Analysis of Engineering Performance and Environmental Impact of Asphalt Pavement Debonding and Ice Suppression Materials
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Component Design and Preparation of the Ice-Defending Materials
2.1. Component Design and Preparation
- (1)
- The preparation of film-forming component A
- (2)
- The preparation of adhesive component C
- (3)
- The preparation of modified ice suppression component C
- (4)
- The preparation of viscosity-reducing and ice-defending materials
2.2. Asphalt and Aggregate Materials
3. Experimental Design and Evaluation of the Viscosity-Reducing and Ice-Defending Materials
3.1. The Durability of the Viscosity-Reducing and Ice-Defending Materials
3.1.1. Water Resistance
3.1.2. Slow-Release Performance
- (1)
- Absorption ability
- (2)
- Ice-deicing performance of freezing point inhibitor through precipitation
3.1.3. Low Temperature Accelerated Loading Test
- (1)
- Experimental simulation of the deicing performance of debonding and ice suppression materials
- (2)
- Experimental simulation of the effect of vehicle rolling wear on debonding ice suppression materials
3.2. Analysis and Evaluation of Environmental Protection Performance of Debonding and Ice Suppression Materials
3.2.1. Environmental Performance Testing of Debonding and Ice Suppression Materials
3.2.2. Analysis and Evaluation of the Effect of Debonding and Ice-Suppressing Materials on Plants
- (1)
- Experiment method
- ①
- Make a pre-painted test piece of debonding and ice suppression material, test the structural depth of the test piece, and spray the debonding and ice suppression material on the test piece according to the recommended optimal amount of debonding and ice suppression material for different structural depths of the test piece. The test specimen is an AC-13C rutting plate specimen with a construction depth of 0.7 mm and a sprinkling amount of debonding and ice suppression material of 0.55 kg/m2. Place the specimen in an outdoor ventilated place to dry.
- ②
- After soaking the test piece in quantitative water for 1 day, collect enough leaching solution of the debonding and ice suppression material test piece for use.
- ③
- Choose the commonly used snow-melting agent in China (the main component is calcium chloride) and add water to dissolve and dilute to make the leachate with a concentration of 5% for use.
- ④
- Cultivate enough healthy green plants as a backup for this experiment.
- ⑤
- Irrigate the green plants with 5% snow-melting agent leaching solution and debonding ice-suppressing material leaching solution every day, and observe the growth of the plants every day, and carry out a comparative analysis.
- (2)
- Test evaluation methodObserve the growth of plants before and after watering the leachate. If the growth of plants before and after watering the leachate has no effect, it means that the debonding and ice-suppressing material leachate does not harm the growth of plants. The greater the damage to the growth of the plant by the leachate.
- (3)
- Test Results and AnalysisObserve the plants irrigated with the leaching solution of the debonding and ice-suppressing material and the leaching solution of the snow-melting agent for 1–30 days.
3.2.3. Analysis and Evaluation of the Influence of Debonding and Ice Suppression Materials on Metal Corrosion
- (1)
- Metal specimen samples are prepared. The rebar sample is made into a cuboid with a size of 50 mm × 10 mm × 3 mm, and a round hole (3 mm in diameter) is drilled at one end. After sanding the sample until there are no marks of cutting, it is cleaned and dried with cold air. The sample is weighed and dimensioned.
- (2)
- Test setup. A test piece is put into the leaching solution of the debonding and ice suppression material for corrosion, and the corrosion performance of the debonding and ice suppression material on the metal test piece is verified. The test is used as a comparative test for the leaching solution of the debonding and ice suppression material.
- (3)
- Corrosion tests are conducted. Equal volumes of solution are added to 1000 mL beakers, and three pre-weighed metal specimens are added to each beaker. The corrosion test takes 24 h as a cycle, from 9:00 to 17:00 in the morning, according to the immersion test. The solution is placed in the air for 10 min, and the cycle test is carried out by placing it in the air for 50 min, and then the test pieces are put into the solution for 4 h to 21:00, and then the test pieces are taken out and placed in the air until 9:00 the next day. The test is repeated for 30 days in a cyclic manner; after the test, the work that needs to be performed is to use distilled water to wash off the corrosive medium solution, use pure alcohol to remove the moisture of the test piece, and dry it for later use.
- (4)
- The average corrosion rate is calculated. The first step is to use the cleaning solution prepared by hydrochloric acid, antimony trioxide, and stannous chloride to clean the corrosives on the surface of the test piece, the second step is to wash with clean water, the third step is to soak in saturated sodium bicarbonate solution for about 2–3 min for neutralization, and the fourth step is to wash with clean water and absorb with filter paper, and then put it into anhydrous alcohol or acetone for 3–5 min for dehydration. Weigh after drying with hot air and calculate the average corrosion rate of the test piece according to Formula (2).
- (5)
- Evaluation criteriaThe smaller the average corrosion rate is, the less corrosive the solution is to the metal specimen; on the contrary, the corrosivity is greater.
- (6)
- Test results and analysisThe metal corrosion test of the test piece is conducted according to step 3, and the test results are shown in Table 8 and Figure 11.From Table 8 and Figure 11, it can be seen that the average corrosion rate of the debonding ice suppression material specimen is far lower than that of the snowmelt agent specimen, which is equivalent to the average corrosion rate of the ionic water specimen. The test results show that the corrosion rate of the leach solution of the debonding ice suppression material to the metal specimen is small, and the debonding ice suppression material has good environmental protection performance.
4. Conclusions
- (1)
- Based on the evaluation index and method of deicing performance of the debonding and ice suppression materials, the proportion of the three components of the debonding and ice suppression materials, namely, the film-forming component, the adhesive component and the modified ice suppression component, and the indoor preparation process were determined through experiments.
- (2)
- The debonding ice suppression material test piece has good water resistance. After the debonding ice suppression material test piece is continuously immersed in water for 24h and 48 h, the coating on the surface of the test piece is free from any blistering, peeling and icing, and the coating film is still intact.
- (3)
- The debonding and ice suppression material has good slow-release performance, and the debonding, and ice suppression material specimen still has good deicing performance after seven cycles of tests.
- (4)
- Through the simulation of the vehicle rolling wear test, it can be concluded that the debonding ice suppression material still has a deicing effect, which proves that the debonding ice suppression material has good durability.
- (5)
- From the analysis and evaluation of the environmental protection performance of the debonding and ice suppression materials, it can be concluded that the debonding and ice suppression materials have no impact on the growth of plants and the average corrosion rate of the debonding and ice suppression materials is far lower than the average corrosion rate of the snowmelt agents, indicating that the debonding and ice suppression materials have good environmental protection performance.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Test Items | JB 70# | Quality Index | Test Method |
---|---|---|---|
Penetration (25 °C, 5 s, 100 g)/0.1 mm | 71.2 | 60–80 | T0604 |
Softening point (R&B)/°C | 46.3 | ≥46 | T0606 |
60 °C Dynamic viscosity/Pa.s | 184 | ≥180 | T0620 |
10 °C Ductility/cm | 33 | ≥20 | T0605 |
Quality change/% | 0.14 | ≤0.6 | T0609 |
Residual penetration ratio (25 °C)/% | 68 | ≥65 | T0604 |
Residual ductility (10 °C)/cm | 6.6 | ≥6 | T0605 |
Test Items | Test Value | Quality Index | Test Method | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Crushing value (%) | 12.5 | ≤26 | T0316-2005 | |
Los Angeles abrasion value (%) | 10.8 | ≤28 | T0317-2005 | |
Content of needle and flaky particles | ≥9.5 | 6.5 | ≤12 | T0312-2005 |
≤9.5 | 12.8 | ≤18 | T0312-2005 | |
Sand equivalent (particle size less than 2.36 mm) (%) | 72.5 | ≥60 | T0334-2005 | |
Angularity (%) | 55.7 | ≥30 | T0345-2005 |
Asphalt-aggregate ratio/% | 5.4 | 5.8 | 6.2 | 6.6 | 7.0 | 7.4 | 8.0 | Specification requirements |
Asphalt content/% | 5.12 | 5.48 | 5.84 | 6.19 | 6.54 | 6.89 | 7.41 | / |
Marshall stability/kN | 6.72 | 6.92 | 7.92 | 7.64 | 7.18 | 6.70 | 6.56 | >6.0 |
Flow value/0.1 mm | 16.9 | 16.6 | 32.4 | 33.6 | 34.0 | 39.6 | 45.3 | 20–50 |
Gross volume relative density | 2.448 | 2.457 | 2.471 | 2.473 | 2.475 | 2.466 | 2.463 | / |
VV/% | 6.72 | 5.86 | 4.78 | 4.14 | 3.56 | 3.37 | 3.86 | 3~4 |
VMA/% | 18.06 | 18.09 | 17.93 | 18.16 | 18.42 | 19.01 | 19.54 | >17 |
VFA/% | 62.81 | 67.63 | 73.34 | 77.17 | 80.68 | 82.26 | 80.22 | 75–85 |
Technical Standard | Unit | Performance Results | Test Method |
---|---|---|---|
Compaction times | time | two sides 75 | JTG E20 T0702 |
Size of test piece | mm | Φ101.6 × 63.5 | JTG E20 T0702 |
Marshall stability | kN | 6.0 | JTG E20 T0709 |
Flow value | 0.1 mm | 32 | JTG E20 T0709 |
Voidage VV | % | 3.4 | JTG E20 T0705 |
VMA-voids | % | 18 | JTG E20 T0705 |
VCAmix | % | ≤VCADRC | JTG E20 T0705 |
VFA | % | 80 | JTG E20 T0705 |
Material Categories | Specimen Oven Dry Weigh/m0 (g) | Oven Dry Weight/m1 (g) | Adsorption Rate/Sa (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Volcanic rock | 67.35 | 74.23 | 10.21 |
Zeolite | 111.20 | 124.30 | 11.78 |
The adsorption carrier materials of the viscosity-reducing and ice-defending materials | 100.00 | 124.70 | 24.70 |
Serial Number | Test Items | Units | Test Results | GB 5749-2006 Index Limit | GB 3838-2002 Standard Value | Conclusion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lead | mg/L | <0.002 | 0.01 | ≤0.05 | The debonding and ice suppression material meets the requirements of GB-5749-2006 and has good environmental performance. |
2 | CrVl | mg/L | <0.01 | 0.05 | ≤0.05 | |
3 | Cadmium | mg/L | <0.0002 | 0.005 | ≤0.005 | |
4 | Mercury | mg/L | 0.0002 | 0.001 | ≤0.001 | |
5 | Arsenic | mg/L | <0.0004 | 0.01 | ≤0.1 | |
6 | Selenium | mg/L | <0.0004 | 0.01 | ≤0.02 |
Watering Days (days) | Watering Snow Melting Agent Leachate Plant Growth | Irrigation of Debonding and Ice-Suppressing Material Leachate Plant Growth |
---|---|---|
0 | Vigorous growth | Vigorous growth |
1 | Basically vigorous | Vigorous growth |
2 | Withering | Vigorous growth |
3 | Withering phenomenon is obvious | Vigorous growth |
10 | Withered | Vigorous growth |
20 | Withered | Vigorous growth |
30 | Withered | Vigorous growth |
Test Specimen | Length (mm) | Width (mm) | Height (m) | Aperture (m) | Weight before Corrosion (g) | Weight after Corrosion (g) | Weightless Mass (g) | Corrosion Rate (mm/a) | Average Corrosion Rate (mm/a) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Snow melting agent test piece 1 | 50.10 | 10.01 | 3.11 | 2.95 | 11.525 | 11.043 | 0.482 | 0.537 | 0.535 |
Snow melting agent test piece 2 | 50.05 | 10.00 | 3.02 | 2.86 | 11.377 | 10.906 | 0.471 | 0.530 | |
Snow melting agent test piece 3 | 50.03 | 10.03 | 3.13 | 2.99 | 11.577 | 11.093 | 0.484 | 0.538 | |
Deionized water test piece 1 | 50.11 | 10.02 | 3.05 | 2.94 | 11.536 | 11.383 | 0.153 | 0.171 | 0.176 |
Deionized water test piece 2 | 50.09 | 10.11 | 3.04 | 2.88 | 11.478 | 11.316 | 0.162 | 0.180 | |
Deionized water test piece 3 | 50.14 | 10.18 | 3.02 | 2.92 | 11.884 | 11.723 | 0.161 | 0.178 | |
Test piece of debonding ice suppression material 1 | 50.13 | 10.05 | 3.12 | 2.92 | 11.934 | 11.760 | 0.174 | 0.193 | 0.189 |
Test piece of debonding ice suppression material 2 | 50.16 | 10.04 | 3.08 | 2.87 | 11.891 | 11.725 | 0.166 | 0.185 | |
Test piece of debonding ice suppression material 3 | 50.18 | 10.11 | 3.04 | 2.94 | 11.776 | 11.605 | 0.171 | 0.190 |
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Zhang, Y.; Zhao, X.; Zheng, M. Analysis of Engineering Performance and Environmental Impact of Asphalt Pavement Debonding and Ice Suppression Materials. Buildings 2023, 13, 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13030689
Zhang Y, Zhao X, Zheng M. Analysis of Engineering Performance and Environmental Impact of Asphalt Pavement Debonding and Ice Suppression Materials. Buildings. 2023; 13(3):689. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13030689
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Yemao, Xijuan Zhao, and Mulian Zheng. 2023. "Analysis of Engineering Performance and Environmental Impact of Asphalt Pavement Debonding and Ice Suppression Materials" Buildings 13, no. 3: 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13030689
APA StyleZhang, Y., Zhao, X., & Zheng, M. (2023). Analysis of Engineering Performance and Environmental Impact of Asphalt Pavement Debonding and Ice Suppression Materials. Buildings, 13(3), 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13030689