International Journal of Pavement Engineering | 2019

Influence of material heterogeneity in the fracture of asphalt mixtures

 
 
 

Abstract


ABSTRACT This work numerically evaluates the role of material heterogeneity in the variability of fracture processes in Hot Mix Asphalt (HMA) materials. Specifically, the paper focuses on the heterogeneity induced by the spatial air void distribution within HMA specimens, and it uses a fracture test configuration to assess the differences produced by these distributions in the fracture response of the mixtures. The work initiated with an experimental stage that provided fracture, creep compliance and indirect tensile strength (IDT) test results and data on the heterogeneous distribution of air voids (AV) in HMA specimens. The outcome from this phase revealed that the air void content in HMA specimens significantly impacted the viscoelastic, tensile resistance and fracture response of the material. This stage also provided information on the typical internal distribution of AV within cylindrical HMA testing specimens. These experimental results were used in the development of computational Finite Element (FE) models that used the geometrical configuration of the semi-circular bending (SCB) test, and that incorporated cohesive surface contacts and stochastic Random Fields (RF) techniques. The cohesive contacts were used to simulate fracture within the computational specimens, while RF theory was used to indirectly account for the non-uniform spatial distributions of the air void phase and of the mechanical- and fracture-related material properties within the specimens. The numerical results suggest that HMA heterogeneity due to non-uniform air void distributions accounts for an important portion of the variability associated with fracture processes in HMA materials.

Volume 20
Pages 747 - 760
DOI 10.1080/10298436.2017.1334461
Language English
Journal International Journal of Pavement Engineering

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