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contributor authorLiao Gongyun;Wang Hao;Zhu Hongzhou;Sun Peixiang;Chen Huaqing
date accessioned2019-02-26T07:31:26Z
date available2019-02-26T07:31:26Z
date issued2018
identifier other%28ASCE%29MT.1943-5533.0002216.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4247586
description abstractInsufficient bonding strength between a poroelastic road surface (PERS) and a sublayer usually induces premature delamination failure. The objective of this paper was to investigate the shear bonding strength of the PERS-sublayer interface with different bonding agents and develop polyurethane-bound grain (PUG) as an alternative bonding agent. The inclined shear test was utilized to measure shear bonding strengths of control (without bonding agents) and interface-treated samples. The effects of polyurethane content within PERS, sublayer type, temperature, and freeze-thaw conditions on PERS-sublayer shear bonding strengths were investigated for control samples. Shear bonding strengths between the PERS and sublayer with a PUG layer were compared to those with epoxy asphalt and polyurethane for interface-treated samples. It was found that shear bonding strengths between PERS and asphalt-bound sublayers substantially decreased, with the increase of temperature or after one freeze-thaw cycle. Shear bonding strengths between PERS and asphalt-bound sublayers were smaller than the ones between PERS and cement-bound sublayers, regardless of polyurethane content, temperature, or freeze-thaw condition. The PUG layer enhanced PERS-sublayer interface bonding and achieved comparative bonding strength to epoxy asphalt, which was greater than the bonding strength brought by pure polyurethane. A PUG layer with 7% polyurethane produced more than 1.5-MPa shear bonding strength at 6°C for the grain size considered in this study.
publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
titleShear Strength between Poroelastic Road Surface and Sublayer with Different Bonding Agents
typeJournal Paper
journal volume30
journal issue3
journal titleJournal of Materials in Civil Engineering
identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)MT.1943-5533.0002216
page4018017
treeJournal of Materials in Civil Engineering:;2018:;Volume ( 030 ):;issue: 003
contenttypeFulltext


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