Abstract

AbstractThe Impulse Response (IR) method is a nondestructive method that has been successfully used to detect voids or loss of support underneath rigid pavement and to evaluate the pavement subgrade. Voids or loss of support can be detected due to changes in the pavement’s mobility spectra, while the subgrade is evaluated based on the static stiffness. The fundamental assumption of the IR method is that the response of rigid pavements can be represented by a single degree of freedom (SDOF) system, with the controlling stiffness being that of the subgrade. Although simple to analyze, this oversimplification of a complex dynamic problem introduces deficiencies that are primarily attributed to a deviation of the shape of the impedance function for rigid pavement systems from that of an SDOF system for frequencies beyond the fundamental frequency. Other dynamic models [i.e., cone and lumped parameter (LP)] are investigated as alternatives to the SDOF model and are implemented in the reduction of field data co...

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