Abstract

Transverse joints are the weakest element of jointed pavements, and when these joints lack structural capacity, the onset of load-related distress is imminent. The most widespread measurement of the joints’ structural performance is the Load Transfer Efficiency Index (LTE), a ratio of the deflection of the two adjoining slabs. LTE can easily be assessed with a falling weight deflectometer, but this test procedure is not advisable for evaluation at the network level because of user safety concerns and because it can be excessively time-consuming. Traffic speed deflection devices like the traffic speed deflectometer (TSD) are suitable devices for network-level pavement structural evaluation. Yet, as of today, no interpretation technique to get structural health metrics for jointed pavements from TSD data has been published. In this paper, a backcalculation scheme based on slab theory is proposed to estimate the joints’ LTE from TSD deflection velocity measurements. The backcalculation problem formulation and its numerical solution using fast procedures are described in detail. The approach is tested with TSD data collected on the MnROAD test track. Overall, it was found that the backcalculation converges to reasonable estimates of the pavement structural properties and can furnish LTE estimates for most transverse joints from 5 cm-resolution TSD data, all at a reasonable computational cost. This allows for corridor-wide LTE assessment of a pavement’s joints using TSD measurements.

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