Stiffening and Toughening of Asphalt Mastic Induced by Bitumen–Mineral Selective Molecular Adsorption and Nanostructural Reconstruction
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials and Sample Preparation
2.1.1. Bitumen and Asphalt Mastic
2.1.2. Mineral Substrates
2.2. Rheological Characteristic Tests
2.3. Molecular Dynamics Simulation
2.3.1. Molecular Models
2.3.2. Molecular Dynamics
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Linear Rheological Characteristics of Asphalt Mastic in Contact with Various Mineral Aggregates
3.1.1. Modulus Analysis at Various Frequencies
3.1.2. Modulus Analysis at Different Temperatures
3.2. Nonlinear Rheological Properties of Asphalt Mastics Affected by the Mineral Aggregates
3.2.1. Nonlinear Rheological Characterization of the Mastic
3.2.2. Initial Modulus and Phase Angle of Mastic on Different Mineral Substrates
3.2.3. Failure Strain and Failure Modulus of Mastic on Different Mineral Substrates
3.3. Nanostructural Characteristics and Intermolecular Interaction Analysis between the Bitumen and Minerals
3.4. Nanomechanical Characteristics of the Bitumen–Mineral Interface under Shearing Displacement
3.5. Relationship between Macrorheological Characteristics and Nanomolecular Interactions
4. Conclusions and Summary
- The mineral aggregates increased the modulus of the mastics but decreased their phase angles, thereby strengthening the stiffness and toughness of the mastics compared with the mastic on the steel plate.
- The mastic on the limestone substrate had a higher modulus but a lower phase angle than that on the basalt substrate within the linear region at a temperature below 50 °C. The mastic on limestone had a higher modulus than that on basalt, and its ratio reached up to 1.18. This was attributed to the coexistence of the adsorbed bitumen layer and internal colloidal nanostructure in the bitumen–calcite system.
- However, the modulus of the mastic on the basalt exceeded that on the limestone, as the temperature was higher than 50 °C, and the maximum ratio reached 2.17. The stable bitumen nanostructure, containing dispersed metal ions in the bitumen–augite and bitumen–albite systems at high temperatures, was responsible for the high modulus on the basalt.
- The mastic on the limestone substrate had a better nonlinear rheological performance than that on the basalt substrate. The mastic in contact with the limestone had a higher failure strain and failure modulus than that in contact with the basalt, the ratios of which reached up to 1.60 and 1.32, respectively. Sufficient calcite in the limestone increased the stiffness of the mastic, whereas the augite and albite in the basalt impaired the mastic’s performance.
- The bitumen–calcite system had a higher shear stress than the bitumen–augite and bitumen–albite systems and presented a stronger resistance to the substrate shear deformation. The ratio of shear stress of the bitumen-calcite to the bitumen-albite reached up to 6.8. The non-bond energy of the bitumen-calcite was 14.15% higher than that of the bitumen-albite. The destruction and reconstruction of the bitumen colloidal structure in the bitumen–calcite system implies abundant work from external shearing, while small resin and diffused metal ions in the bitumen–augite and bitumen–albite systems form a lubrication layer between the asphaltene self-aggregates and mineral substrates and hardly constrain substrate shearing.
- The chemistry or mineral composition makes an essential contribution to the adhesion and interaction of the mastic–aggregate interface. Considering the influence of mineral aggregates on the rheology of mastic and bitumen is significant for the accurate characterization and prediction of the macroperformance of asphaltic paving material in the field.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Oxide Mass Concentration (%) | Primary Mineral Composition (%) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Limestone | Basalt | Limestone | Basalt | |||
SiO2 | 2.5 | 51.55 | Calcite (CaCO3) | 100 | Anorthite (CaAl2Si2O8) | 28.82 |
CaO | 94.84 | 5.29 | ||||
Al2O3 | 1.21 | 16.38 | ||||
MgO | 0.42 | 9.77 | Augite (Mg6Fe6Si8O28) | 23.36 | ||
Fe2O3 | 0.44 | 7.73 | ||||
Na2O | 0.05 | 4.89 | Albite (NaAlSi3O8) | 47.83 | ||
Other | 0.55 | 4.4 |
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Liu, Z.; Wang, H.; Gong, X.; Cui, P.; Wei, H. Stiffening and Toughening of Asphalt Mastic Induced by Bitumen–Mineral Selective Molecular Adsorption and Nanostructural Reconstruction. Sustainability 2023, 15, 4398. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054398
Liu Z, Wang H, Gong X, Cui P, Wei H. Stiffening and Toughening of Asphalt Mastic Induced by Bitumen–Mineral Selective Molecular Adsorption and Nanostructural Reconstruction. Sustainability. 2023; 15(5):4398. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054398
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Zhiyang, Haipeng Wang, Xiangbing Gong, Peng Cui, and Hongrui Wei. 2023. "Stiffening and Toughening of Asphalt Mastic Induced by Bitumen–Mineral Selective Molecular Adsorption and Nanostructural Reconstruction" Sustainability 15, no. 5: 4398. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054398
APA StyleLiu, Z., Wang, H., Gong, X., Cui, P., & Wei, H. (2023). Stiffening and Toughening of Asphalt Mastic Induced by Bitumen–Mineral Selective Molecular Adsorption and Nanostructural Reconstruction. Sustainability, 15(5), 4398. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054398