Abstract

Smooth, round steel dowels have been used for nearly a century to transfer wheel loads across concrete pavement joints. Dowels are subjected to shear and bending stresses caused by traffic loads in addition to curling stresses caused by temperature gradients in pavement slabs. Over time, the use of deicing salts corrodes steel dowels and causes damage to concrete pavement joints. Alternative dowel materials, such as stainless steel and glass fiber–reinforced polymer (GFRP), have been introduced in recent years. The dominant size of dowels for highway pavements has remained the same, typically 38 mm in diameter, and costs can be considerably higher for stainless steel compared with epoxy-coated steel dowels of the same size. Experimental tests at the University of Manitoba, Canada, examined the performance of four dowel types, including the standard 38-mm epoxy-coated steel; 38-mm solid, pultruded GFRP dowels; and 50-mm and 63.5-mm concrete-filled GFRP tube dowels. The dowels were cast in small concrete slabs of typical pavement thickness and instrumented with strain and displacement gauges. Behavior of the dowels was evaluated on the basis of measured displacements, bending strains, and performance for more than 1 million load cycles. Concrete-filled GFRP tube dowels exhibited considerably smaller displacements and, therefore, lower bearing stresses than 38-mm steel and solid GFRP bars. After 1 million load cycles, concrete-filled dowels and concrete slab showed no signs of fatigue damage or loss of load transfer, indicating a reasonable potential for replacing steel dowels, particularly in corrosive environments.

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