期刊
ENGINEER-JOURNAL OF THE INSTITUTION OF ENGINEERS SRI LANKA
卷 55, 期 4, 页码 61-70出版社
INST ENGINEERS SRI LANKA
DOI: 10.4038/engineer.v55i4.7544
关键词
Biochar; Hot Mix Asphalt; Marshall Stability; Moisture Susceptibility; Indirect Tensile Test; Retained Marshall Stability
The research found that using CRH and BC as partial asphalt binder replacements can improve the performance of asphalt at high temperatures and reduce the amount of asphalt required. Although the modifications decreased the Marshall stability and Indirect tensile strength, they still met the specifications for highways and retained high performance after moisture conditioning.
Carbonized rice husk (CRH) and biochar (BC) were investigated as partial asphalt binder replacements. TCR and BC modified asphalt binders were initially evaluated with reference to their penetration index and then by volumetric properties, Marshall properties, indirect tensile strength, and moisture damage resistance of HMA made using a modified asphalt binder. Both BC and CRH modifications improved the high-temperature performance of the asphalt binder while reducing the actual asphalt binder required for the optimum HMA. A maximum of 13.75% reduction in actual binder requirement was observed. Although both modifications decreased the Marshall stability and Indirect tensile strength, at most of the modification levels the reductions were small. Marshall stability and Indirect tensile strength values were above the Asphalt institute specifications stipulated for heavy traffic (ESAL>106 for 20 years) highways. All modifications retained more than 80% of their Marshall stability and Indirect tensile strength when subjected to moisture conditioning.
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