Ontology

Introduction:

A perpetual pavement is a high-performance, multi-layered asphalt structure designed for a service life of >= 50 years. It uses a “bottom-up” design philosophy where fatigue and rutting are prevented in the base layers, limiting wear only to the surface.

Purpose:
The project aims to represent the composition and logic of long-life pavement to support valid design variants, consistency checking, and parametric thickness/material analysis in digital twin environments.

Scope:
The scope is fixed around the physical and functional aspects of the HMA (Hot Mix Asphalt) layers, Surface, Intermediate/Binder, and Fatigue-Resistant Bottom, as well as the supporting foundation (Subbase and Subgrade).

Intended Users & Intended Use:

Users: Pavement engineers, transportation researchers, and digital-twin design teams.

Use: Knowledge representation and reasoning to ensure structural completeness and support “what-if” material changes.

Figure01: Perpetual pavement built up of layered stack and surface-renewal concept

Class Hierarchy:

The hierarchy follows a physical decomposition modeled after the engineering stack. Key classes include PerpetualPavementSystem, PavementLayer, Material, Function, and DesignProperty.

Figure 02: Class Hierarchy

Ontograf:

The Ontograf visualization displays the network of relationships, such as how specific layers “restOn” others and how materials like AsphaltMix are linked to specific functional roles like RuttingControl.

Figure 03: Visual Ontology Network

Engineering Example:

  1. Maintenance Planning: Identifying surface layers that require periodic renewal.
  2. Material Optimization: Using restrictions to ensure only AsphaltMix is used for heavy-traffic surface layers.
  3. Lifecycle Evaluation: Comparing design options based on the hasServiceLife_years data property.

References:

1.Pavement Interactive. “Perpetual Pavements”. https://pavementinteractive.org/reference-desk/design/structural-design/perpetual-pavements/

2.Krötzsch, Simancík, Horrocks. “A Description Logic Primer.” (formal semantics; inference/reasoning in DL/OWL).

3.Noy & McGuinness. “Ontology Development 101: A Guide to Creating Your First Ontology.” (iterative process; no single correct ontology).

4.Pahl & Beitz. Engineering Design: A Systematic Approach, Ch. 6. (function-structure → subfunctions; flows).

Parametric Model >