Aggregate structures analysis of bitumen for the production of modified benders in asphalt industry
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Filippelli, Luigi
Bartolino, Roberto
Oliviero Rossi, ,Cesare
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Scuola di dottorato Scienza e Tecnica "Bernardino Telesio", Scienze e Tecnologie delle Mesofasi e dei Materiali Molecolari, Ciclo XXVI, a.a. 2013; Since antiquity bitumen had been used as a construction material. Nowadays, most of the huge
global production of bitumen each year, are functional to the roads paving industry where they are
employed as binders for mineral aggregates to produce asphalt mixes. In the paving industry, a
suitable bitumen should be fluid enough at to be pumpable and workable for a uniform covering of
the mineral aggregates upon amalgamation. Furthermore, once the asphalt has been laid to build
the roads, bitumen has to become sufficiently rigid at the highest pavement temperature to
oppose rutting, depending on local climate conditions. Conversely, it must stay flexible enough at
the lowest pavement temperature to resist cracking. For these purposes, additives such as
polymers, acids, etc., are used to calibrate the operative range of bitumen. In addition asphalt
industry is interested to reduce the costs of production, the environmental impact of the
production and the safety condition for the paving workers. Bitumen is currently modeled as a
dispersion of colloidal particles of asphaltenes, surrounded by a layer of stabilizing polar resins in a
continuous oil phase (maltene). Although one can write a very simple definition of bitumen, its
chemical composition is very complex and still not completely known. However the
characterization of the bituminous materials for its convenient application, is still made by
empirical standardized tests. This research project aimed to the deeper understanding of the
behavior of bituminous systems, in order to correlate the macroscopic properties to the
microstructure of the aggregates that constitute the bitumen colloidal network. We explored the
possibility of taking advantage from chemical-physics techniques such as NMR, Rheology and AFM.
In particular we have investigated the effect and overall the mechanism through which some
chemical additives, already in use by paving companies, explicate their action to modulate the
bitumen performances. Several samples different in nature and differently modified were analyzed.
The rheological analysis, performed by the measurements under kinematic and dynamic control,
helped to determine the material properties related to the structure of the system. The parameters
thus obtained, being independent of the measurement conditions may be correlated with the
microstructure of the sample investigated by the other techniques we used. As for NMR we
exploited the spin-spin relaxation time measurement firstly to find the soften point of bituminous
materials whether modified or not. As a novel approach to the understanding of the colloidal
nature of the bitumen, the Inverse Laplace Transform (ILT) of the NMR spin-echo decay (T2) was
applied. The ILT was used to draw the map of the macro-aggregates inside bitumen at different
temperatures providing indication on the nature of the interaction between additives and the
colloidal network. The efficiency of the ILT method was proved by atomic force microscopy images.
As matter of fact collecting the AFM analysis, the ILT and the rheological results, we were able to
describe the correlation between the aggregates at supra-molecular level inside fresh and doped
bitumen. This research constituted a new inside bitumen chemistry overcoming the limits of the
empirical tests to verify the efficiency of the bitumen modifiers; Università della CalabriaSoggetto
Chimica fisica; Bitumi; Reologia
Relazione
CHIM/02;