| Literature DB >> 36080727 |
Yangsen Cao1, Jiarong Li1, Zhuangzhuang Liu1,2, Xinzhou Li1, Fan Zhang1, Baozeng Shan1.
Abstract
Sprinkled snow melting salt (SMS) exerts a snow melting effect and also has a negative impact on the asphalt pavement and the environment. Salt storage pavement technology can alleviate these two problems. However, non-alkaline SMSs may have the risk of affecting asphalt mastic properties and further affecting the mechanical properties of asphalt pavements. Therefore, the general properties and rheological properties of two styrene-butadiene-styrene-modified asphalts with and without high elastic polymer were studied after adding SMS. The asphalt mastic without a high elastic agent is defined as the SBS group, and the other group is the HEA group. Our results show that the HEA group shows a lower penetration and a higher softening point, ductility, and viscosity than the SBS group. The more the SMS, the more the reduction effect of the general performance. The elastic recovery of asphalt mastic decreases with the content of SMS. SMS has no obvious effect on the ratio of the viscous and elastic composition of asphalt mastic. The creep of asphalt mastic increases with the content of SMS. The high elastic polymer can significantly reduce the creep, and even the strain of HEA100 is smaller than that of SBS00. SMS increases the creep stiffness and reduces the creep rate at low temperature. Although SMS increases the potential of asphalt pavement to melt ice and snow, it also reduces the high-temperature rutting resistance and low-temperature crack resistance of asphalt mastic. Salt storage pavement materials can be used in combination with high elastic polymers to reduce the negative effects brought by SMSs.Entities:
Keywords: high elastic polymer; rheological properties; road engineering; salt storage asphalt mastic; salt storage pavement
Year: 2022 PMID: 36080727 PMCID: PMC9460621 DOI: 10.3390/polym14173651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.967
Basic technical indexes of SBS I-D asphalt.
| Indexes | Unit | Test Result | Standard | Test Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Penetration (100 g, 5 s, 25 °C) | 0.1 mm | 54 | 40–60 | T0604-2011 |
| Ductility (5 °C, 5 cm/min) | cm | 31 | ≥20 | T0605-2011 |
| Softening Point | °C | 80 | ≥60 | T0606-2011 |
| Dynamic viscosity (135 °C) | Pa·s | 1.773 | ≤3 | T0620-2011 |
| Elastic recovery (25 °C) | % | 90 | ≥75 | T0662-2000 |
| Residues after TFOT | ||||
| Mass change | % | −0.213 | ±1.0 | T0609-2011 |
| Penetration ratio (25 °C) | % | 70.5 | ≥65 | T0604-2011 |
| Ductility (5 °C, 5 cm/min) | cm | 16 | ≥15 | T0605-2011 |
Figure 1TPS modifier, Icebane, and limestone filler.
Basic properties of TPS.
| Particle Size/mm | Color | Relative Density | Water Absorption Rate/% | Melting Point/°C |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2–4 | Yellow | 0.96 | <1 | 170 |
Basic properties of limestone fillers.
| Indexes | Test Result | Standard | Test Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moisture content (%) | 0.2 | ≤1.0 | T0103-1993 |
| Apparent relative density | 2.762 | ≥2.5 | T0352-2000 |
| Gross bulk relative density | 2.667 | / | T0352-2000 |
| Hydrophilic coefficient | 0.73 | <1 | T0353-2000 |
| Plasticity index (%) | 2.7 | <4 | T0354-2000 |
| Appearance | Qualified | No agglomeration | T0355-2000 |
Basic properties of Icebane.
| Indexes | Test Result | Standard | Test Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Appearance | White powder | No agglomeration | T0355-2000 |
| Moisture content (%) | 0.2 | ≤0.5 | T0103-1993 |
| Apparent relative density | 2.170 | / | T0352-2000 |
| Gross bulk relative density | 2.136 | / | T0352-2000 |
| Salt content (%) | 56 | 50 ± 10 | / |
| pH | 8.3 | 8–8.5 | / |
Basic indicators of HEA.
| Indexes | Unit | Test Result | Standard | Test Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Penetration (100 g, 5 s, 25 °C) | 0.1 mm | 49 | 40–60 | T0604-2011 |
| Ductility (5 °C, 5 cm/min) | cm | 55 | ≥20 | T0605-2011 |
| Softening Point | °C | 94 | ≥60 | T0606-2011 |
| Dynamic viscosity (135 °C) | Pa·s | 1.861 | ≤3 | T0620-2011 |
| Elastic recovery (25 °C) | % | 98 | ≥75 | T0662-2000 |
| Residues after TFOT | ||||
| Mass change | % | −0.13 | ±1.0 | T0609-2011 |
| Penetration ratio (25 °C) | % | 76.6 | ≥65 | T0604-2011 |
| Ductility (5 °C, 5 cm/min) | cm | 31 | ≥15 | T0605-2011 |
Samples information.
| Tests | Specimens | Replication |
|---|---|---|
| Penetration test | SBS00, SBS50, SBS100, HEA50, HEA100 | 4 |
| Softening point test | SBS00, SBS50, SBS100, HEA50, HEA100 | 4 |
| Ductility test | SBS00, SBS50, SBS100, HEA50, HEA100 | 4 |
| Brookfield viscosity test | SBS00, SBS50, SBS100, HEA50, HEA100 | 3 |
| Temperature sweep test | SBS00, SBS50, SBS100, HEA50, HEA100 | 3 |
| Multiple stress creep and recovery test | SBS00, SBS50, SBS100, HEA50, HEA100 | 3 |
| Bending beam rheological test | SBS00, SBS50, SBS100, HEA50, HEA100 | 3 |
Figure 2Basic properties of asphalt mastic.
Figure 3The viscosity of asphalt mastic at different temperatures.
Figure 4Storage modulus: (a) Before TFOT; (b) After TFOT.
Figure 5Phase angle: (a) Before TFOT; (b) After TFOT.
Figure 6Complex modulus: (a) Before TFOT; (b) After TFOT.
Figure 7Rutting factor: (a) Before TFOT; (b) After TFOT.
Figure 8Viscoelastic index Z: (a) Before TFOT; (b) After TFOT.
Figure 9Strain curve: (a) 58 °C before TFOT; (b) 64 °C before TFOT; (c) 70 °C before TFOT; (d) 58 °C after TFOT; (e) 64 °C after TFOT; (f) 70 °C after TFOT.
Figure 10Creep compliance: (a) 0.1 kPa before TFOT; (b) 0.1 kPa after TFOT; (c) 3.2 kPa before TFOT; (d) 3.2 kPa after TFOT.
Figure 11Recovery rate: (a) 0.1 kPa before TFOT; (b) 0.1 kPa after TFOT; (c) 3.2 kPa before TFOT; (d) 3.2 kPa after TFOT.
Figure 12Low-temperature creep of asphalt mastic: (a) Creep stiffness. (b) Creep rate.
Figure 13m/S of asphalt mastic.