Modern road surfaces typically comprise a combination of aggregate materials and binding agents processed and applied to form a smooth paved surface. The type and quality of the pavement components used, and the manner in which the pavement components are implemented or combined, may affect the durability of the paved surface. Even where a paved surface is quite durable, however, temperature fluctuations, weather, and vehicular traffic over a paved surface may result in cracks and other surface or sub-surface irregularities over time. Road salts and other corrosive chemicals applied to the paved surface, as well as accumulation of water in surface cracks, may accelerate pavement deterioration.
Road resurfacing equipment may be used to mill, remove, and/or recondition deteriorated pavement. In come cases, heat generating equipment may be used to soften the pavement, followed by equipment to mill the surface, apply pavement materials, and plane the surface. Often, new pavement materials may be combined with materials milled from an existing surface in order to recondition or recycle existing pavement. Once the new materials are added, the materials may be compacted and planed to restore a smooth paved surface.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,952,561, which is herein incorporated by reference for all that it contains, discloses a real time differential asphalt pavement quality sensor adapted to measure asphalt density in real time using a differential approach. Two sensors, one in the front of a roller and another behind the roller, measure reflected signals from the asphalt. The difference between the reflected signals provides an indication of the optimal compaction and density of the asphalt pavement. The invention looks at the change in variance over successive passes to determine when the optimal level of compaction has been reached.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,287,048 which is herein incorporated by reference for all that it contains, discloses an apparatus having a horizontal compacting roller and a side edge confinement roller or shoe for compacting an asphalt concrete lane. A sensor is on the carrier vehicle for sensing the position of a defined edge of the lane, and a control is provided for steering the carrier vehicle so that the horizontal roller and the edge confinement force roller or shoes follow the defined edge of the lane to provide uniform density.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,577,141 which is herein incorporated by reference for all that it contains, discloses a system and method of determining the density of pavement material. The invention includes positioning a capacitive proximity sensor, adjacent to but not in direct contact with a pavement material, projecting an electrostatic capacitive field from the sensor in the direction of the pavement material, measuring the strength of the electrostatic capacitive field as detected by the sensor, and correlating the strength of the electrostatic capacitive field to the density of the pavement material. The invention further discloses determining a location and associating the location with a pavement material density.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,122,601 which is herein incorporated by reference for all that it contains, discloses a two component system to obtain uniform density of compacted materials and track the compaction of the materials. The first component provides an automated, real-time compaction density meter and method of use to measure the density of the compacted material. The second component provides a Geographic Information System (GIS) for tracking compaction of a surface at specific locations. The two components of the present invention combined provide a system to measure the density of the compacted material and record the location of each density measurement. The components of the present invention can be utilized for many compaction operations, such as the roller compaction of concrete, pavement, soil, landfills, and asphalt pavements.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,952,561 which is herein incorporated by reference for all that is contains, discloses a real time differential asphalt pavement quality sensor adapted to measure asphalt density in real time using a differential approach. Two sensors, one in the front of a roller and another behind the roller, measure reflected signals from the asphalt. The difference between the reflected signals provides an indication of the optimal compaction and density of the asphalt pavement. The invention looks at the change in variance over successive passes to determine when the optimal level of compaction has been reached.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/421,105; which is herein incorporated by reference for all that it contains; discloses a method for recycling a paved surface including the steps of providing a motorized vehicle adapted to traverse a paved surface; providing the motorized vehicle with a plurality of degradation elements, a plurality of foaming elements and a plurality of compacting elements; each plurality being attached to a carriage slidably supported by a bearing surface of an underside of the motorized vehicle; degrading the paved surface with the plurality of degradation elements as the vehicle traverses the paved surface; foaming rejuvenation material by the plurality of foaming elements into the degraded surface as the surface is being degraded; and compacting the degraded surface and the rejuvenation material into a new surface with the plurality of compaction elements as the foaming elements continue to foam rejuvenation material into the degraded surface.
The present invention provides a compaction system with a first and second array of compaction elements supported by an underside of a motorized vehicle adapted to traverse a degraded surface. A sensor assembly is supported by the motorized vehicle, disposed intermediate the first and second array of compaction elements, and in electrical communication with a controller. The sensor assembly also being adapted to sense a characteristic of an at least partially compacted surface formed after the first array of compacting elements applies a first compaction pressure to the degraded surface. The controller may be in electrical communication with the second array of compaction elements and have an input field for a second compaction pressure. The sensor assembly is also adapted to input the second compaction pressure into the field and the controller adjusts the second array of compaction elements to apply the second compaction pressure to the at least partially compacted surface.
In one embodiment the compacting elements may be tampers, rollers, vibrators, and/or plates. The first and second row of compactors as well as the sensor assembly may be in communication with a controller. The sensor assembly may be part of a closed loop system. In one embodiment the controller may have a PC, a microprocessor, a microcontroller, analog circuitry, programmable logic, and/or combinations thereof. The controller may also have electronic components selected from the group consisting of analog filters, digital filters, modems, data input ports, data output ports, power supply, battery's, memory, wireless transceivers, digital/optical converters, optical/digital converters, analog to digital converters (ADC), digital to analog converters (DAC), modulators, demodulators, clocks, amplifiers, and combinations thereof.
The sensor assembly may have density sensors with which the density of the at least partially compacted surface may be measured. The sensor assembly may further include a pressure sensors, position sensors, compressive strength sensor, porosity sensor, pH sensor, electric resistively sensor, inclination sensor, nuclear sensor, acoustic sensor, velocity sensor, moisture sensor, capacitance sensor, and combinations thereof. The sensor assembly may be flexibly coupled to the motorized vehicle and be adapted for stationary placement while the motorized vehicle traverses the roadway.
The sensor assembly may also have an actuating element selected from the group consisting of hydraulic actuators, a rack and pinion gear, a smart material actuator, an electric actuator or combinations thereof. One use for the actuator may include making the sensor assembly movable with respect to the rest of the vehicle longitudinally along the axis of the vehicle or transversely normal to the axis, or combinations thereof. Actuators may also be used for pivotable movement of the sensor assembly.
The sensor assembly may also have electronic components selected from the group consisting of analog filters, digital filters, modems, data input ports, data output ports, power supply, battery's, memory, wireless transceivers, digital/optical converters, optical/digital converters, analog to digital converters (ADC), digital to analog converters (DAC), modulators, demodulators, clocks, amplifiers, processors, and combinations thereof.
A method of compacting a rejuvenated mix, including the steps of providing a motorized vehicle adapted to traverse a paved surface; providing a sensor assembly intermediate a first and second row of compaction elements; compacting the rejuvenated mix with the first row of compaction elements with a first compressive force; acquiring a characteristic of the compacted rejuvenated mix; determining from the characteristic an adjusted compressive force for the second row of compaction elements; compacting the rejuvenated mix with the second row of compaction elements using the adjusted compressing force.
In this application, “pavement” or “paved surface” refers to any artificial, wear-resistant surface that facilitates vehicular, pedestrian, or other form of traffic. Pavement may include composites containing oil, tar, tarmac, macadam, tarmacadam, asphalt, asphaltum, pitch, bitumen, minerals, rocks, pebbles, gravel, polymeric materials, sand, polyester fibers, Portland cement, petrochemical binders, or combinations thereof. Likewise, rejuvenation materials refer to any of various binders, oils, and resins, including bitumen, surfactant, polymeric materials, emulsions, asphalt, tar, cement, oil, pitch, or combinations thereof. Reference to aggregates refers to rock, crushed rock, gravel, sand, slag, soil, cinders, minerals, or other course materials, and may include both new aggregates and aggregates reclaimed from an existing roadway. Likewise, the term “degrade” or “degradation” is used in this application to mean milling, grinding, cutting, ripping apart, tearing apart, or otherwise taking or pulling apart a pavement material into smaller constituent pieces.
Referring to
In selected embodiments, to facilitate degradation of a swath of pavement wider than the motorized vehicle 100, the vehicle 100 may include one or more slidable carriages 108 supported by a bearing surface 120 of an underside of the motorized vehicle 100 capable of extending beyond the outer edge of the vehicle 100. In some embodiments, the carriages 108 may be as wide as the vehicle 100 itself, the carriages 108 may sweep over a width approximately twice the vehicle width 102 or more. These carriages 108 may include banks 109 of pavement degradation elements 110 that rotate about an axis substantially normal to a plane defined by a paved surface. Each of these pavement degradation elements 110 may be used to degrade a paved surface in a direction substantially normal to their axes of rotation. The slidable carriages 108 may further comprise a first array 111 of compacting elements 112 followed by a sensor assembly 113 and then a second array 114 of compaction elements 112.
Under the shroud 104, the motorized vehicle 100 may include an engine and hydraulic pumps for powering the translational elements 106, the carriages 108, the pavement degradation elements 110, or other components. Likewise, the vehicle 100 may include a tank 124 for storing hydraulic fluid, a fuel tank 126, a tank 128 for storing rejuvenation materials such as asphalt, bitumen, oil, tar, or the like, a water tank 130, and a hopper 132 for storing aggregate such as gravel, rock, sand, pebbles, macadam, concrete, or the like.
Pavement rejuvenation materials may include, for example, asphalt, bitumen, tar, oil, water, combinations thereof, or other suitable materials, resins, and binding agents. These rejuvenation materials may be mixed with various aggregates, including new aggregates and reclaimed aggregates generated by the pavement degradation elements 110. The resulting mixture may then be smoothed and compacted to form a recycled road surface. In selected embodiments, the rake 200 may move side-to-side, front-to-back, in a circular pattern, vibrate, or the like to aid in mixing the resulting mixture of aggregates and rejuvenation materials. In certain embodiments, each carriage 108 may include a first array 111 of compacting elements 112 to compact the mix following which a sensor assembly 113 may measure the density of the compacted mix. A second array 114 of compaction elements 112 may then adjust there compaction pressure and/or displacement in order to compact the mix to a desired density. In the current embodiment the compacting elements 112 are tampers 203. Like the foaming elements 202, the tampers 203 may, in certain embodiments, be independently extendable and retractable relative to the carriage 108.
The sensor assembly 113 may comprise one or more density sensors 204 attached to actuators 205 adapted to place the sensors 204 on the partially compacted mix for a period of time after being compacted by the first array 111 of compaction elements 112. The actuators 205 may adjust the sensors 204 such that they may move longitudinally along the axis of the vehicle, transversely normal to the axis, or combinations thereof. Actuators 206 may also be placed on the assembly 113 to control the height of the sensors 204 with respect to the partially compacted mix.
Whereas the present invention has been described in particular relation to the drawings attached hereto, it should be understood that other and further modifications apart from those shown or suggested herein, may be made within the scope and spirit of the present invention.
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