4.6 Article

Rheological, Mechanical, Microscopic, and Chemical Characterization of Asphalt Binders at Extended Aging Levels

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ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1061/JMCEE7.MTENG-15297

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This study aims to provide a comprehensive and fundamental understanding of asphalt binder aging and cracking by connecting its mechanical properties with dynamic microscopic morphology and chemical indices. The results showed that the parameters based on linear viscoelastic analysis and fatigue life were not suitable for delineating the evolution of asphalt binder behavior with aging. However, the poker chip test was found to be sensitive to longer aging cycles and could capture the total degradation of the asphalt binder's ductility. The study also highlighted the importance of morphological observations, specifically fibril formation, in understanding the mechanical performance of asphalt binders.
This study aims to connect asphalt binder mechanical properties to their dynamic microscopic morphology and chemical indices to provide a more thorough and fundamental picture of aging and cracking phenomena. Unmodified and modified asphalt binders were aged to five levels for a comprehensive representation of the asphalt binder service life. Rheological indices used covered linear viscoelastic cracking indicators and nonlinear parameters including fatigue life obtained by the linear amplitude sweep test. A recently validated asphalt binder cracking test, the poker chip test, was used to provide new insight into the mechanical performance of asphalt binders as they stretch into the nonlinear regime and experience cavitation damage. Rheological and mechanical properties were compared to static surface topography from atomic force microscopy (AFM) and time-sensitive asphalt binder microstructure based on electron beam loading using an environmental scanning electron microscope (ESEM). Results indicated that the parameters based on linear viscoelastic analysis and fatigue life derived from the linear amplitude sweep (LAS) test are not adequate to delineate the evolution of asphalt binder behavior with aging among different asphalt binders, due to poor ranking based on known phenomena. However, it was confirmed that the poker chip test was sensitive to longer aging cycles and could capture the total degradation of the asphalt binder's ductility for both modified and unmodified asphalt binders. The consistency between ESEM and AFM was ensured by observing static surface structures; however, quantification of the fibril formation in ESEM images was the most critical morphological observation when it came poker chip results, because both sharing similar deformation mechanisms. Chemical characterization using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy was also able to capture asphalt binder aging well, and could be best related to the strength of the asphalt binder. Overall, it was established that the surface microstructure has some relationship to mechanical properties, but not a definitive one, and that using ESEM as an energy absorption indicator was most similar to the comprehensive results from mechanical and chemical testing.

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