Abstract

ABSTRACTAmong the fabrication processes available for obtaining asphalt rubber, terminal blend is the most commonly used in Brazil. On the other hand, the use of field-blended rubber asphalt has been around in the United States for decades, especially in the state of Arizona. The lack of information regarding this technique in Brazil, however, inhibits a more common use in pavement construction/rehabilitation. This case history study was conducted in order to characterise the field performance of the first pavement rehabilitation job in Brazil using a field-blended rubber asphalt mixture and attempt to predict its future performance. A 500-m test section using a field-blended rubber asphalt mixture with a gap-graded aggregate as a surface course was monitored periodically through pavement deflection tests, roughness, rutting and surface conditions. Pavement monitoring revealed good functional and structural conditions after 4 years of service life. Accelerated pavement testing (f-sAPT), conducted in a representative test section using a full scale, mobile traffic simulator, exhibited promising performance. No cracking was observed in the test section and the average maximum rut depth was below limits after simulating 7 years of service life. Results from the f-sAPT simulation were then used to calibrate the performance cracking and rutting models in the Highway Development and Management Model (HDM-4).

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