Journal
CONSTRUCTION AND BUILDING MATERIALS
Volume 346, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2022.128413
Keywords
Asphalt binder; Specification; Phase angle; Fatigue cracking; Thermal cracking
Categories
Funding
- Ministry of Transportation of Ontario
- Chinese Scholarship Council
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Recent paving contracts in Ontario have specified asphalt binders based on various criteria, including crack tip opening displacements, low temperature performance grades, and grade losses. However, the testing protocols for these criteria are cumbersome. A study was conducted to assess the feasibility of using phase angle temperatures as an alternative to CTOD, LLTPG, and grade losses. The results showed a strong correlation between phase angle and these performance measures, suggesting that a phase angle specification could be a more practical approach for controlling pavement cracking.
In recent years, Ontario paving contracts have specified asphalt binders based on limits for: (1) critical crack tip opening displacements (CTOD) obtained in the double-edge-notched tension (DENT) test, (2) limiting low temperature performance grades (LLTPG) obtained in the extended bending beam rheometer test (EBBR), and (3) EBBR grade losses, in addition to (4) regular American Association of State and Highway Transportation Officials (AASHTO) M320 criteria. While the enhanced performance measures are expected to provide significant improvements in pavement performance, both DENT and EBBR protocols are cumbersome. A total of 371 sets of binder test results are used to assess if CTOD, EBBR LLTPG and grade losses can be replaced with limiting phase angle temperatures T-30 degrees and T-45 degrees, in an effort to make the binder specification more practical. The CTOD, LLTPG and grade loss correlate strongly with phase angle but variation for softer grades were found to be significant, which likely relates to differences in aging mechanisms in the laboratory and service (chemistry and/or thermal history, exudation of oils). A phase angle specification for the control of pavement cracking deserves further consideration for its accuracy, sensitivity, precision and thus usefulness.
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