
Using products of the Strategic Highway Research
Program to build better, safer roads
April 1998
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Phase II of the Superpave Models Project
Under Way

The second phase of the Federal Highway Administration's (FHWA) Superpave models project
is now under way. The project, which is being conducted by the University of Maryland (UM)
and a team of subcontractors, is part of FHWA's multiyear plan for developing a system for
predicting the performance of asphalt mixes designed using the Superpave system.
During the first phase of the models project, the UM team conducted a comprehensive
review of the theory, application, implementation, feasibility, results, and conclusions
of the Superpave performance prediction models system initially developed under the
Strategic Highway Research Program (SHRP). The review, which was completed in fall 1996,
concluded that the models system required technical corrections and field calibration
before it would be ready for implementation by highway agencies and industry.
As a result, FHWA's Superpave Technology Delivery Team modified the work plan for the
second phase of the models project. Because Phase I found several errors or limitations in
the way asphalt concrete materials were characterized in the models, Phase II will
emphasize materials characterizationthat is, the structure and behavior of materials
in asphalt mixes.
The UM team will develop the framework for the Superpave performance prediction models
and the materials characterization procedures for use with that framework. The framework
will cover the four major types of distress found in new and rehabilitated
pavementsthermal cracking, fatigue cracking, permanent deformation, and reflection
cracking. The Superpave performance prediction models will be completed, calibrated, and
validated under a series of future contracts.
In addition, the UM team will address the need among highway agencies and industry for
a simple performance test for use with the Superpave mix design procedures. By providing
additional information on the predicted performance of a mix, this test could be useful
in mix design and quality control procedures. The UM team will evaluate the performance
test equipment that is now available, then guide the development of any new test equipment
and develop related test procedures. The test should be available by early next year.
Phase II also calls for the UM team to develop a new educational software program. The
program, which will analyze rutting, fatigue fracture, and thermal fracture in asphalt
pavements, is intended for use in research and education. It will help engineers, students,
and others get ready to use the American Association of State Highway and Transportation
Officials' (AASHTO) 2002 Design Guide, now under development, and it will help them
understand the computer models that will form the basis of the Superpave performance
prediction procedures. The program is scheduled to be available late summer 1998.
For more information, contact Katherine Petros at FHWA (phone: 202-366-1340; fax:
202-366-9981; email: katherine.petros@fhwa.dot.gov)
or visit the UM team's Web site (www.ence.umd.edu/superpave).
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