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to resist the slab from bending moment at the edges and stop moment of the edges when the vehicles moves the approaching direction

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What is the difference between flexible and rigid pavements?

Flexible pavement: Are those pavements which reflect the deformation of subgrade and the subsequent layers to the surface. Rigid pavement: The rigid characteristic of the pavement are associated with rigidity or flexural strength or slab action so the load is distributed over a wide area of subgrade soil.


What is the purpose of using rigid pavement?

As compared to walking on unpaved dirt, walking on rigid pavement is easier, and less dirt sticks to your shoes, especially when it has been raining and the dirt road gets muddy.


Examples of rigid joints?

Examples of rigid joints in the human body include sutures in the skull, where bones are tightly fused together with very little movement possible. Additionally, synarthroses joints, such as the joints between the teeth and mandible, are also considered rigid because they do not allow for significant movement.


Is running on a treadmill better or worse than running on pavement for your knees?

It is better than running on pavement for your joints and knees.


What are the mode of failure of a 'Flexible' and a 'Rigid' pavement in the contents of 'High way engineerin'?

Flexible pavement typically fails due to fatigue cracking, rutting, and moisture damage. In contrast, rigid pavement tends to fail through joint and crack spalling, corner breaks, and pumping of fines from underlying layers.Understanding the specific failure modes for each type of pavement is crucial for designing and maintaining highways effectively.


What is an example of a rigid joint?

the rugs connected to a ladder and the usually metal triangles or crosses of a bridge are examples of rigid joints.


What do you call joints that aren't flexible?

Joints that aren't flexible are often referred to as immobile or rigid joints. This lack of flexibility can be caused by various conditions, injuries, or diseases that affect the joint structure or function.


What has the author Yu T Chou written?

Yu T. Chou has written: 'Structural analysis computer programs for rigid multicomponent pavement structures with discontinuities--WESLIQID and WESLAYER' -- subject(s): Computer programs, Concrete Pavements, Dynamic testing, Finite element method, Joints, Materials, Pavements, Pavements, Concrete


What is a rigid splint?

Rigid splint is used for stabilize body parts to solid the joints. Can be used for easing pain in wrist from Carpal Tunnel, stabilizing broken leg etc.


What is the difference between a mobile joint and rigid joint?

A joint is where two sections of something come together. With bones, your elbow, knee, jaw, fingers, etc. are all mobile joints, because they move. A rigid joint would be where the bones don't move; your skull has various bones that connect but do not move.


What is the following describes the joints in the skull?

The joints in the skull are called sutures, which are fibrous joints that connect the bones of the skull. These joints allow for some flexibility during childbirth and skull growth in infancy, but become more rigid as we age to help protect the brain.


Why do concrete roads have compression expansion joints?

Concrete pavement always develops cracks. Unless expensive additives are included, the pavement block will shrink slightly during curing - and soon crack. Pavement expands when heated and contracts as it cools so, even when reinforced with steel mesh, a sufficiently long block of pavement will eventually contract enough to crack, or expand enough to buckle (explode up). The solution is to intentionally make cracks exactly where intended, at expansion and contraction joints, and design them not to leak, nor shear vertically, nor fill up with grit. There are far more contraction joints than expansion joints in highway pavement. The expansion joints are made with a gap all the way through the concrete. The contraction joint has no gap at first, but is designed with a deep slot and shallow groove to invite a crack. With proper construction techniques and frequent contraction joints, the pavement will not develop troublesome stray cracks. Both types of joints are reinforced with a sturdy set of parallel steel rods spanning the joint. The pavement blocks are kept in alignment with the rods, yet can slide along them. The rods are coated with epoxy for rust-proofing. The epoxy is coated with an oil-soap film so the rods can slide in the concrete. Every joint is sealed closed just below the surface with an elastic glue, or springy structure. The seals job is to keep out water, road salt, and grit.