ABSTRACT
The transit of superheavy vehicles on the road network requires a specific authorisation, which results from a critical analysis of the vehicle's effect on the pavement and other road infrastructure. The assessment of the damage caused by these atypical loading conditions is based on the mechanistic-empirical approach to pavement analysis. In practice, two critical behaviours are taken as reference: (1) fatigue failure and (2) structural rutting of the pavement. However, damage assessment is carried out based on partial stresses, making it an incomplete approach to the conditions described by superheavy loads. This article compares different analysis criteria to quantify the damage caused by superheavy trucks and identifies common interest elements. Additionally, a novel approach is used to study the partial contribution of pavement layers to the structure's performance under atypical loading conditions.
Acknowledgement
The authors wish to acknowledge the partners of Phase 2 of the NSERC industrial research Chair on the interaction of heavy loads, climate and pavements of Université Laval (Chair i3C) for the support given to this research.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).