Abstract

The new Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide (MEPDG) provides methodologies for mechanistic-empirical pavement design as opposed to the empirical methodology used in the 1993 American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) pavement design guide. The objective of this study was to compare the pavement designs obtained using the 1993 AASHTO and the new MEPDG methods for typical Portland Cement Concrete (PCC) and Asphalt Concrete (AC) pavements in Kansas. Five in-service Jointed Plain Concrete Pavement (JPCP) projects were reanalyzed as equivalent JPCP and AC projects using both approaches at the same reliability level. The results show that the new MEPDG analysis yielded thinner AC sections for all projects than those obtained from the 1993 AASHTO design guide analysis. Four of the PCC sections, designed using the 1993 AASHTO design guide, were thicker than the sections obtained with MEPDG. The MEPDG analysis resulted in thicker PCC slab for the fifth project. Effect of change in performance criteria on the thickness of AC and PCC sections has also been investigated. It has been found that AC sections are more sensitive to change in performance criteria as compared to PCC sections using MEPDG versions 1.0 and 1.1. In general, difference in thickness using both versions is not significant for all practical purposes.

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