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Concrete played a major role in the construction of the U.S. Interstate
Highway System during the past 50 years. The national focus has shifted
from building new highways to maintaining and repairing the existing
highway network. Recent advances in concrete technology enable highway
contractors to rehabilitate the nation's 160,000 mile (275,000 km)
national highway system to extend its useful life with minimal disruption
of traffic.
The national highway system, which includes the nearly 45,000 mile
interstate system, carries 40% of the nation's total traffic, including
70% of the commercial traffic and 90% of the tourist traffic, according
to the Federal Highway Administration. About 60% of the interstate
system is concrete, especially in urban areas where FHWA anticipates
heavy traffic loads. Concrete was selected, in part, because of its
durability.
Concrete can support heavy loads, such as truck traffic, with less
deformation than asphalt. Although the initial cost of concrete used
to be higher than for asphalt, today concrete has become the least
expensive alternative for new construction on a first-cost basis in
addition to maintenance costs being generally lower.In addition, concrete
generally has a useful life of twice that of asphalt. Concrete commonly
serves 20–30 years without needing major repair, while asphalt
typically lasts only 8–12 years before resurfacing or significant
repair is required.
History of Concrete Highways
The first concrete highway constructed in the United States was a
24 mile (38.6 km) long, 9 ft (2.7 m) wide, 5 in. (12.7 cm) thick strip
of concrete pavement built near Pine Bluff, Arkansas, in 1913—five
years after the introduction of the Model T Ford. By 1914, portland
cement concrete had been used to pave 2,348 miles (3778 km) of roadway.
Highway construction received a significant push forward two years
later when President Woodrow Wilson signed the first Federal-Aid Highway
Act directing the federal government to help states finance road building.
In 1919, Oregon became the first state to level a fuel tax on gasoline
to finance road construction. Today this is still the primary method
of financing road building and maintenance. The Pennsylvania Turnpike,
built on a railroad right-of-way during the 1930s, was the first major
intercity turnpike or tollroad in the United States and was constructed
of concrete.
Significant technical and design developments during the 1930s and
1940s made concrete paving faster, less expensive, and more durable.
Road designers stopped requiring contractors to build roads that were
thicker at the edges—concrete highways were generally 6 in.
(15 cm) thick at the middle and 8 or 9 in. (20 or 23 cm) thick at
the edges—and permitted construction with a uniform concrete
depth, saving time and money. Designers began to require that subbases
of gravel, crushed stone, or slag be placed beneath concrete highways
in the late 1930s, when an increase in heavy truck traffic caused
pumping, a phenomenon in which a concrete slab loses support and cracks
as wet clay and soil particles underneath shift and are pumped from
beneath the slab at its edges.
In the 1940s, some highway departments began to use soil-cement
as a subgrade for highways. At this time, contractors also changed
their method of creating pavement joints. Rather than forming the
joints when the concrete was fully plastic by lumping it up to either
side of the joint, contractors began sawing the concrete once it was
partially hardened to create a smoother joint. This change in procedure
helped create more even highway surfaces, and eliminated the familiar
"bump, bump" drivers feel at some aging slab joints.
At this time, concrete pavement also exhibited problems with scaling,
the flaking or peeling away of the surface, which studies determined
to be the result of freeze-thaw cycles, accelerated through the use
of deicing salts. Studies showed that the introduction of tiny air
bubbles in the concrete mix could reduce the problem. This led to
the development of air-entrained concrete, now used in virtually all
U.S. road building. The invention of the slip-form paver in 1949 was
another milestone in the development of concrete paving technology,
as it allowed road crews to place wide sections of concrete continously,
and therefore far more efficiently than before. Slip-forming is now
used for highway paving projects in almost every state.
Many consider the construction of the interstate highway system, during
the 1960s and 1970s, to be a heyday for concrete paving, and road
building in general. But even as thousands of miles of concrete highway
were formed, research and development continued, improving methods
of placing and maintaining concrete. In 1976, the U.S. Congress recognized
the need to specifically finance maintenance of the highway system,
and approved federal funding for the 3R program: restoration, rehabilitation,
and resurfacing.
New Construction Techniques
Several relatively new techniques make it possible for concrete contractors
to rehabilitate and resurface highways efficiently with minimum traffic
interruption. Among these is fast-track concrete pavement technology,
in which high-early-strength concrete is used to allow reconstructed
roads to open more quickly. While conventional concrete mixes might
require a curing time from 5 to 14 days, fast-track concrete can meet
roadway opening strengths in 12 hours or less. Although combinations
of ingredients vary, high-early-strength concrete commonly includes
a higher proportion of the standard Type I cement to water or contains
high-early-strength cement, known as Type III cement. Type III cement
is virtually identical to Type I, except that Type III cement particles
are ground much smaller. The smaller cement particles increase the
surface area, allowing more cement contact with the water in the concrete
mix, meaning faster hydration is achieved. Generally, fast-track concrete
provides good durability because most of these concretes are air entrained
and have a relatively low water content—factors that improve
strength and decrease the chloride or salt permeability that damages
steel reinforcement and contributes to deterioration.
Another relatively new technique that promises to improve highway
smoothness and longevity is dowel retrofitting of existing concrete
pavement that has undowelled slab joints. Since 1980, the slab joints
of most new concrete highway pavements in areas where heavy loading
is anticipated have been dowelled with 18 in. (46 cm) long smooth
steel bars. The dowels bridge the joint sawed between the pavement
slabs and help transfer traffic loads from one concrete slab to the
next. The new retrofitting technique involves cutting slots across
the pavement joints, inserting the bars, patching the slots with fast-track
concrete mixes, and then diamond-grinding the road to obtain a smooth
surface. Department of Transportation officials in Washington—the
first state to undertake dowel retrofitting on a large scale—expect
to extend the life of some of the state's 30-year-old concrete highways
by 10 to 15 years using the new technique.
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