UNH
Engineer Wins NSF Grant to Study Asphalt
Research
could lead to better roads, less construction
DURHAM
– A University of New Hampshire engineering professor has won a
National Science Foundation (NSF) research grant that could one day result
in more durable roads and less highway construction.
Jo Daniel, assistant
professor of civil engineering in the College of Engineering and Physical
Sciences (CEPS), was recently awarded a $400,000 NSF CAREER Award to study
“viscoelastic” materials, such as asphalt. Like a rubber band,
these materials return to their original shape after being stretched,
but like honey, they move slowly.
Daniel hopes to find
a way to relate the results of different tests used to determine the strength
of asphalt. “We’ll get a more fundamental understanding of
the behavior of asphalt, as well,” said Daniel. “That could
help design longer lasting roads and give a better idea of how long materials
last, so maintenance can be timed to avoid major reconstruction.”
Researchers currently
use a number of tests to determine the strength of viscoelastic materials.
Each test uses a different sample shape, from cylindrical to rectangular,
and a different method of applying load, from simple crushing tests to
complicated triaxial loading that simulates real world conditions. All
produce useful results, but there is no way to tie them together.
This year
Daniel was the only New Hampshire researcher to receive a CAREER grant
-- one of NSF’s most prestigious awards for new faculty members.
She joins five other CEPS faculty currently working on NSF Career grants,
including Carmela Amato-Wierda, associate professor of material science;
Karsten Pohl, assistant professor of physics; Elizabeth Varki, associate
professor of computer science; Liming Ge, professor of math; and Robert
Griffin, assistant professor of earth sciences.
The CAREER award recognizes
and supports the early career-development activities of those teacher-scholars
who are most likely to become the academic leaders of the 21st century.
Awardees are selected on the basis of creative, career-development plans
that effectively integrate research and education.
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PHOTO
CAPTION
Big
Squeeze : NSF CAREER Award winner Jo Daniel, assistant professor
of civil engineering at the UNH College of Engineering and Physical Sciences,
holds a sample of asphalt rigged with sensors that measure stress and
strain on the viscoelastic material as it is squeezed in the testing apparatus
to her right.
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