4.6 Article

Recommendations for handling bitumen prior to FTIR spectroscopy

Journal

MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
Volume 55, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1617/s11527-022-01884-1

Keywords

Bitumen; FTIR spectroscopy; Material handling; Heating time; Temperature; Storage

Funding

  1. TU Wien Bibliothek
  2. Austrian Federal Ministry for Digital and Economic Affairs
  3. National Foundation for Research, Technology and Development
  4. Christian Doppler Research Association
  5. BMI Group
  6. OMV Downstream
  7. Pittel + Brausewetter

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This study investigates the impact of heating and storage conditions on the oxidation of bituminous specimens. The results show that heating small quantities of bitumen at 180 degrees C for up to 30 minutes has little impact on oxidation, while strong oxidation can occur within 1 hour when stored in the dark with no UV radiation. Heating bitumen at 180 degrees C for 5-10 minutes followed by storage in a dark, climatized room and measurement within one hour is recommended.
The application of chemical analysis on bituminous materials has increased drastically over the past decades. One of the most common spectroscopic methods used in the field of research is Attenuated Total Reflection (ATR) Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Since ATR-FTIR is a surface sensitive method, sample or specimen handling of a complex material like bitumen prior to its analysis needs to be considered, especially for people new to the field or analysis technique. This study looks at the impact of heating time and temperature as well as storage time and conditions on the oxidation of the bituminous specimen. Four binders from the same crude oil source but different specification classes (unmodified and styrene-butadiene-styrene polymer modified) and two binders from different crude oil sources were investigated. The results show that heating small quantities of bitumen at 180 degrees C for up to 30 min has little impact on the formation of oxidized species, when proper thermal monitoring is conducted. Special cases where oxidation does occur are reported in detail. Furthermore, strong oxidation is induced by day light, when bitumen is stored behind glass with no UV radiation present, which can reach short-term ageing level within 1 h. Thus, heating bitumen at 180 degrees C for 5-10 min followed by storage in the dark, climatized room and measured within one hour after preparation is recommended. These results should act as recommendation for future specimen handling prior to FTIR spectroscopic analysis to ensure unbiased and comparable measurements.

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