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Engineering Commons

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University of Kentucky

1976

Engineering

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

A Possible Explanation Of Concrete Pop-Outs, James H. Havens, Robert C. Deen Dec 1976

A Possible Explanation Of Concrete Pop-Outs, James H. Havens, Robert C. Deen

Kentucky Transportation Center Research Report

This report summarizes several years of research relating to damage to concrete and aggregates undergoing freezing and thawing. Basic principles involving freezing and attendant pressures are considered. Application of these principles to the evaluation of concrete was accomplished in experiments on concrete having low and high air contents.

Freeze-thaw characteristics of saturated aggregates relative to physical properties such as porosity, absorption, and bulk specific gravity were studied by submerging individual particles in pre-chilled mercury. Pressures associated with pop-outs in concrete were monitored and are presented along with accompanying theoretical considerations.


Kentucky Research: A Flexible Pavement Design And Management System, Herbert F. Southgate, Robert C. Deen, James H. Havens, William B. Drake Aug 1976

Kentucky Research: A Flexible Pavement Design And Management System, Herbert F. Southgate, Robert C. Deen, James H. Havens, William B. Drake

Kentucky Transportation Center Research Report

Various strategies for designing pavement structures are discussed. Initial full-life design, stage designs and planned extensions of service life, final design, surface renewals for deslicking, no-defect designs for high-type high-volume facilities, and allowable-defect designs are considered. Economics enter in terms of salvage value of existing pavements and alternate designs using different proportions of materials within the structure.

The elastic model represented in Chevron's n-layered computer program is the basis for theoretical relationships. Ranges of values are given for input variables such as Young's moduli, Poisson's ratio, thicknesses for layers, tire pressure, and load. The Kentucky CBR is related to modulus …


Effect Of Pavement Texture On Traffic Noise, Kenneth R. Agent, Charles V. Zegeer Jun 1976

Effect Of Pavement Texture On Traffic Noise, Kenneth R. Agent, Charles V. Zegeer

Kentucky Transportation Center Research Report

Noise from highway vehicles emanates primarily from engine exhausts, tire-pavement interaction) gears, and rattles. Studies have shown that at high speeds tires become the dominant generators of noise. Measurements on different road surfaces have produced different noise-versus-speed relationships (1). This led to the road surface adjustment used in the noise prediction procedure developed in NCHRP Report 117 (2). This adjustment called for a 5 dBA reduction for smooth surfaces (very smooth, seal-coated asphalt pavement) and a 5 dBA increase for rough surfaces (rough asphalt pavement with voids 1/2 inch (12 mm) or larger in diameter and grooved concrete). …


Pedestrian Accidents In Kentucky, Charles V. Zegeer, Robert C. Deen Jun 1976

Pedestrian Accidents In Kentucky, Charles V. Zegeer, Robert C. Deen

Kentucky Transportation Center Research Report

When a pedestrian is hit by a motor vehicle, he is usually injured or killed; there is no protective cushion to absorb the impact. The high concentration of pedestrians in urban areas, coupled with heavy vehicle traffic, often results in large numbers of pedestrian accidents. In rural areas, there are considerably fewer pedestrians but traffic speeds are higher and, therefore, accidents are more often fatal.

Pedestrian fatalities have increased in the United States from about 7,800 in 1960 to approximately 10,500 in 1973 (1). There are 120,000 pedestrian accidents each year. Total traffic accidents in the US number about …


Highway Accidents At Bridges, Kenneth R. Agent, Robert C. Deen Jun 1976

Highway Accidents At Bridges, Kenneth R. Agent, Robert C. Deen

Kentucky Transportation Center Research Report

Grade-separation structures (bridges) at interchanges, crossroads, over streams, railroads, etc., which are intended to provide greater convenience and safety, otherwise involve features which either obstruct the range of free travel or serve as containment barriers. The objective of this study was to identify those principal features of bridges and appurtenances which may be related to accident frequency and severity and to provide some further insights toward highway safety.


Speed Reduction In School Zones, Charles V. Zegeer, James H. Havens, Robert C. Deen Jun 1976

Speed Reduction In School Zones, Charles V. Zegeer, James H. Havens, Robert C. Deen

Kentucky Transportation Center Research Report

The use of flashing beacons together with signing has become somewhat standard throughout the country to alert drivers to the presence of school children and to regulate vehicle speed in school zones. Yellow beacons, usually two flashing alternately, may be used with both warning signs and regulatory signs. The only regulatory signs related to school zones are speed-limit signs. Both hazard identification beacons and speed-limit sign beacons are intended to operate only during hours when the warning and speed regulations are in effect. The effectiveness of signs and flashing lights in reducing speeds in school zones has been questioned.

The …