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Article
Variation of Moisture Content and Temperature under the Road Shoulder Improved with Wicking Geotextile
Geotechnical Special Publication
  • Javad Galinmoghadam
  • Xiong Zhang, Missouri University of Science and Technology
Abstract

Several Pavement Distresses Are Associated with Excess Water in the Pavement System. Hence, Controlling Subsurface Water is Crucial to Pavement's Long-Term Performance. Improving Pavement Drainage is Commonly Used to Control the Water Content in Pavement Layers. Conventional Drainage Systems Can Work under Saturated Conditions but Cannot Effectively Drain Capillary Water. a New Type of Wicking Geotextile Has Been Developed that Can Drain Water under Both Saturated and Unsaturated Conditions. in This Study, the Performance of This New Type of Geotextile in Draining Water from a Paved Road Shoulder is Evaluated. a Full-Scale Test Section Along Interstate 44 Was Constructed and Instrumented. More Than Three Years of Continuous Monitoring Proved that the Wicking Geotextile Effectively Reduced the Moisture Content of the Improved Section.

Department(s)
Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering
Keywords and Phrases
  • Capillary water,
  • Field test,
  • Pavement,
  • Subsurface drainage,
  • Wicking geotextile
Document Type
Article - Conference proceedings
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2023 American Society of Civil Engineers, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Publication Date
01 Jan 2023
Citation Information
Javad Galinmoghadam and Xiong Zhang. "Variation of Moisture Content and Temperature under the Road Shoulder Improved with Wicking Geotextile" Geotechnical Special Publication Iss. GSP 343 (2023) p. 419 - 431 ISSN: 0895-0563
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/xiong-zhang/92/