TY - JOUR
T1 - Bender element sensor technology to quantify local stiffness enhancement of geogrid-stabilized aggregate specimens
AU - Wang, Han
AU - Kang, Mingu
AU - Kim, Youngdae
AU - Qamhia, Issam I.A.
AU - Tutumluer, Erol
AU - Shoup, Heather
N1 - This publication is based on the results of the ongoing Illinois Center of Transportation (ICT)-R27-234 project, titled, \u201CEffectiveness of Geosynthetics in Soil/Aggregate Stabilization - Evaluation using Bender Element Sensor Technology.\u201D ICT-R27-234 is conducted in cooperation with the ICT, the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), and the U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). The authors would like to acknowledge the geogrid manufacturer for donating the products for this study. The authors would also like to acknowledge Austin Bunge, Taeyun Kong and Syed Faizan Husain from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) for their help with the laboratory work. The help and efforts of research engineers Greg Renshaw and Mohsen Motlagh from ICT, and Marc Allen Killion from Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE) Department machine shop at UIUC with the instrumentation are greatly appreciated. The contents of this paper reflect the view of the authors, who are responsible for the facts and accuracy of the data presented herein. The contents do not necessarily reflect the official views or policies of the ICT, the IDOT, or the FHWA. This paper does not constitute a standard, specification, or regulation.
PY - 2024/9/19
Y1 - 2024/9/19
N2 - Geogrids improve pavement performance and extend lifespan by making the unbound aggregate base/subbase course stiffer. Extruded (i.e., punched and drawn) geogrids are widely used in pavement applications. This paper presents an experimental evaluation of multi-axial extruded geogrids with various aperture shapes for pavement applications. The study quantified modulus enhancement ratio and identified the extent of the geogrid-stiffened zone. Two types of aggregates (i.e., crushed limestone and partially crushed gravel), commonly used in Illinois for base or subbase course, were utilized. Repeated load triaxial tests were conducted on 6-in. diameter and 12-in. height cylindrical specimens instrumented with embedded shear wave transducers in the form of Bender Element (BE) sensors. The BE pairs were horizontally placed at three different heights above the geogrid. Resilient moduli of the aggregate samples were determined following the AASHTO T 307 standard test procedure. Concurrently, the localized small-strain moduli at different heights above the midheight of the specimen were determined from the shear wave velocities computed according to the first arrival times from the BE sensors recorded at the end of the application of each stress state. The results reveal that resilient modulus tests do not capture the geogrid effects, while BE sensors can quantify the local stiffness enhancement due to a geogrid, and the extent of the geogrid-stiffened zone. Results show that the multi-axial geogrids provided a 45% increase in small strain modulus for both aggregate types in the vicinity of the geogrid.
AB - Geogrids improve pavement performance and extend lifespan by making the unbound aggregate base/subbase course stiffer. Extruded (i.e., punched and drawn) geogrids are widely used in pavement applications. This paper presents an experimental evaluation of multi-axial extruded geogrids with various aperture shapes for pavement applications. The study quantified modulus enhancement ratio and identified the extent of the geogrid-stiffened zone. Two types of aggregates (i.e., crushed limestone and partially crushed gravel), commonly used in Illinois for base or subbase course, were utilized. Repeated load triaxial tests were conducted on 6-in. diameter and 12-in. height cylindrical specimens instrumented with embedded shear wave transducers in the form of Bender Element (BE) sensors. The BE pairs were horizontally placed at three different heights above the geogrid. Resilient moduli of the aggregate samples were determined following the AASHTO T 307 standard test procedure. Concurrently, the localized small-strain moduli at different heights above the midheight of the specimen were determined from the shear wave velocities computed according to the first arrival times from the BE sensors recorded at the end of the application of each stress state. The results reveal that resilient modulus tests do not capture the geogrid effects, while BE sensors can quantify the local stiffness enhancement due to a geogrid, and the extent of the geogrid-stiffened zone. Results show that the multi-axial geogrids provided a 45% increase in small strain modulus for both aggregate types in the vicinity of the geogrid.
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U2 - 10.1051/e3sconf/202456926004
DO - 10.1051/e3sconf/202456926004
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85206196464
SN - 2555-0403
VL - 569
JO - E3S Web of Conferences
JF - E3S Web of Conferences
M1 - 26004
T2 - 5th Pan-American Conference on Geosynthetics, GeoAmericas 2024
Y2 - 28 April 2024 through 1 May 2024
ER -