Abstract

Short-term aging of asphalt binders is an inevitable phenomenon during mix production and laydown that significantly affects the rheological properties of asphalt binders and further contributes to the deterioration of pavement performance. This paper presents a new short-term aging model for asphalt binders. The new model focuses on the binder viscosity as the target property and incorporates the rheological activation energy for the model development. It consists of four model coefficients and two essential binder specific inputs (i.e. viscosity and rheological activation energy of the unaged asphalt binder). The rheological activation energy is calculated from the conventional properties of unaged asphalt binders like penetration, kinematic viscosity, and absolute viscosity measured at various temperatures or from the known Viscosity Temperature Susceptibility parameters (i.e. “A-VTS” values) of unaged asphalt binders. The global model coefficients are determined using data extracted from the long-term pavement performance database. The short-term aging is verified to increase the rheological activation energy of the asphalt binder to a certain amount which is linearly proportional to that of the unaged binder. It is also found that the new model delivers more accurate viscosity prediction capabilities over the existing binder aging model. The new model is then validated through data collected from multiple independent data sources. The validation results indicate that the new model provides fairly accurate predictions in both laboratory and field short-term aging. Thus, it can be concluded that the new model is a good candidate for the short-term aging prediction.

Highlights

  • Aging is a phenomenon that affects the physical properties, rheological properties as well as thePage 2 of 22 chemical composition of asphalt binder when exposed to aging agents over time

  • Rheological testing of asphalt binder can be used to account for the effect of aging on rheological properties such as binder viscosity while the effect of aging binder chemical composition has been studied by numerous researchers using the Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) method e.g., [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Several studied have shown that after short-term aging, the asphalt binder has a rheological activation energy at least 5 kJ/mol higher than the original binder [26, 27, 31]. All these results imply that the increase in viscosity due to the shortterm aging might be characterized through the change of rheological activation energy

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Aging is a phenomenon that affects the physical properties, rheological properties as well as the. The model makes use of a statistical equation to establish an empirical relationship between the unaged and the short-term aged viscosity in log–log scale, which has been implemented into the current AASHTOWare Pavement ME Design for the level-3 pavement design [21]. This model lacks of physical significance because it is developed based on a regression analysis. This significantly affects the applicability of the model for practical applications and affects the reliability of the prediction result

Motivation and objectives
Formulation of short-term aging model
Calculation of rheological activation energy
Determination of global model coefficients
Model verification and comparison with existing model
Conclusions
Compliance with ethical standards
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call