Pavement Engineering · Rigid Pavement Distress
Concrete Faulting: Causes, Types
A field-level explainer on concrete faulting — what it is, why it forms at pavement joints, how engineers measure and classify it, whether it’s safe to drive over, and the proven methods used to prevent and repair it.
Why Does Concrete Faulting Happen?
Faulting rarely has a single cause. It is usually the end result of loss of support beneath one slab, combined with repeated traffic loading that pushes the unsupported slab down over time. The main mechanisms are:
Slab Pumping
Water trapped between the slab and base is ejected under wheel loads, carrying fine base material out through the joint. This is the single largest cause of faulting in undoweled pavements.
Weak or Erodible Base
A base course built from erodible material (or without proper stabilization) washes out faster, leaving voids that let the slab deflect and settle under load.
Poor Load Transfer
Joints without dowel bars, or with corroded/misaligned dowels, cannot share load evenly between slabs, so one side deflects more than the other with every axle pass.
Heavy, Repetitive Traffic
High volumes of heavy trucks accelerate both pumping and the fatigue that lets a slab settle — faulting rate is closely tied to cumulative equivalent single axle loads (ESALs).
Curling and Warping
Temperature and moisture gradients through the slab thickness bend the corners up or down, changing how load is carried at the joint and contributing to differential settlement.
Poor Drainage / Freeze-Thaw
Water that cannot escape the pavement structure softens the subgrade and, in cold climates, freeze-thaw cycling further loosens base support.
Types of Concrete Faulting
Engineers classify faulting by where it occurs and what triggers it. Understanding the type matters because it points to the right repair.
By Location
- Transverse joint faulting — the classic case, occurring across joints running perpendicular to the direction of travel; this is what most people mean by “faulting.”
- Longitudinal joint faulting — a step along the joint that runs parallel to traffic, often between a travel lane and a shoulder built at a different time or with different support.
- Crack faulting — the same elevation-difference behavior, but occurring at an unplanned crack rather than a designed joint.
By Mechanism
- Pumping-induced faulting — caused by erosion and ejection of base fines, the most common and most studied type.
- Settlement-induced faulting — from consolidation of a soft or poorly compacted subgrade beneath one slab.
- Curling/warping-related faulting — driven by temperature or moisture-gradient deformation rather than material loss.
- Construction-related faulting — from uneven subgrade preparation, inconsistent slab thickness, or misaligned dowel baskets at the time of paving.
How Is Concrete Faulting Measured?
Field engineers use a few standard tools depending on the scale of the survey:
- Faultmeter — a simple hand-held device with a foot on each slab and a dial gauge that reads the step height directly at the joint.
- Straightedge and ruler — a low-cost manual method for spot checks: lay a straightedge across the joint and measure the gap.
- Digital profilometers / inertial profilers — vehicle-mounted laser or accelerometer systems used for high-speed, network-level surveys on highways.
Faulting Severity Scale
General thresholds: faulting under about 3 mm (0.125 in) is typically left unrepaired; faulting between roughly 3–12.5 mm is often addressed with diamond grinding or slab stabilization; and faulting beyond 12.5 mm (0.5 in) usually signals a need for more aggressive repair, such as dowel bar retrofit or slab replacement.
Is Concrete Faulting Safe?
Small faulting is a nuisance more than a hazard. But once the step grows, it becomes a genuine safety and durability issue:
- Reduced ride quality — repeated jolts affect driver comfort and can distract attention on long trips.
- Higher dynamic impact loads — every wheel that crosses a faulted joint hits it with extra force, which in turn accelerates further joint and slab damage — a feedback loop.
- Two-wheeler and pedestrian risk — motorcyclists and cyclists are especially vulnerable to sudden steps, and faulted sidewalk slabs are a documented trip-and-fall hazard.
- Hydroplaning potential — faulted joints can pond water, slightly increasing hydroplaning risk in wet weather.
- Structural consequences — untreated faulting speeds up spalling, corner breaks, and eventually full slab failure.
How to Prevent Concrete Faulting
Prevention is far cheaper than repair, and almost all of it happens at the design and construction stage:
- Install dowel bars at transverse joints to transfer load evenly between adjacent slabs and cut deflection at the joint.
- Build a non-erodible, well-compacted base — stabilized or treated base layers resist the erosion that drives pumping.
- Improve drainage with edge drains and proper cross-slope so water cannot linger under the slab.
- Seal and maintain joints so surface water can’t infiltrate and start the pumping cycle in the first place.
- Control joint spacing in the design to limit slab curling and warping stress.
- Manage heavy-vehicle loading where possible, since faulting rate scales with cumulative heavy-axle traffic.
Advantages of Managing Faulting Early vs. Disadvantages of Letting It Progress
Faulting itself has no “advantage” — it is a distress, not a feature. But there is a real trade-off between catching it early and letting it run:
Benefits of Early Detection & Repair
- Lower-cost fixes (grinding, sealing) instead of full slab replacement
- Extends overall pavement service life
- Preserves ride quality and reduces vehicle wear
- Prevents secondary distresses like spalling and corner breaks
Disadvantages of Ignoring Faulting
- Escalating repair costs as the problem compounds
- Faster deterioration of the base and subgrade beneath the slab
- Increased risk to vehicles, cyclists, and pedestrians
- Higher noise and reduced comfort for road users
How Concrete Faulting Is Repaired
| Method | Best For | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Diamond grinding | Widespread low-to-moderate faulting | Mechanically grinds the pavement surface flat, restoring a smooth ride profile |
| Slab jacking / stabilization | Faulting from voids beneath the slab | Injects grout or foam under the slab to fill voids and restore support |
| Dowel bar retrofit | Undoweled joints with recurring faulting | Cuts slots and installs dowels after construction to add load transfer |
| Joint resealing | Early-stage prevention | Keeps water out of the joint to slow the pumping cycle |
| Full-depth slab replacement | Severe faulting with structural damage | Removes and rebuilds the affected slab section entirely |
Concrete Faulting vs. Other Pavement Distresses
| Distress | What It Is | Primary Cause |
|---|---|---|
| Faulting | Elevation step across a joint or crack | Pumping / loss of support |
| Spalling | Breaking or chipping at joint/crack edges | Incompressible material in the joint, corrosion of dowels |
| Punch-out | Localized block of slab breaking free | Heavy loads + inadequate slab thickness |
| D-cracking | Crescent-shaped cracks near joints | Freeze-thaw of susceptible aggregate |
| Pumping | Ejection of water/fines at the joint | Trapped water under the slab (a cause of faulting, not the same distress) |
Frequently Asked Questions
It’s the step you feel where two concrete slabs meet — one slab sits higher than the one next to it at a joint or crack, usually because the lower slab lost support underneath it.
Mainly slab pumping (water eroding the base and ejecting fines through the joint), plus weak subgrade, poor load transfer between slabs, curling/warping, and heavy repetitive traffic.
Faulting under about 3 mm is usually not a concern. Past roughly 6–12.5 mm it starts to affect ride quality and vehicle impact loads, and it can become a real hazard for motorcycles, cyclists, and pedestrians.
With a faultmeter or straightedge for spot checks, or a vehicle-mounted digital profilometer for network-level highway surveys.
Use dowel bars for load transfer, build a stable non-erodible base, improve drainage, keep joints sealed, and control joint spacing at the design stage.
Faulting is a vertical elevation difference across a joint; cracking is a break in the slab surface; spalling is chipping/breaking of concrete at joint or crack edges. They can occur together but have different causes and fixes.
Common methods are diamond grinding, slab jacking/stabilization, dowel bar retrofit, joint resealing, and, for severe cases, full-depth slab replacement.
Faulting in the classic sense is specific to jointed rigid (concrete) pavements, since their design relies on separate slabs that can move independently at joints.