Abstract

Truck tire inflation pressure plays an important role in the tire-pavement interaction process. As a conventional approximation method in many pavement studies, tire-pavement contact stress is frequently assumed to be uniformly distributed over a circular contact area and to be simply equal to the tire pressure. However, recent studies have demonstrated that the tire-pavement contact stress is far from uniformly distributed. Measured tire-pavement contact stress data were input into an elastic multilayer pavement analysis program to compute pavement immediate responses. Two asphalt concrete pavement structures, a thick pavement and a thin pavement, were investigated. Major pavement responses at locations in the pavement structures were computed with the measured tire-pavement contact stress data and were compared with the conventional method. The computation results showed that the conventional method tends to underestimate pavement responses at low tire pressures and to overestimate pavement responses at...

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