4.5 Article

Oxidative aging of bitumen: a structural and chemical investigation

Journal

ROAD MATERIALS AND PAVEMENT DESIGN
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages 1091-1106

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14680629.2021.1871936

Keywords

Bitumen; oxidative aging; SARA; TOF-SIMS; AFM

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Oxidative aging of bitumen leads to decreased aromatic fractions and increased resins and asphaltenes. Wax-containing bitumen exhibits bee-like structures on the surface, while non-waxy bitumen does not show any structures.
The oxidative aging of bitumen was investigated chemically and structurally using SARA analysis, TOF-SIMS and AFM. Typical wax-containing and non-waxy bitumen samples were selected. Short- and long-term aging tests were conducted under standard conditions, and at prolonged aging times. For both the wax-containing and non-waxy bitumen, aging significantly decreases the aromatic fraction and at the same time increase the content of resins and asphaltenes. AFM shows bee-like structures on the wax-containing bitumen surface, and these structures change when the binder is aged. The bee structures are fewer but larger after a prolonged PAV. For the non-waxy bitumen, no structures were observed, even not after a severe PAV aging that increased the content of asphaltenes significantly. This implies that asphaltenes are most likely not responsible for the formation of bee structures. By TOF-SIMS, the non-waxy bitumen surface did not show structures, neither in the virgin state nor after the severe oxidative aging, further supporting that asphaltenes do not directly result in structure formation. For the wax-containing bitumen, TOF-SIMS shows aliphatics-enriched structures, which generally become larger after oxidative aging.

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