Investigating the effect of layer thickness on the variability of porous asphalt tyre/road noise

Longitudinal variability in tyre/road noise is often associated with low-noise porous asphalt surfaces, with CPX testing results for individual 20-metre road segments commonly varying by up to 6 dB along new projects in New Zealand. In November 2018, following on from previous trials investigating t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Romanian Journal of Transport Infrastructure Vol. 11; no. 1; pp. 1 - 15
Main Authors: Bull, John, Wareing, Rob, Chiles, Stephen, Jackett, Richard
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 01-07-2022
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Longitudinal variability in tyre/road noise is often associated with low-noise porous asphalt surfaces, with CPX testing results for individual 20-metre road segments commonly varying by up to 6 dB along new projects in New Zealand. In November 2018, following on from previous trials investigating the effects of air voids and stone size, three EPA7 trial sections were constructed to investigate the effects of layer thickness on tyre/road noise. The thickness effect was found to be approximately –2 dB L per 10 mm increase in target layer thickness across the three trial sections. Core samples taken from a new road showed EPA7 layer thicknesses that differed from the target layer thickness by up to 15 mm. These findings suggest that variations in layer thickness may be a key contributor to longitudinal variations in tyre/road noise on roading projects using porous asphalt. A further investigation involving a detailed thickness survey is currently underway to better understand layer thickness variability and its effect on tyre/road noise.
ISSN:2286-2218
2286-2218
DOI:10.2478/rjti-2022-0001