Buildings (Jul 2024)

Study on GA–ANN-Based Prediction of Paving Time of Cement-Stabilized Layer above Ultra-High-Filled Subgrade

  • Wenjie Liu,
  • Wanli Chao,
  • Yuxuan Jin,
  • Fei Yang,
  • Limin Fan,
  • Wuqiao Zhang,
  • Lijian Wu,
  • Changjun Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14082312
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. 2312

Abstract

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In mountainous areas, high-filled subgrade often experiences significant post-construction settlement. Prematurely paving the cement-stabilized gravel layer on an unstable subgrade can easily lead to subsequent cracking. To accurately predict the settlement of high-filled subgrade and determine the appropriate timing for paving the cement-stabilized layer, this study proposes a subgrade settlement prediction method combining an Artificial Neural Network (ANN) with a Genetic Algorithm (GA). Using monitoring data from a high-filled subgrade on a highway in Hunan Province, China, a GA–ANN model was established to predict settlement curves. The predicted data from the GA–ANN model were compared with measured data and ANN predictions to validate the advantages of using GA–ANN for subgrade settlement prediction. The results indicate that the GA–ANN model significantly outperforms the ANN model due to GA’s ability to provide more reasonable weight biases for ANN through global search optimization. Predictions of settlement data beyond 50 days using both ANN and GA–ANN showed that the GA–ANN prediction curve closely matched the measured curve, with a basic deviation within ±3 mm. In contrast, ANN’s prediction error gradually increased to over 5 mm as the observation time increased, with predicted values lower than measured values, leading to an overly optimistic estimation of early settlement convergence. Based on the predicted data and settlement standards, the estimated timing for laying the stabilized layer was determined. During the laying process, no cracking was observed in the stabilized layer. The project has been in operation for six months, with the road surface in good condition. This study provides a valuable reference for the laying of stabilized layers on similar high-filled and ultra-high-filled subgrades.

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