From Perfect alignment to pavement failure: engineering a better understanding of dowel bar behavior

Abstract

Thousands of vehicles cross modern concrete highways daily, their wheels rolling over what seems like seamless pavement. Hidden beneath is a critical detail that determines whether these expensive projects will last 30-40 years or fail prematurely the alignment of steel dowel bars embedded across pavement joints. Concrete pavements are preferred for high-traffic corridors, highways, airports, and container terminals because they withstand heavy loads with minimal maintenance. This durability requires transverse joints, typically 3mm wide, cut every 4-5 meters to control cracking from shrinkage and temperature changes. Without these joints, uncontrolled cracks would compromise the pavement structure.

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