Skip to main content

Automated testing is safer, cheaper and more thorough

New tests for cracking and rutting are easy to perform, use existing equipment and work well on mixes with different binders and recycled content - Kristina Smith writes Researchers at the Texas A&M Transportation Institute (TTI) have developed new tests for cracking and rutting, designed to be quick and easy to carry out, using existing laboratory equipment. The most advanced of these is the IDEAL Cracking Test (IDEAL-CT), which could be appearing in specifications in some of the US states in around six
May 10, 2019 Read time: 5 mins
Fujie Zhou is the research engineer behind the development of the new IDEAL Cracking and Rutting tests
New tests for cracking and rutting are easy to perform, use existing equipment and work well on mixes with different binders and recycled content - Kristina Smith writes


Researchers at the Texas A&M Transportation Institute (TTI) have developed new tests for cracking and rutting, designed to be quick and easy to carry out, using existing laboratory equipment. The most advanced of these is the IDEAL Cracking Test (IDEAL-CT), which could be appearing in specifications in some of the US states in around six months’ time.

“Cracking is a huge problem in the US,” said Fujie Zhou, research engineer at Texas A&M Transportation Institute, an expert in this field who is leading the development of both tests. “Every Department of Transportation is looking for a simple, practical cracking test for use during mix design, quality control and quality assurance.”

The tests have been developed under one of three Innovations Deserving Exploratory Analysis (IDEA) projects managed by the 2774 Transportation Research Board (TRB). The highways-themed research is funded by 3510 American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) as part of the 1257 National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP).

The most commonly used cracking tests in the US are the Texas Overlay Tests and the Illinois Flexibility Index Test. Both are good tests, according to Zhou, but they each require significant preparation of the specimens before testing, involving notching and – in the case of the Texas Overlay Test specimen – gluing too.

“Based on my experience, the more steps you include in sample preparation, the more potential human error you introduce,” said Zhou, who has been working on cracking-related issues for the last 20 years.

THe IDEAL-CT simply requires a disc-shaped specimen to be moulded, 150mm in diameter and 62mm thick (which is the same size as the specimen required for the Hamburg wheel tracking test). No notching or gluing is required, and the specimen can be tested in a standard indirect tensile strength testing machine.

“We use exactly the same machine, the same test, even the same loading speed,” said Zhou. “The only thing we do differently is use a new way of looking at the data.”

The IDEAL-CT produces a fraction mechanics-based parameter called the Cracking Tolerance Index (CT Index). The larger the CT Index, the better the cracking resistance for the mix.

Most laboratories will have an indirect tensile strength testing machine and, even if they had to buy it new, the cost would be less than $10,000, according to Zhou. This compares to specialised equipment which would cost around $50,000.

Laboratories may need to buy an accessory because the calculation of the CT Index requires that the whole load versus displacement curve be recorded, rather than just the maximum load which is normal for that machine. But this would cost less than $3,500, said Zhou. Alternatively, the load-displacement readings could be recorded manually.

The test has been shown to have good correlation with the existing cracking tests and also with field cracking performance data collected from a number of sources. Independent testing at the National Centre for Asphalt Technology (NCAT) Test Track also verified its correlation with in-field performance. The researchers at TTI ran tests to check its sensitivity to the type of binder used, binder content, RAP proportions and ageing and report that the test is sensitive to these different conditions.

The Coefficient of Variation (COV) for the IDEAL-CT is less than 20%. Although this sounds high, it is actually low, explainED Zhou: “In civil engineering, a COV of less than 20% is pretty good,” he SAID. “When you are producing asphalt mixes, we are talking in tonnes not milligrammes, it’s not like chemistry. Cracking is a localised facture which means that the cracking test is much more variable than other tests such as stiffness or rutting resistance.”

Six DOTs have committed to an implementation programme for the test: Texas, Oklahoma, Virginia, Kentucky, Minnesota and Main. Texas DOT is already planning to use the IDEAL Cracking Test for quality control and Virginia has said that it will specify it for all mixes. Georgia is doing laboratory studies on the test, says Zhou.

TTI published a final report on the new testing method in January this year and there is a draft ASTM standard currently under review.

IDEAL Rutting Test


Having spent two years developing the IDEAL Cracking Test, Zhou and his colleagues have now moved on to create the IDEAL Rutting Test (IDEAL-RT). This can be carried out using a new shear rutting fixture which works with a regular loading frame such as an MTS, UTM or indirect tensile tester.

Currently-used rutting tests, the Hamburg wheel tracking test and the asphalt pavement analyser (APA) require long testing hours and therefore have not often been used for quality assurance and quality control. The new rutting test uses the same sized disc as the cracking test and proposes that the shear strength of the specimen be used as the rutting parameter; the larger the shear strength, the better the rutting resistance of the mix.

Details of the test were due to be published in the Journal of the Association of Asphalt Paving Technologists (AAPT) in March 2019. It shows very good repeatability, explained Zhou, with a COV of 5% and is sensitive to variations in binder properties content, RAP content and ageing.

The goal in developing these two tests is to be able to achieve Balanced Mix Design, a concept which was developed by TTI over a decade ago. This requires mixes to have good resistance to both rutting and cracking, rather than withstand one at the expense of the other.

Zhou hopes that his work can have far-reaching benefit. “If people can use the tests, and everyone benefits from them, I would be very happy,” he said. “The goal is to help contractors build better roads that last longer and that means that every tax payer will benefit.”

Related Content

  • Wirtgen’s concrete paving business meets specialised market demands
    December 2, 2014
    Wirtgen is gearing up its operations in the concrete paving market - Mike Woof writes Concrete paving is a technology developed and pioneered in the US, so it is no surprise that US firms GOMACO, Guntert & Zimmerman, Power Curbers and Power Pavers, have had such a high profile in this market over the years. However one European firm, Wirtgen, is a serious competitor in the sector, the only non-US supplier to the market.
  • Power Curbers sees strong machine sales
    May 15, 2019
    Power Curbers has seen strong sales of its machines during 2018, with demand expected to continue through 2019 – Mike Woof writes Power Curbers has seen strong sales for its slipformers during 2018, with customers keen to replace ageing equip-ment. Sales of the 5700-C have been very healthy. One of the key changes in the market that Power Curbers has observed is with the growing interest in machine control solutions amongst its customers. Power Curbers said that there has been a massive change in custom
  • South Korean technology for thin overlays
    May 15, 2019
    South Korean company Hansoo Road Industry has developed an ultra-thin hot mix asphalt pavement layer, Recover asphalt, designed to overlay cracked pavements at a depth of between 10 and 20mm. “Our company has been studying asphalt modifiers since 1999 and has know-how on research and development of asphalt modifiers,” said Yulia Min, manager at Hansoo Road Industry. “Recover asphalt was developed through a four-year study based on the previous studies of asphalt modifier technology.” Recover asphalt has
  • Micro surfacing the Brooklyn Bridge with Bergkamps’ M210 paver
    May 16, 2018
    A major job for micro surfacing took place on the Brooklyn Bridge near New York. It was the third time in Ken Messina’s career that he would provide micro surfacing for the iconic Brooklyn Bridge, built in 1883. Messina, as president of New Jersey-based Asphalt Paving Systems (APS), knew only too well the challenges that lay ahead. And there were many. There would be only a brief window of opportunity for paving, with lane closures starting at 10pm and ending at 5am. The cool, humid atmosphere would a