Stochastic Performance and Maintenance Optimization Models for Pavement Infrastructure Management

Mohamed S Yamany, Purdue University

Abstract

Highway infrastructure, including roads/pavements, contributes significantly to a country’s economic growth, quality of life improvement, and negative environmental impacts. Hence, highway agencies strive to make efficient and effective use of their limited funding to maintain their pavement infrastructure in good structural and functional conditions. This necessitates predicting pavement performance and scheduling maintenance interventions accurately and reliably by using appropriate performance modeling and maintenance optimization methodologies, while considering the impact of influential variables and the uncertainty inherent in pavement condition data. Despite the enormous research efforts toward stochastic pavement performance modeling and maintenance optimization, several research gaps still exist. Prior research has not provided a synthesis of Markovian models and their associated methodologies that could assist researchers and highway agencies in selecting the Markov methodology that is appropriate for use with the data available to the agency. In addition, past Markovian pavement performance models did not adequately account for the marginal effects of the preventive maintenance (PM) treatments due to the lack of historical PM data, resulting in potentially unreliable models. The primary components of a Markov model are the transition probability matrix, number of condition states (NCS), and length of duty cycle (LDC). Previous Markovian pavement performance models were developed using NCS and LDC based on data availability, pavement condition indicator and data collection frequency. However, the selection of NCS and LDC should also be based on producing pavement performance models with high levels of prediction accuracy. Prior stochastic pavement maintenance optimization models account for the uncertainty of the budget allocated to pavement preservation at the network level. Nevertheless, variables such as pavement condition deterioration and improvement that are also associated with uncertainty, were not included in stochastic optimization models due to the expected large size of the optimization problem. The overarching goal of this dissertation is to contribute to filling these research gaps with a view to improving pavement management systems, helping to predict probabilistic pavement performance and schedule pavement preventive maintenance accurately and reliably. This study reviews Markovian pavement performance models using various Markov methodologies and transition probabilities estimation methods, presents a critical analysis of the different aspects of Markovian models as applied in the literature, reveals gaps in knowledge, and offers suggestions for bridging those gaps. This dissertation develops a decision tree which could be used by researchers and highway agencies to select appropriate Markov methodologies to model pavement performance under different conditions of data availability. The lack of consideration of pavement PM impacts into probabilistic pavement performance models due to absence of historical PM data may result in erroneous and often biased pavement condition predictions, leading to non-optimal pavement maintenance decisions. Hence, this research introduces and validates a hybrid approach to incorporate the impact of PM into probabilistic pavement performance models when historical PM data are limited or absent. The types of PM treatments and their times of application are estimated using two approaches: (1) Analysis of the state of practice of pavement maintenance through literature and expert surveys, and (2) Detection of PM times from probabilistic pavement performance curves.

Degree

Ph.D.

Advisors

Abraham, Purdue University.

Subject Area

Civil engineering|Transportation

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