Litcius/Paper detail

Rheological Property Evaluation and Microreaction Mechanism of Rubber Asphalt, Desulfurized Rubber Asphalt, and Their Composites

Ying Fang, Zhengqi Zhang, Kaiwen Zhang, Zhuolin Li

2021Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering29 citationsDOI

Abstract

Desulfurized rubber asphalt (DRA) is a good environmentally friendly road construction material, but its high-temperature performance is relatively insufficient compared to ordinary rubber asphalt (RA). Therefore, in order to make full use of its environmental protection features and overcome its shortcomings in high-temperature performance, polyphosphoric acid (PPA) was used to modify DRA to prepare composite modified asphalt (PPA-DRA). First, RA, DRA, and PPA-DRA were prepared in this study, and their high-temperature performance and fatigue properties were compared and analyzed by a temperature scanning test and multistress creep recovery test (MSCR). Then, their low-temperature performance was also compared and analyzed by using a bending beam rheological test (BBR). Finally, the modified mechanism of PPA-DRA was revealed by the FTIR test, thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), and microswelling model. Results show that compared to RA and DRA, PPA-DRA performed better both at high and low temperatures but worse at fatigue resistance, and it can be applied to a wider range of traffic grades. However, PPA-DRA and DRA are more susceptible to aging than RA, and the elastic component in PPA-DRA increases greatly due to aging. According to the strategic highway research program (SHRP) specification, PPA-DRA, DRA, and RA can be graded as PG82-34, PG76-28, and PG76-28, respectively. Also, the FTIR test in conjunction with TGA proves that PPA-DRA exhibits better high-temperature performance than DRA and RA from the microscopic perspective, and its modification process is of chemical modification; the swelling model shows that compared to RA and DRA, PPA-DRA shows the largest number of micelles and the best combination between modifier and asphalt molecules, which promotes the formation of a dense spatial network structure and makes the asphalt structure more stable.

Topics & Concepts

AsphaltNatural rubberMaterials scienceThermogravimetric analysisComposite materialCrumb rubberFourier transform infrared spectroscopyRheologyFlexural strengthEngineeringChemical engineeringAsphalt Pavement Performance EvaluationInfrastructure Maintenance and MonitoringNatural Fiber Reinforced Composites