2011
DOI: 10.1061/(asce)mt.1943-5533.0000267
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Characterization of Cement-Fiber-Treated Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement Aggregates: Preliminary Investigation

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Cited by 164 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…Portland Cement Association (PCA) has suggested that the UCS of 7-day-cured chemically stabilized base course materials should be in the range of 2070 to 2760 kPa [14]. Guthrie et al [14], Taha et al [23], Ganne [12], Yuan et al [35], and Hoyos et al [17] evaluated the UCS of 7-day-cured cement-stabilized blends of RAP and aggregates commonly used for base course applications. All the above researchers, except Guthrie et al [14] and Ganne [12] found [14] found that the virgin aggregate samples had lower UCS than the blends containing 25 and 50 % RAP.…”
Section: Unconfined Compressive Strengthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Portland Cement Association (PCA) has suggested that the UCS of 7-day-cured chemically stabilized base course materials should be in the range of 2070 to 2760 kPa [14]. Guthrie et al [14], Taha et al [23], Ganne [12], Yuan et al [35], and Hoyos et al [17] evaluated the UCS of 7-day-cured cement-stabilized blends of RAP and aggregates commonly used for base course applications. All the above researchers, except Guthrie et al [14] and Ganne [12] found [14] found that the virgin aggregate samples had lower UCS than the blends containing 25 and 50 % RAP.…”
Section: Unconfined Compressive Strengthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…RAP contains asphalt binder (3-7%) and aggregates (93-97%) by weight (Han & Thakur, 2015), and is an ideal recycled waste material for reuse in pavement applications. RAP often exhibits low strength and stiffness performances, hence chemical stabilization of RAP is used extensively for developing bound pavement base/sub-base material (Hoyos et al, 2011;Saride et al, 2015). Several researchers have reported that the performance of cement stabilized RAP satisfied the requirements of pavement base/subbase application (Hoyos.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the natural soils mixed with RAP exhibit low strength and collapse on wetting. These limitations have led to the new research efforts aimed at exploring novel stabilization methods to treat soil-RAP mixture before their use in pavement base or subbase construction [6]. The cost-effective method for stabilizing pavement material is a cold in-place mixed with cement.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Laboratory and field investigation on the use of RAP material in pavement base and subbase applications has been conducted by Rutgers University [14]. Other research works on the use of RAP have been reported in the most recent literature (e.g., [6], [15] to [17]). However, there are no methodologies based on rational criteria to assess the target strength for practical use; the conventional technique to design the mixed proportions of soil/RAP mixture is based on a trial batch.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%