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  DESIGN CRITERIA FOR PERMANENT DEFORMATION OF 
 SUBGRADE SOILS IN FLEXIBLE PAVEMENTS FOR LOW-VOLUME ROADS  
 YANJUN QIU, NORMAN D. DENNIS and ROBERT P. ELLIOTT   
 ABSTRACT Subgrade soils contribute to surface rutting and 
 fatigue cracking, the two major distress modes in flexible pavements. 
 Rutting and cracking are accumulated damages done to the pavement 
 structures over load repetitions and are irrecoverable in nature. 
 Current transfer functions used in the mechanistic-based design methods 
 relate these plastic phenomena solely to elastic responses. In this 
 paper, the philosophy of the connection between subgrade and pavement 
 distress modes is reviewed. A finite element method program, ARKPAVE, 
 was used to conduct the structural analyses of flexible pavements. 
 Structural responses suggest that resilient modulus, the only design 
 input of subgrades could not adequately reflect such a contribution 
 which indicates that subgrade soils have not been addressed effectively 
 in current design methods. Based on the prediction model for permanent 
 deformation of subgrade soils which is ck rived from the results of 
 repeated load testing, an improved design criterion for subgrade soils 
 is proposed. An example of incorporating the permanent deformation of 
 subgrade soils into flexible pavement design, especially for low-volume 
 rural roads, is demonstrated. The stress ratio at the top of subgrade 
 soils,  rc defined as 
 the ratio of deviator stress to static strength, is recommended to 
 replace the vertical compressive resilient strain as the design criteria 
 for pavement rutting in future mechanistic-based design guides for 
 flexible pavement structures  
 Key words: cracking, flexible pavement, pavement design, 
 permanent deformation, rutting, stress ratio, subgrad soils (IGC: 
 H6/E2/E10)  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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