2010
DOI: 10.3141/2152-03
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In-Place Hot-Mix Asphalt Density Estimation Using Ground-Penetrating Radar

Abstract: In-situ asphalt mixture density is critically important to the performance of flexible airport pavements: density that is too high, or too low, may cause early pavement distresses.Traditionally, two methods have been commonly used for in-situ asphalt mixture density measurement: laboratory testing on field-extracted cores and in-situ nuclear gauge testing.However, both these methods have limitations. The coring method damages pavement, causes traffic interruption, and provides only limited data at discrete loc… Show more

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Cited by 98 publications
(67 citation statements)
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“…He presented a model to estimate the moisture content of asphalt mixture based on dielectric constant. Then, the same principle was used to measure the percentage of air voids in asphalt mixtures (Al-Qadi, Leng, & Larkin, 2011). Also Saarenketo used the GPR for air void estimation in 1993 in a project that was owned by the Technology Development Centre of Finland (TEKES) (Al-Qadi, 1992).…”
Section: Backgroundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…He presented a model to estimate the moisture content of asphalt mixture based on dielectric constant. Then, the same principle was used to measure the percentage of air voids in asphalt mixtures (Al-Qadi, Leng, & Larkin, 2011). Also Saarenketo used the GPR for air void estimation in 1993 in a project that was owned by the Technology Development Centre of Finland (TEKES) (Al-Qadi, 1992).…”
Section: Backgroundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The software named SIDARS was designed on the basis of mixing theory that each pavement layer is formed of three types of solid, liquid and gas. Thus, the dielectric constant is a combination of dielectric constant of each of the three phases of the material (Al-Qadi, Leng, & Larkin, 2011). Based on this assumption a model of wave propagation was used in pavement systems.…”
Section: Backgroundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In fact, the electromagnetic echo recorded by GPR is due to the different electromagnetic parameters (i.e., effective relative permittivity, permeability and conductivity) of the materials along the stratification [3], whose knowledge leads to a correct time-to-depth conversion and a correct estimation of the depth of a buried target [2]. Moreover, the knowledge of the dielectric permittivity of soil allows to infer the chemical, physical and mineralogical properties of the mixture composing the soil, being a macroscopic parameter related to the soil moisture content [4][5][6], to the mixture density of asphalt [7], and to the air voids per unit of volume [8].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This in turn enables calibration of layer depth estimates and determination of the bulk relative permittivity of pavement layers, from which the moisture content or other pavement parameters or their variation may be inferred, for example changes in density for new asphalt pavements (Al-Qadi et al, 2010). As the approach accounts for material inhomogeneity within layers, it enables more accurate layer depth estimates for older and more variable pavement materials compared to the surface reflection coefficient approach (Lahouar et al, 2002) as that approach is better suited to new or defect-free pavements that are non-attenuative .…”
Section: Advantages and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%