1. Introduction
Asphalt mixture has become one of the most widely used pavement materials globally because of its smooth surface, low noise and low maintenance cost. Aggregate plays a significant role in asphalt pavement, as aggregate accounts for approximately 95% of the weight and 90% of volume in asphalt mixtures. Asphalt binder becomes brittle after several years of use, and cracks appear due to oxidation and repeated wheel load [
1]. The destruction of a large amount of asphalt mixture waste generated in road maintenance has caused severe pollution. Therefore, experts have repeatedly tried to use waste asphalt mixture [
2,
3,
4,
5]. RAP technology reduces the use of new aggregate material, allowing construction waste material in semi-flexible pavement construction. A reasonable amount of new aggregate material, new asphalt binder and waste asphalt material are mixed to form a new asphalt mixture with significant performance, according to the standard requirements. The recycled or waste asphalt is heated and mixed at a temperature of 170 °C in the laboratory, and the resulting recycled material shows significant performance. In addition, the heating of asphalt mixtures requires a considerable amount of energy, increases carbon dioxide in the environment, and produces toxic gases, which causes environmental effects [
6,
7,
8,
9].
Due to its advantages of low energy consumption, low emissions, and reducing the ageing of old asphalt binders, a new type of green and environmentally friendly asphalt recycled material-foam warm-mixed recycled asphalt mixture has been applied in recent years [
10,
11,
12]. The foamed warm-mix asphalt technology aims to produce foamed asphalt binder by adding a specific amount of water to the foaming equipment. When water contacts the heated asphalt binder, it quickly evaporates and expands. The increased working capacity of asphalt enables it to be fully incorporated into aggregates at lower temperatures and to mix and compact the mixture at lower temperatures. However, the foamed warm-mix RAP technology can minimize the viscosity of the asphalt binder, resulting in a decrease in the compaction and mixing temperature. RAP technology has a slight advantage over hot-mix asphalt mixture in terms of low-temperature crack resistance, high-temperature performance and water stability.
Semi-flexible pavement combines certain best properties of flexible and rigid pavement by using an open-graded matrix asphalt mixture filled with specific cement grouting materials (void ratio 20–25%) [
13]. Asphalt’s flexibility, seamlessness and water-resistance are complementary to high static load carrying capacity, resistance to rutting and abrasion, and resistance to oil and fuel leakage, which are also characteristics of typical concrete surfaces [
14,
15]. The cement grouting material can be interlocked with the basic asphalt mixture to improve the performance of the pavement as a semi-flexible pavement material. This research proposes a warm mixed recycled semi-flexible pavement material to improve the road performance of foamed warm mixed recycled asphalt mixture, which is driven by this unique semi-flexible mixed composite pavement type.
In this paper, the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement material was prepared based on the coarse aggregate void-filling method (CAVF). Five different types of open-graded asphalt mixtures containing different contents of RAP (0%, 15%, 30%, 45%, 60%, in mass), while the target air voids of 25% were designed. Relevant laboratory tests were conducted to evaluate the road performance of the materials, and the grey correlation degree of various factors on the road performance of warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible materials was analyzed.
3. Testing Program
3.1. High-Temperature Resistant Test
Rutting tests were conducted to investigate the high-temperature performance of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement materials by the Chinese specifications (JTG E20-2011). According to the preparation procedure in
Section 2.3.3, 320 × 260 × 60 mm asphalt mixture slabs with different contents of RAP materials (referring to
Table 5) were fabricated for rutting tests, and then placed in a curing box with a temperature of 20 ± 3 °C and humidity of more than 80% to cure for 3 and 7 d.
The dynamic rutting stability (DS) index in the rutting test calculated with Equation (4) was obtained through the Hamburg Wheel Tracking (HWT) test apparatus (Infera Test Pruftechnik GmbH, Backenheim, Germany). For each type of asphalt mixture, three replicate tests were performed.
where
and
(mm) are tracking depths at 45 and 60 min, respectively.
and
represent 45 and 60 min, respectively.
N is the rolling speed of the steel wheel which is 52 times/min in this study.
and
are correction factors that are equal to 1.0.
3.2. Low-Temperature Test
A three-point bending test evaluated the crack resistance of the prepared specimens with the cement mortar according to the Chinese standard test methods of asphalt and asphalt mixtures for highway engineering (JTG E20-2011, T 0715). The prepared slabs with cement mortar were placed for curing for three days and seven days and cut by using a cutting machine. The small beams’ dimensions for the three-point bending test were 250 × 30 × 35 mm in length, width, and height, respectively. The small cut beams were placed in the water bath at −10 °C temperature for six hours to perform the low-temperatures crack resistance test. The test was conducted at a loading rate of 50 mm/min. The flexural tensile strength, stiffness modulus and maximum flexural strain were used to evaluate the crack resistance, which can be calculated with Equations (5) and (6).
where
L is span length (mm);
h is mid-span height (mm);
b is mid-span width (mm);
d is mid-span deflection at failure (mm);
PB is the maximum load at failure (N);
RB is the flexural tensile strength (MPa);
εB is the failure strain (με, 1 με = 10
−6ε).
3.3. Moisture Damage Resistance Test
The moisture damage resistance performance of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement materials was determined by the Marshall immersion test and the freeze–thaw splitting test. In the immersion Marshall test, the specimens were immersed in 60 ℃ water bath for 30 min and 48 h, and the stability of the specimens was measured, respectively. The immersion residual Marshall stability (MS) of the specimens can be calculated with Equation (7) expressed as:
where
is residual stability of the specimen (%).
and
(kN) are the stability of the specimen after immersion for 30 min and 48 h, respectively.
In the freeze–thaw splitting test (FTST), the prepared cylindrical specimens were divided into two groups. The first group was immersed in 25 °C water bath for 2 h, and then the indirect tensile strength (ITS) of the specimens was performed with a loading rate of 50 mm/min. The second group was immersed in a vacuum at room temperature for 15 min until it achieved at vacuum saturation, then placed in a freezer at a temperature of −18 °C for 16 h. Afterward, the specimens were placed into a 60 °C water bath for 24 h followed by placed into a 25 °C water bath for 2 h before testing. Finally, the indirect tensile strength of the second group was performed at 25 °C with a loading rate of 50 mm/min. The ITS ratio of the specimen before and after water conditioning was used to evaluate moisture damage resistance performance of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement materials with Equation (8) expressed as:
where
is the indirect tensile strength ratio (%).
and
are the splitting strength of the specimens with and without freeze–thaw process (MPa).
3.4. Fatigue Test
Four-point bending test (4 PB) was conducted by Cooper NU-14 (Cooper Research Technology, Ripley, UK) to evaluate the fatigue performance of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement materials under repeated load. The fatigue specimens with a dimension of 380 × 63.5 × 50 mm in length, width, and height, respectively, were cut from prepared slab specimens after curing for 28 days. The strain magnitudes selected in this study were 150 and 200 με. All the 4 PB tests were performed at 15 °C with a loading frequency of 10 Hz. The fatigue life of the specimens was defined as the number of loading cycles when the stiffness modulus of the specimen beam decreases to 50% of its initial stiffness modulus.
3.5. Grey Correlation Analysis (GCA)
J. Deng developed the grey correlation analysis (GCA) based on the development trend degree of similarity or dissimilarity between the factors to evaluate and optimize schemes with a multi-index [
22]. The basic concept of this analysis method is to calculate the correlation coefficient and the correlation degree, and then evaluate the influence degree of different affecting factors by the reference sequences [
23]. The evaluation process of grey correlation analysis are as follows:
- (1)
Determination of reference sequence
The factors that affect the behavior of the system are composed of comparative sequences, which can be expressed as . The factors that reflect the characteristics of the behavior of the system are composed of reference sequences, which can be expressed as ;
- (2)
Normalize and get non-dimension
In this paper, the initial value converting method was used by dividing all the data of a sequence by its first value to normalize the values expressed as and ;
- (3)
Calculation of grey correlation coefficient
Let the difference between the reference sequence and each comparative sequence set as
. The maximum difference
, the minimum difference
and the grey correlation coefficient
were calculated by Equations (9)–(11), respectively.
where
is a coefficient,
in this study;
- (4)
Determination of correlation degree
The correlation degree among the system factors was defined as .
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Rutting Resistance
The rutting depth of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement material at different curing ages are presented in
Figure 6a,b. As shown in
Figure 6, the rutting depth increases with the increase of RAP content in the same curing age, and the rutting depth of the material with the same content of RAP decreases with the increase of curing age. Compared with semi-flexible pavement without RAP, the maximum rutting depths of the material with a RAP content of 60% at 20,000 rolling cycles for 3 and 7 d curing age are 0.69 and 0.65 mm, respectively. This indicates that the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement material has high rutting resistance performance.
The influences of RAP contents and curing ages on DS are illustrated in
Figure 7a,b. As it can be seen, the DS values decreased with the increase of RAP contents in the same curing age. To quantify the influence of RAP content on DS, the reduction ratio of DS calculated with Equation (12) is defined as a fraction of the reference DS value (DS value of the material with a RAP content of 0%). This is taken as a variation in DS value with different RAP content as shown in
Figure 7a,b.
Figure 7 shows that the dosage increase for RAP is nonlinear to the reduction ratio of dynamic stability. The reduction ratio of dynamic stability for the material with RAP content increases from 0% to 15% develops faster than when the RAP content is from 15% to 60%. Raising the RAP content to 60%, the reduction ratio of dynamic stability for the material can reach to 50% and 60% in 3 and 7 curing days, respectively. In other words, the high content of RAP greatly influences the dynamic stability of the material.
To clarify the influence of curing time on the DS, ratio of dynamic stability variation versus RAP content has been drawn, as displayed in
Figure 8. It can be seen from
Figure 8 that the DS variation of 7 curing days for the material without RAP increases by 50% compared with that of 3 curing days. The dynamic stability variation from 3 curing days to 7 curing days decreases with the increase of RAP content. When the RAP content is from 30% to 60%, the dynamic stability variation increase of dynamic stability is within 20%. This indicates that the increase of curing days has a slow effect on the DS of the material with a relatively high RAP content. This is mainly because the increase of curing day cannot counteract the decrease of dynamic stability caused by the increase of RAP content.
4.2. Low-Temperature Crack Resistance
The flexural tensile strength and failure strain of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement material at different curing ages are presented in
Figure 9. As shown in
Figure 9, when the RAP contents range from 0% to 30%, the flexural tensile strength and failure strain decrease with the increase of RAP content. While the flexural tensile strength and failure strain change trends when the RAP content is from 30% to 60%. The main reason for this trend is that the reclaimed pavement materials contain old asphalt binder, forming weakened interfaces between old aggregates and asphalt mastic. The weakened interfaces lead to lower bond strength and deteriorate flexural tensile strength and failure strain of the warm-mixed, semi-flexible pavement material. However, the effective porosity of the matrix asphalt mixture will decrease when the reclaimed material content increases to 30–60%, according to our experimental results. Thus, the matrix asphalt mixture containing higher reclaimed material content becomes denser. The flexural tensile strength and failure strain of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement material increases slightly with the increase of reclaimed materials.
4.3. Moisture Damage Resistance
Results of Marshall immersion tests and freeze–thaw splitting tests are presented in
Figure 10. As shown from
Figure 10, the immersion residual Marshall stability (MS) decreases with the increase of RAP content and increases with the rise of the curing ages. It can also be found that the values of MS are all above 100%, which indicates that the Marshall stability of 48 h immersion is more remarkable than of 30 min immersion. This is because a small portion of cement mortar in the semi-flexible material is not entirely hardened during the early curing age. When the Marshall specimen was placed in the constant temperature water bath box at 60 °C for 48 h, the strength of the semi-flexible material improved due to the hydration of the cement mortar. It can also be seen from
Figure 10 that the indirect tensile strength ratio (
TSR) of the specimens has the same trend in the increase of RAP content as Marshall stability (
MS). The indirect tensile strength ratio values are above 90% when the curing age is up to 7 d, indicating that warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement material has good water stability.
4.4. Fatigue Performance
The fatigue performance of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible pavement material is shown in
Figure 11. As demonstrated from
Figure 11, the fatigue life of the warm-mixed recycled semi-flexible material increases with the increase of RAP content at the same strain magnitude. At the same time, the initial stiffness modulus decreases with the increase of reclaimed materials. When the RAP content is the same, the fatigue life of the semi-flexible material decreases with the increase of strain level.
4.5. Grey Correlation Analysis
The comparative sequences of the factors affecting the system behavior, such as RAP content, asphalt binder content, curing age and strain magnitude, are listed as
. The factors that reflect the characteristics of the behavior of the system, such as DS, Flexural tensile strength, Failure strain, MS, TRS and Fatigue life, are expressed as
. The comparative sequences and reference sequences are shown in
Table 9 and
Table 10, respectively. The comparison sequences and reference sequences were dimensionless and treated by the method of initial value reduction, and then the grey correlation coefficients were calculated by Equations (10) and (12) in
Section 3.5. Finally, the grey correlation degree of various factors on the road performance of warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible materials was obtained, as shown in
Table 11.
As can be seen from
Table 11, the order of the influence degree of each influencing factor on the high-temperature performance of warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible materials is: asphalt binder content > curing age > RAP content. This indicates that the asphalt binder content has the most significant correlation with the high-temperature stability of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible material. This is because the high asphalt content of the matrix asphalt mixture leads to the decrease of the porosity of the matrix asphalt mixture and the grouting amount of cement mortar becomes smaller, while the rutting resistance is mainly provided by cement mortar.
Furthermore, the order of the influence degree of each influencing factor on the material’s low-temperature crack resistance is: curing age > RAP content > asphalt binder content. This indicates that the curing age has the most significant with the low-temperature crack resistance of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible material. Cement mortar in this material is a rigid material with weak flexural strain resistance and is vulnerable to brittle failure. Thus, the curing age dominates the strength of cement mortar and greatly affects the low-temperature crack resistance of the material. The order of the influence degree of each influencing factor on the water stability performance of the material is as follows: curing age > asphalt binder content > RAP content. The results show that the curing age has the most remarkable correlation with the water stability of the warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible material. The order of the influence degree of each influencing factor on the fatigue property of the material is as follows: RAP content > strain magnitude > asphalt binder content. The correlation between RAP content and the fatigue performance of the semi-flexible materials is the greatest. The addition of used materials can significantly improve the fatigue life of the materials.
This study has analyzed the grey correlation degree of various factors on the road performance of warm-mixed reclaimed semi-flexible materials. It is found that multiple factors have different influence degree of the road performance of warm-mixed recycled semi-flexible materials and these factors restrict each other. The road performance of the material cannot be changed by controlling the single variable. It is necessary to consider the various factors to select a suitable variable range and choose several factors with more significant influence for research.
For example, the grey correlation degree of RAP content on the high-temperature stability, low-temperature crack resistance and water stability performance of the recycled semi-flexible material is low, but it cannot directly explain that the RAP content has little effect on the road performance of the material. According to the road performance test results, the change of RAP content has a more significant impact on the comprehensive path performance of the mixed regenerative semi-flexible material. Because there are correlations between the different factors, RAP content directly causes the change of other factors, and influences material road performance. In grey correlation analysis, selecting similar factors and comparing them with test results can improve the accuracy of results.