Effect of Chemical Composition of Bio- and Petroleum-Based Modifiers on Asphalt Binder Rheology
Abstract
:Featured Application
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials
2.2. Asphalt Binder Modification
- PG 64-22 binder was sampled from the refinery terminal in 110–3.8 L cans. They were labelled from 1 to 110 in the order they were collected. The base binder was then grouped in five different sets as shown in Figure 1a.
- Binder from each set was split to 6 cans of around 500 g each (Figure 1b). Each can was heated to 135 °C for 2 h to reach a flowing state and was stirred prior to splitting. The split samples were then stored for modification.
- Before modification, the split base binder (S1) was heated for 30 min in a heating mantle (Figure 1c) to reach 130 ± 10 °C to ensure that material was steadily flowing prior to blending.
- The modifier was added (weight measured with a 0.01 g readability scale), the propeller was inserted half-way into the depth of the material and was set to 1000 rpm for 20 min. During blending, the temperature was maintained at 130 ± 10 °C and formation of vortices was prevented to avoid air bubbles in the blend.
- After blending, the MAB was divided into 4–240 mL cans (Figure 1d).
- Steps 3 to 5 were repeated for the binders from different sets mentioned in Step 1 for obtaining representative samples.
- Later, 3–240 mL cans from different batches of each MAB were combined to proceed with aging conditioning (Figure 1e).
2.3. Modifier Chemistry Experimental Program
2.3.1. Elemental Analysis
2.3.2. Chemical Functional Groups
2.3.3. Molecular Weight Analysis
2.3.4. Binder Fractionation
2.4. Binder Rheology Experimental Program
2.4.1. Superpave Performance Grading (PG)
2.4.2. ΔTc Parameter
2.4.3. Frequency Sweep Test
Glover–Rowe Parameter (GR)
3. Results
3.1. Chemical Characterization of Modifiers
3.1.1. Elemental Analysis
3.1.2. Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR)
- All modifiers show characteristic peaks in the range of 2800–3000 cm−1 and 1300–1460 cm−1 which correspond to C-H stretching and C-H bending, respectively (Figure 2a).
- Peaks at 2850, 2920, 2955, and 3008 cm−1 correspond to C-H stretching and are observed in modifiers A, C, D, E, and K (Figure 2c). These peaks are absent in G. Instead, a distinct broad peak at 2860 cm−1 in G was observed (Figure 2c). This peak is representative of N-H stretching specific to amine salt.
- The common peak at 1460 cm−1 in all the modifiers shows the presence of C-H bending for alkanes (Figure 2b). It is the most common functional group present in hydrocarbons.
- Series of peaks were observed from 1000–1300 cm−1 in all modifiers (Figure 2a). This may reflect the presence of either alkoxy (-C-O-), phenyl (=C-O-), or C-N stretching.
- Peaks for modifiers A, C, D, and E at 1165 cm−1 show the presence of a common functional group which can be either of alkoxy (-C-O-), phenyl (=C-O-), or C-N (Figure 2b). Because a negligible amount of nitrogen was observed in these modifiers, the probability of alkoxy (-C-O-) or phenyl (=C-O-) groups presence is higher.
- An accentuated peak at 1120 cm−1 for G and a smaller peak around 1050 cm−1 for C might correspond to C-N stretching (Figure 2b). This is characteristic of amine stretching (1000–1250 cm−1).
- Smaller peaks at 1350 and 1375 cm−1 for modifier K correspond to stretching of sulfoxide (-S=O) group (Figure 2b).
- Strong peaks of carbonyl (-C=O) stretching were observed in modifiers A, C, D, and E between 1650–1800 cm−1. The peaks are close to wavenumber 1742 cm−1 which may reflect the presence of aldehydes, ketones, esters, or carboxylic groups (-C=O). However, a very small peak for modifier G was also observed closer to wavenumber 1650 cm−1 which is characteristic of amides (-NC=O) (Figure 2b). There is no peak for modifier K in this region.
- Modifier G and C have a single broad peak in range of 3100–3500 cm−1 (Figure 2a). This peak is usually due to the stretching in alcohols (O-H) or secondary amines (-R1R2N-H). Based on elemental analysis, G and C have higher nitrogen content compared to other modifiers. Therefore, presence of secondary amines is highly likely in these modifiers.
- The spectral analysis results of modifiers confirm the type as provided by the suppliers (Table 1). No information on modifier A’s composition was provided; however, the FTIR results suggest that modifier A has characteristics similar to the bio-oil blend (modifier D).
3.1.3. Gel Permeation Chromatography
- The molecular weight distribution in modifier A and D showed two peaks at similar retention times but with different intensities. The larger peak occurred at lower retention times than the smaller peak, which indicates presence of two different sized molecules with higher proportion of larger size particles.
- Modifier C has a similar two peak distribution to A and D. However, the two peaks occur at longer retention times, indicating that the respective weights are smaller than A and D.
- Modifiers E and G have one sharp peak indicating the presence of single weight molecule. However, the peaks occur at different retention times which represent different particles.
- Modifier G has the largest retention time suggesting lower average molecular weight.
- Modifier K has the largest molecular weights among the modifiers. The molecular size distribution is wider compared to all other modifiers with two peaks. The wider distribution indicates a wide range of molecular size present in modifier K, resulting in a high PDI.
3.1.4. Thin Layer Chromatography Flame Ionization Detection (TLC-FID)
- Modifiers A, C, D, and E are primarily composed of resins.
- Modifiers A and D consist of some aromatics (A = 19.7% and D = 10.5%), limited asphaltenes (A = 4.6% and D = 7.5%), and some saturates (A = 8.3% and D = 1.1%).
- Modifiers C and E show limited or no presence of aromatics and saturates. They are primarily composed of resins (C = 70.1% and E = 83.4%) and asphaltenes (C = 23.2% and E = 13%).
- Modifier K has a significant proportion of saturates (59.3%) and exceptionally high residue content (26%) compared to other modifiers.
3.2. Rheological Characterization of Modified Binders
3.2.1. Superpave Grading
3.2.2. Delta Tc (ΔTc)
3.2.3. Frequency Sweep Test
Complex Shear Modulus Master Curves
- In Figure 6a, after RTFO aging, modified binders are difficult to differentiate based on their shear modulus values. All the binders have similar master curves representing similar stiffnesses.
- As the aging progressed to PAV condition, modified binder containing K separates from the rest of the binders at the lower frequency range (Figure 6b) representing a stiffer behavior. Other binders (A, C, D, E, G, and S5) show similar behavior.
- Upon further aging (2PAV), modified binder containing G slightly separates from the rest of the binders towards lower moduli (Figure 6c), showing a softer behavior. K is again the stiffest and separates from the rest (A, C, D, E, and S5) in this condition.
- At 3PAV, modified binders containing G and K have clear distinction in moduli, G being the softest and K being the stiffest. All other binders have similar variation in the complex shear modulus as shown in Figure 6d.
Black Space Diagram
- For the selected range of G* at RTFO (Inset Figure 7a) aged condition, K-modified binder has the lowest δ with clear distinction compared to other binders. The remaining binders have higher δ values than K-modified binder and are close to each other. C-modified binder has highest δ.
- As the aging progresses to PAV aging, the separation in δ can be distinguished clearly. K-modified binder is separated from rest of the binders with lower δ (Inset Figure 7b), while G-modified binder has the highest δ followed by C, S5, E, D, and A, respectively (close to each other).
- Upon further aging (2PAV and 3PAV), the trends for highest and lowest δ are again similar to that of PAV aging. However, the separation in δ became more evident (Inset Figure 7c,d). At 3PAV, K-modified binder has the lowest δ, followed by E, D, S5, C, and G. The δ values for G-modified binder suggest a greater viscous component in the complex shear modulus, indicating a flowing behavior, thus possibly lower cracking susceptibility.
Glover–Rowe (GR) Parameter
4. Discussion
4.1. Summary of Modifier Chemistry
4.2. Summary of Modified Asphalt Binder Rheology
4.3. Relationship between Modifier Chemistry and Binder Rheology
5. Summary and Findings
- Nitrogen-rich modified binders appear to have superior rheological properties. They have higher ΔTc, higher phase angles, and lower GR for 2PAV and 3PAV conditions. Hence, it can be assumed that the presence of nitrogen would boost anti-oxidizing properties and reduce susceptibility to cracking. Further research is needed to validate this hypothesis.
- Sulfur presence may have a detrimental impact on modified binder performance.
- Lower molecular size/weight of modifiers appears to be related to better cracking resistance potential of modified asphalt binders. Further research towards validating this idea is encouraged.
- Modifiers A and D have similar chemical characteristics and molecular weight distributions. This suggests that modifier A may have a bio-based origin.
- The methodology employed in the SARA analysis may not be able to characterize some modifiers. An alternative test method should be considered for some modifiers.
- Phase angle parameter in conjunction with complex modulus (G*) was shown to be sensitive to laboratory aging of modified and unmodified binders. Therefore, such a parameter has potential to identify phase-incompatible asphalt binders, is able to distinguish potential mechanical behavior, and could be associated with field performance.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Modifier | Type 1 |
---|---|
A | NA 2 |
C | Fatty acid derivative |
D | Bio-oil blend |
E | Modified vegetable oil |
G | Glycol amine |
K | ReOB |
Sample | C (%) | H (%) | N (%) | O (%) | S (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | 77.3 | 11.9 | 0.4 | 10.4 | 0.001 |
C | 70.1 | 11.5 | 3.5 | 14.9 | 0.004 |
D | 76.1 | 11.8 | 0.8 | 11.3 | 0.03 |
E | 77.1 | 11.5 | 0.6 | 9.9 | 0.33 |
G | 47.9 | 10.0 | 9.0 | 33.1 | 0.00 |
K | 79.7 | 12.7 | 0.9 | 5.7 | 0.98 |
Modifier | Number-Average Molecular Weight (Mn) | Weight Average Molecular Weight (Mw) | Polydispersity Index (PDI) |
---|---|---|---|
A | 4450 | 4616 | 1.04 |
C | 3709 | 3971 | 1.07 |
D | 4345 | 4909 | 1.13 |
E | 4684 | 4805 | 1.03 |
G | 2349 | 2596 | 1.11 |
K | 8933 | 48,784 | 5.46 |
Sample ID | Saturates (%) | Aromatics (%) | Resins (%) | Asphaltenes (%) | Residue (%) | Total (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | 8.3 | 19.7 | 62.5 | 4.6 | 4.9 | 100.0 |
C | 0.0 | 0.0 | 70.1 | 23.3 | 6.6 | 100.0 |
D | 1.2 | 10.5 | 78.5 | 7.5 | 2.3 | 100.0 |
E | 0.0 | 0.1 | 83.4 | 13.0 | 3.5 | 100.0 |
K | 59.3 | 0.4 | 10.3 | 4.0 | 26.0 | 100.0 |
Binder ID | High PG | Low PG | Continuous PG | Superpave PG |
---|---|---|---|---|
S1 | 66.4 | −23.7 | 66.4-23.7 | 64-22 |
S5 | 61.1 | −29.5 | 61.1-29.5 | 58-28 |
S1-A-3.5 | 61.6 | −30.0 | 61.6-30.0 | 58-28 |
S1-C-3.1 | 61.4 | −30.1 | 61.4-30.1 | 58-28 |
S1-D-3.1 | 62.1 | −28.3 | 62.1-28.3 | 58-28 |
S1-E-3.1 | 62.3 | −30.7 | 62.3-30.7 | 58-28 |
S1-G-6.5 | 60.8 | −28.5 | 60.8-28.5 | 58-28 |
S1-K-10 | 59.4 | −27.3 | 59.4-27.3 | 58-22 |
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Singhvi, P.; García Mainieri, J.J.; Ozer, H.; Sharma, B.K.; Al-Qadi, I.L. Effect of Chemical Composition of Bio- and Petroleum-Based Modifiers on Asphalt Binder Rheology. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 3249. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10093249
Singhvi P, García Mainieri JJ, Ozer H, Sharma BK, Al-Qadi IL. Effect of Chemical Composition of Bio- and Petroleum-Based Modifiers on Asphalt Binder Rheology. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(9):3249. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10093249
Chicago/Turabian StyleSinghvi, Punit, Javier J. García Mainieri, Hasan Ozer, Brajendra K. Sharma, and Imad L. Al-Qadi. 2020. "Effect of Chemical Composition of Bio- and Petroleum-Based Modifiers on Asphalt Binder Rheology" Applied Sciences 10, no. 9: 3249. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10093249
APA StyleSinghvi, P., García Mainieri, J. J., Ozer, H., Sharma, B. K., & Al-Qadi, I. L. (2020). Effect of Chemical Composition of Bio- and Petroleum-Based Modifiers on Asphalt Binder Rheology. Applied Sciences, 10(9), 3249. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10093249