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Guia de disseny de paviments mecanístic-empíric (MEPDG o Pavement ME)×Consolidació de Terzaghi×Hidrograma Unitari×
CampEnginyeria civilEnginyeria civilEnginyeria civil
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Any d'origen200819431932
Autor originalAASHTO (American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials)Karl TerzaghiL. K. Sherman
TipusPerformance-prediction model for asphalt pavement designDiffusion equation for pore pressure dissipation and soil settlementLinear transformation from rainfall to streamflow
Font seminalAASHTO (2008). Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide: A Manual of Practice. American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. link ↗Terzaghi, K. (1943). Theoretical Soil Mechanics. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN: 0-471-85305-1Sherman, L. K. (1932). Streamflow from rainfall by the unit graph method. Engineering News-Record, 108(14), 501-505. link ↗
ÀliesMEPDG, Pavement design, Fatigue and ruttingPrimary consolidation, Soil settlement, Effective stressUH, Rainfall-runoff, Hydrograph synthesis
Relacionats333
ResumThe Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide (MEPDG or Pavement ME) is a modern method for designing asphalt pavements that predicts performance (rutting, cracking) using mechanistic stress analysis combined with empirical distress models. Developed by AASHTO in 2008 as a successor to the 1993 AASHTO Empirical Guide, this approach provides better accuracy and enables climate-based, site-specific design.Terzaghi consolidation theory describes how water-saturated clay soils compress over time as excess pore water pressure dissipates and effective stress increases. Formulated by Karl Terzaghi in 1943, this foundational theory enables prediction of settlement rates for foundations on compressible soils, a critical design concern in geotechnical engineering.The unit hydrograph (UH) is a linear transformation that converts rainfall excess into streamflow for a watershed. Introduced by Sherman in 1932, the UH assumes that rainfall-runoff response is linear and time-invariant, enabling synthesis of flood hydrographs from design storms for dam spillway design and flood risk assessment.
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ScholarGateCompara mètodes: Pavement ME Design · Terzaghi Consolidation · Unit Hydrograph. Recuperat el 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/ca/compare