Title: Material Properties
1Material Properties
2Material Types
- Unbound (soil)
- Natural (i.e., subgrade)
- Select (i.e., subbase, base)
- Asphalt concrete
- Portland cement concrete
- Stabilized materials
- Cement stabilized
- Bituminous stabilized
- Bedrock
- Recycled
3Material Properties Needed for Design
- Pavement response model material inputs
- Modulus (stiffness)
- Poissons ratio
- Materials-related pavement distress criteria
- Permanent deformation resistance
- Fatigue resistance
- Strength
- Other materials properties
- Density
- Permeability
- Thermal expansion coefficient
4Material Models
(Yoder and Witczak, 1974)
5Material Models
- Linear elasticity
- Asphalt
- Stabilized layers
- Unbound layers
- Linear viscoelasticity
- Asphalt
- Nonlinear (all materials, to some extent)
- Nonlinear elasticity
- Plasticity
- Nonlinear viscoelasticity
- Viscoplasticity
6Soil Classification Systems
7Soil Classification
- The separation of soil into classes or groups
each having similar characteristics and
potentially similar behaviour - Few simple (routine) tests are used to classify
soils. - Gradation
- Atterberg Limits
8Soil Classification Systems
9MIT Classification
Material Material Size (mm)
Boulder gt 60
Gravel Fine 2 6
Gravel Medium 6 20
Gravel Coarse 20 60
Sand Fine 0.06 0.2
Sand Medium 0.2 0.6
Sand Coarse 0.6 2
Silt Fine 0.002 0.006
Silt Medium 0.006 0.02
Silt Coarse 0.02 0.06
Clay lt 0.002
10AASHTO Classification
- AASHTO American Association of State Highways
and Transportation Officials - Used mainly for subgrade rating for highway
purposes. - Requires
- Gradation
- LL
- PI
-
11AASHTO Classification (Granular Materials)
12AASHTO Classification (Fine Materials)
13AASHTO Classification
(Coduto, 1999)
14Group Index (GI)
- GI is used to classify the fine grained soils
within one group and for judging their
suitability as subgrade materials. - GI 0.2 a 0.005 a.c 0.01 b.d ?(0 to 20)
- a P200 35 ?(0 to 40)
- b P200 15 ?(0 to 40)
- c LL 40 ?(0 to 20)
- d LL 10 ?(0 to 20)
- GI to the nearest whole number (integer)
- High GI ? low quality material
- EX A-7-6(5), A-7-6(18)
15USCS Classification
- USCS United Soil Classification System
- Used mainly for geotechnical purposes
- Requires
- Gradation
- LL
- PI
16USCS Classification
Soil Symbol Property Symbol
Gravel G Well Graded W
Sand S Poor Graded P
Clay C High LL (High Plasticity) H
Silt M Low LL (Low Plasticity) L
Peat Pt Clay C
Organic soil O silt M
EX SC ? Clayey Sand EX
Dual Symbol SP-SM GW ? Well Graded
Gravel poorly graded sand
CL ? Clay with low plasticity with
silt
17Computing CU and CC
Coefficient of Uniformity
High Values Indicate Well-Graded Soil
Coefficient of Curvature
Values Between 1-3 Indicate Well-Graded Soil
18A-Line Chart
Separates Clays and Silts
OH MH
ML OL
19USCS Classification
20USCS Classification (Coarse-Grained)
Coarse- Grained Soils 50 or less pass 200 P 4 lt 50 (Gravel) Less than 5 Fines Cugt4, Cc (1-3) GW
Coarse- Grained Soils 50 or less pass 200 P 4 lt 50 (Gravel) Less than 5 Fines Not satisfying GW GP
Coarse- Grained Soils 50 or less pass 200 P 4 lt 50 (Gravel) More than 12 Fines Below A-Line GM
Coarse- Grained Soils 50 or less pass 200 P 4 lt 50 (Gravel) More than 12 Fines PIgt7 Above A-Line GC
Coarse- Grained Soils 50 or less pass 200 P 4 gt 50 (Sand) Less than 5 Fines Cugt6, Cc (1-3) SW
Coarse- Grained Soils 50 or less pass 200 P 4 gt 50 (Sand) Less than 5 Fines Not satisfying GW SP
Coarse- Grained Soils 50 or less pass 200 P 4 gt 50 (Sand) More than 12 Fines Below A-Line SM
Coarse- Grained Soils 50 or less pass 200 P 4 gt 50 (Sand) More than 12 Fines PIgt7 Above A-Line SC
21USCS Classification (Fine-Grained)
Fine- Grained Soils More than 50 pass 200 LLlt50 ML
Fine- Grained Soils More than 50 pass 200 LLlt50 CL
Fine- Grained Soils More than 50 pass 200 LLlt50 OL
Fine- Grained Soils More than 50 pass 200 LLgt50 MH
Fine- Grained Soils More than 50 pass 200 LLgt50 CH
Fine- Grained Soils More than 50 pass 200 LLgt50 OH
Highly Organic Soils Highly Organic Soils Highly Organic Soils Pt
OH MH
ML OL
22Dual Symbols
USCS
- For the following conditions a dual symbol should
be used - a) Coarse grained soils with fines between 5
and 12 - The first symbol is indicative of the gradation
(W or P), the second symbol is indicative of the
fines. - EX SP-SM poorly graded sand with silt
- b) Fine grained soils within the shaded zone in
the A-line chart (PI between 4 and 7, LL between
12 and 25). - EX CL-CM, Silty clay with Low LL
23Comparison between the AASHTO and Unified Systems
- Both systems are based on the texture and
plasticity of the soil. - Both systems divide the soils into two major
categories Coarse grained and Fine grained based
on P200 SI sieve. - AASHTO
- P200 lt 35 ? Coarse grained
- P200 gt 35 ? Fine grained
- Unified
- P200 lt 50 ? Coarse grained
- P200 gt 50 ? Fine grained
24Comparison between the AASHTO and Unified Systems
(Contd)
- AASHTO 10 sieve separates gravels and sand
- Unified 4 sieve separates gravels and sand
- AASHTO There is no organic soil
- Unified There is organic soil
- AASHTO gravely and sandy soils are not clearly
separated - Unified gravely and sandy soils are clearly
separated
25(NCHRP 1-37A. 1999)
26(Das, 1990)
27FAA Classification
- FAA Federal Aviation Administration
- Used mainly for soil classification for airport
construction. - Requires
- Gradation
- LL
- PI
28FAA Classification (Yoder Witczak 1975)
Soil Group R10 P10, R60 P60, R270 P270 LL PI
E-1 0-45 40 60- 15- 25- 6-
E-2 0-45 15 85- 25- 25- 6-
E-3 0-45 - - 25- 25- 6-
E-4 0-45 - - 35- 35- 10-
E-5 0-55 - - 45- 40- 15-
E-6 0-55 - - 45 40- 10-
E-7 0-55 - - 45 50- 10-30
E-8 0-55 - - 45 60- 15-40
E-9 0-55 - - 45 40 30-
E-10 0-55 - - 45 70- 20-50
E-11 0-55 - - 45 80- 30
E-12 0-55 - - 45 80 -
E-13 Muck and Peat Field Examination Muck and Peat Field Examination Muck and Peat Field Examination Muck and Peat Field Examination Muck and Peat Field Examination Muck and Peat Field Examination
29FAA Classification Chart for Fine-Grained Soils
(Yoder Witczak 1975)
30It is Hard to be an engineer!