Abstract

In cold regions, many types of structural damages are caused by the frost heaving of asphalt pavements. Hence, it is important to quantitatively determine the frost-heaving effect of asphalt pavement using a mechanical method to control frost-heaving damage. In this study, first, the internal voids of the asphalt mixture were regarded as a single void, and the water phase transition generating the freezing water in the voids was simulated using a simplified hollow sphere model to create a uniform internal pressure. Second, the prediction equation of the equivalent linear expansion coefficient was proposed by taking the phase transition of water in the saturated asphalt mixture voids into account. A step function was used during the phase transition of water to determine the sudden change in the equivalent linear expansion coefficient, heat capacity, density, and thermal conductivity. Finally, the typical cooling conditions were simulated with the water phase transition and the nonwater phase transition. The experimental results showed that the proposed model could accurately simulate the effect of frost heaving. Higher stress and strain were generated on the surface and in the interior of the pavement, and the positions of maximum stress and strain occurred on the pavement surface under the frost-heaving conditions. The compressive strength of the asphalt mixture in a uniaxial compression test is about 4.5–6 MPa with a single freeze–thaw cycle. Furthermore, when frost heaving occurs on the asphalt pavement between 5.8 and 6.5 MPa, the numerical simulation method can be used to calculate the internal stress of the structure, which found that the compressive stress under the frost-heaving condition was the same magnitude as the compressive strength under the freeze–thaw testing condition.

Highlights

  • The defects caused by the freeze–thaw cycle of an asphalt mixture in pavements are typical in cold regions [1,2]

  • The nonlinearity of temperature change at the water phase transition is due to the fact that when the internal temperature of the pavement surface drops to about 0 ◦C, the water freezes and releases latent heat, and the temperature can be maintained for a period of time without dropping

  • Some conclusions from this study can be drawn: (1) The frost-heaving effect on the asphalt mixture caused by the ice–water phase transition cannot be ignored

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Summary

Introduction

The defects caused by the freeze–thaw cycle of an asphalt mixture in pavements are typical in cold regions [1,2]. Repeated freeze–thaw action leads to the loosening of the asphalt mixture and further results in pavement defects [3,4]. A large number of laboratory findings showed that the freeze–thaw cycle significantly reduced the strength, fatigue life, and durability of different asphalt mixtures [5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. The results of CT show that frost heaving can lead to the expansion of a single void, the merging of two separate voids, and the formation of new voids, which can increase the size and number of voids and cause significant attenuation of asphalt mixture performance [14,15,16]

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