Support for Critical Issues in Transportation and Commitment to the Future IHS. Advancing Practices of In Situ Nondestructive Evaluation of Highway System Asset Foundational Condition and Capability
The Transportation Research Board in 2019 published two documents presenting wide-ranging perspectives on matters of importance to the future of the nation’s transportation system and its capabilities to support our continued prosperity. The first of these documents, Renewing the National Commitment to the Interstate Highway System: A Foundation for the Future (CIHS), the product of a congressionally mandated study, presented a series of recommendations for government actions needed “to upgrade and restore the Interstate Highway System to fulfill its role as a crucial national asset, serving the needs of people, cities and towns, businesses, and the military while remaining the safest highway network in the country” (CIHS, p. viii). The second document, Critical Issues in Transportation 2019 (CIT2019), was prepared by the TRB Executive Committee to frame high-level questions that can be addressed during the next 5 to 10 years through research, policy analysis, and debate to help society prepare for potentially unprecedented changes likely to affect our transportation system’s service to individuals and society (CIT2019, p. 2). Considering the contributions our highway system makes to the nation’s economy and well-being and the age of many of the physical assets comprising this system—pavement, bridges, culverts, embankments, and more—these reports highlight the importance of knowledge of asset condition and likely reliability. Such knowledge is essential to allocating maintenance resources, determining when asset renewal or replacement is prudent, and thereby ensuring the system’s continued high performance. Regarding the Interstate System, for example, a recommendation was made that “… Congress should direct U.S. DOT and FHWA to join with the states to assess the foundational integrity of the system’s pavements and bridges, and identify where full reconstruction is needed based on accepted life-cycle cost principles” (CIHS, p. 208). More generally, “…improved maintenance strategies are needed to cost-effectively enhance infrastructure performance over its full life cycle” (CIT, p. 21). This knowledge of asset condition and service capability is inadequate for much of the highway system. People responsible for system asset management know that aging of materials, variations in weather and climatic conditions, normal usage and such unusual events as vehicle crashes and seismic shock, erosion of foundation soils, and other factors contribute to deterioration of asset condition and service capability, but they often cannot be certain about the rate of deterioration or the damage that has accumulated. Deterioration and damage, generally hidden from observation within and around massive, earth-bound structures, may be partially revealed by observation and testing through excavation or drilling into the structure, but such methods introduce new damage and can contribute to more rapid deterioration. Continuing technology developments—for example, remote sensing (ground-penetrating radar, light detection and ranging (LIDAR), and acoustic emissions detection), embedded sensors, and others—seem promising, but high costs of data collection and processing may outweigh the benefits to be gained through cost and risk reduction and improved asset management generally. This tradeoff of data collection and processing costs versus asset management benefits to be gained is particularly troublesome with respect to the foundations of transportation system infrastructure, the condition and capabilities of materials beneath and adjacent to pavements, footings, walls, and embankments. Research is needed to identify, develop, and facilitate cost-effective use of methods for non-destructive in situ inference, direct measurement, and testing of foundational integrity, condition, and service capability of highway system assets, as well as to guide further research and development for advancing measurement, testing, and monitoring practice. The objective of this project was to conduct a critical review of current and leading practices, research and application of emerging and new technologies, and opportunities for further advances to identify near-term opportunities for improving agencies’ capabilities to assess and monitor the foundational integrity, condition and service capability of highway system assets. The review should be useful to state transportation agencies, the Transportation Research Board, and others to inform decision-making for research program development, investment in technology adoption and data management, and strategic planning.
Language
- English
Project
- Status: Completed
- Funding: $150000
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Contract Numbers:
Project 20-126(03)
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Sponsor Organizations:
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO)
444 North Capitol Street, NW
Washington, DC United States 20001Federal Highway Administration
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC United States 20590National Cooperative Highway Research Program
Transportation Research Board
500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC United States 20001 -
Project Managers:
Dekelbab, Waseem
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Performing Organizations:
Applied Research Associates, Inc.
100 Trade Centre Drive, Ste 200
Champaign, IL United States 61820-7233 -
Principal Investigators:
Alhasan, Ahmad
- Start Date: 20210504
- Expected Completion Date: 20220803
- Actual Completion Date: 20220803
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Asset management; Data management; Decision making; Highways; Investments; Nondestructive tests; State of the practice; Strategic planning; Technology
- Subject Areas: Administration and Management; Highways; Planning and Forecasting;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01760166
- Record Type: Research project
- Source Agency: Transportation Research Board
- Contract Numbers: Project 20-126(03)
- Files: TRB, RIP
- Created Date: Dec 16 2020 6:16PM