated base is a conveniently and effectively stabilised pavement material consisting of a mixture of standard base course materials blended with a prescribed amount of Portland cement and water. The cement-treated base material is suitable for use in high-traffic roads and airfield pavement...

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Main Authors: Nusit, K., Jitsangiam, Peerapong, Nikraz, Hamid, Hewa Thalagahage, R.
Other Authors: Prof.Suksun Horpibulsuk
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Suranaree University of Technology 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13738
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author Nusit, K.
Jitsangiam, Peerapong
Nikraz, Hamid
Hewa Thalagahage, R.
author2 Prof.Suksun Horpibulsuk
author_facet Prof.Suksun Horpibulsuk
Nusit, K.
Jitsangiam, Peerapong
Nikraz, Hamid
Hewa Thalagahage, R.
author_sort Nusit, K.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Cement-treated base is a conveniently and effectively stabilised pavement material consisting of a mixture of standard base course materials blended with a prescribed amount of Portland cement and water. The cement-treated base material is suitable for use in high-traffic roads and airfield pavements, and usually provides superior engineering properties compared to standard road base material. However, fully bound or stabilised cement-treated base is a relatively stiff pavement base material which is prone to fatigue failure under repeated loading. In pavement design, current fatigue models for cement-treated base material remain empirical, and there exists a lack in scientific linkage between the models themselves and real fatigue perfor-mance. Consequently, a more reliable fatigue deterioration model for cement-treated base is required in order to maximise the usage of such material in pavements. The provision of ‘bottom-up’ constitutive equations is preferable when seeking a deeper understanding of cement-treated base course behaviour under repeated loading. This study focuses on evaluating the dynamic moduli (i.e., the moduli under cyclic loading conditions), of cement-treated base under traffic loads. The same testing basis used for asphalt concrete was adopted in this research. As such, the dynamic moduli were measured under different temperatures and loading frequencies, based on the dynamic modulus testing protocol for asphalt concrete. Test results revealed that cement content and curing time significantly influence the dynamic modulus of bound cement-treated base course. However, the dynamic modulus property was slightly affected by the changes in temperature and loading frequency within a specific range of testing conditions of the test protocol. At the end of this research, a predictive equation for the dynamic modulus was tentatively put forward. This equation was developed from the relationship of the modulus to the unconfined compressive strength. It should be noted that this predictive equation requires further verification due to its development being based on limited number of test samples and results.Cement-treated base is a conveniently and effectively stabilised pavement material consisting of a mixture of standard base course materials blended with a prescribed amount of Portland cement and water. The cement-treated base material is suitable for use in high-traffic roads and airfield pavements, and usually provides superior engineering properties compared to standard road base material. However, fully bound or stabilised cement-treated base is a relatively stiff pavement base material which is prone to fatigue failure under repeated loading. In pavement design, current fatigue models for cement-treated base material remain empirical, and there exists a lack in scientific linkage between the models themselves and real fatigue performance. Consequently, a more reliable fatigue deterioration model for cement-treated base is required in order to maximise the usage of such material in pavements. The provision of ‘bottom-up’ constitutive equations is preferable when seeking a deeper understanding of cement-treated base course behaviour under repeated loading. This study focuses on evaluating the dynamic moduli (i.e., the moduli under cyclic loading conditions), of cement-treated base under traffic loads. The same testing basis used for asphalt concrete was adopted in this research. As such, the dynamic moduli were measured under different temperatures and loading frequencies, based on the dynamic modulus testing protocol for asphalt concrete. Test results revealed that cement content and curing time significantly influence the dynamic modulus of bound cement-treated base course.However, the dynamic modulus property was slightly affected by the changes in temperature and loading frequency within a specific range of testing conditions of the test protocol. At the end of this research, a predictive equation for the dynamic modulus was tentatively put forward. This equation was developed from the relationship of the modulus to the unconfined compressive strength. It should be noted that this predictive equation requires further verification due to its development being based on limited number of test samples and results.
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format Conference Paper
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:04:51Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Suranaree University of Technology
recordtype eprints
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-137382017-02-28T01:34:37Z Dynamic Modulus Characteristics of Bound Cement-Treated Crushed Rock Base course Nusit, K. Jitsangiam, Peerapong Nikraz, Hamid Hewa Thalagahage, R. Prof.Suksun Horpibulsuk Unconfined compressive strength Cement stabilisation Dynamic modulus Cement-treated base is a conveniently and effectively stabilised pavement material consisting of a mixture of standard base course materials blended with a prescribed amount of Portland cement and water. The cement-treated base material is suitable for use in high-traffic roads and airfield pavements, and usually provides superior engineering properties compared to standard road base material. However, fully bound or stabilised cement-treated base is a relatively stiff pavement base material which is prone to fatigue failure under repeated loading. In pavement design, current fatigue models for cement-treated base material remain empirical, and there exists a lack in scientific linkage between the models themselves and real fatigue perfor-mance. Consequently, a more reliable fatigue deterioration model for cement-treated base is required in order to maximise the usage of such material in pavements. The provision of ‘bottom-up’ constitutive equations is preferable when seeking a deeper understanding of cement-treated base course behaviour under repeated loading. This study focuses on evaluating the dynamic moduli (i.e., the moduli under cyclic loading conditions), of cement-treated base under traffic loads. The same testing basis used for asphalt concrete was adopted in this research. As such, the dynamic moduli were measured under different temperatures and loading frequencies, based on the dynamic modulus testing protocol for asphalt concrete. Test results revealed that cement content and curing time significantly influence the dynamic modulus of bound cement-treated base course. However, the dynamic modulus property was slightly affected by the changes in temperature and loading frequency within a specific range of testing conditions of the test protocol. At the end of this research, a predictive equation for the dynamic modulus was tentatively put forward. This equation was developed from the relationship of the modulus to the unconfined compressive strength. It should be noted that this predictive equation requires further verification due to its development being based on limited number of test samples and results.Cement-treated base is a conveniently and effectively stabilised pavement material consisting of a mixture of standard base course materials blended with a prescribed amount of Portland cement and water. The cement-treated base material is suitable for use in high-traffic roads and airfield pavements, and usually provides superior engineering properties compared to standard road base material. However, fully bound or stabilised cement-treated base is a relatively stiff pavement base material which is prone to fatigue failure under repeated loading. In pavement design, current fatigue models for cement-treated base material remain empirical, and there exists a lack in scientific linkage between the models themselves and real fatigue performance. Consequently, a more reliable fatigue deterioration model for cement-treated base is required in order to maximise the usage of such material in pavements. The provision of ‘bottom-up’ constitutive equations is preferable when seeking a deeper understanding of cement-treated base course behaviour under repeated loading. This study focuses on evaluating the dynamic moduli (i.e., the moduli under cyclic loading conditions), of cement-treated base under traffic loads. The same testing basis used for asphalt concrete was adopted in this research. As such, the dynamic moduli were measured under different temperatures and loading frequencies, based on the dynamic modulus testing protocol for asphalt concrete. Test results revealed that cement content and curing time significantly influence the dynamic modulus of bound cement-treated base course.However, the dynamic modulus property was slightly affected by the changes in temperature and loading frequency within a specific range of testing conditions of the test protocol. At the end of this research, a predictive equation for the dynamic modulus was tentatively put forward. This equation was developed from the relationship of the modulus to the unconfined compressive strength. It should be noted that this predictive equation requires further verification due to its development being based on limited number of test samples and results. 2014 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13738 Suranaree University of Technology restricted
spellingShingle Unconfined compressive strength
Cement stabilisation
Dynamic modulus
Nusit, K.
Jitsangiam, Peerapong
Nikraz, Hamid
Hewa Thalagahage, R.
Dynamic Modulus Characteristics of Bound Cement-Treated Crushed Rock Base course
title Dynamic Modulus Characteristics of Bound Cement-Treated Crushed Rock Base course
title_full Dynamic Modulus Characteristics of Bound Cement-Treated Crushed Rock Base course
title_fullStr Dynamic Modulus Characteristics of Bound Cement-Treated Crushed Rock Base course
title_full_unstemmed Dynamic Modulus Characteristics of Bound Cement-Treated Crushed Rock Base course
title_short Dynamic Modulus Characteristics of Bound Cement-Treated Crushed Rock Base course
title_sort dynamic modulus characteristics of bound cement-treated crushed rock base course
topic Unconfined compressive strength
Cement stabilisation
Dynamic modulus
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13738