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PART 8 BITUMINOUS MATERIALS

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Bitumen: A heavy fraction from oil distillation (also occurs as part of natural asphalt). Tar: A viscous liquid obtained from distillation of coal or wood. Rarely ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PART 8 BITUMINOUS MATERIALS


1
PART 8 BITUMINOUS MATERIALS
  • 8.1 Introduction
  • Definitions
  • Safety
  • Production
  • 8.2 Binders
  • 8.3 Bituminous mixtures
  • 8.4 Applications

2
Definitions
  • Binder A material used to hold solid particles
    together, i.e. bitumen or tar.
  •  Bitumen A heavy fraction from oil distillation
    (also occurs as part of natural asphalt).
  •  Tar A viscous liquid obtained from
    distillation of coal or wood. Rarely used in
    construction currently in the UK.
  • Asphalt A mixture of bitumen and mineral
    filler. Note that Hot Rolled Asphalt is a road
    surfacing material.
  • Mastic An adhering asphalt which is placed
    with trowelling.
  • Macadam A road construction material with
    binder and coarse aggregate. Tarmacadam was the
    first road surfacing material.

3
SAFETY
  • The flash point is the temperature at which
    vapour given off from the surface will burn.
  • The fire point is the temperature at which the
    binder will burn.
  • Water will spread a bitumen fire.
  • The materials are generally used at temperatures
    high enough to cause severe burns.
  • Both the materials and the vapours are
    potentially carcinogenic.

4
Melted Bitumen
5
Bitumen Preparation
Crude oil
Fractional Distillation
Kerosene (parafin)
Lubricating oil
Base Bitumen
Diesel oil
Petroleum
Light oil
Blending
Penetration Grade Bitumen
Fluxing
Emulsification in water
Oxidation
Cut-back bitumen
Bitumen Emulsion
Blown Bitumen
6
Tar Preparation
7
PART 8 BITUMINOUS MATERIALS
  • 8.1 Introduction
  • 8.2 Binders
  • Properties
  • Testing
  • Binder Mixtures
  • 8.3 Bituminous mixtures
  • 8.4 Applications

8
Binder Properties
  • Adhesion Bituminous materials adhere to clean
    dry surfaces.  
  • Viscosity All bituminous materials are viscous,
    i.e. when subject to a long term load they deform
    continuously.
  • Softening point This is the temperature at which
    the binder softens to a pre-determined point.

9
 Durability .Bitumens are
  • Intrinsically durable, they oxidise, polymerise
    and lose light oil components when exposed to air
    and heat but all of these processes just make
    then harder
  • Virtually impermeable if well compacted
  • Intrinsically resistant to plant growth
  • Softened by high temperature and solvents (often
    by fuel spills)

10
Cracking of thin surface
11
TESTING Binders
  • Sliding plate viscometer In this apparatus a
    thin film of binder is sheared between two glass
    plates and the shearing force is measured. 
  • Standard tar viscometer In this test the time
    taken for a set volume of tar to flow through an
    opening at a given temperature is measured.
  • Penetration test For straight bitumens viscosity
    is normally measured with a penetration test. A
    1mm diameter needle is loaded with a weight of
    100g and the distance it drops into a bitumen
    sample in 5 seconds is measured (at 25oC). A
    bitumen is referred to as 70 pen if the
    penetration is 7mm.
  •  Softening point test To measure the softening
    point a small sample is melted, cast in brass
    ring and cooled and then progressively re-heated
    until it deforms (i.e. "flows") by a given amount.

12
BINDER MIXTURES
  • Cutbacks This term is used to describe a mixture
    of a binder and a light volatile oil. They are
    liquid at low temperatures until the volatile oil
    evaporates.. Due to the release of solvents into
    the atmosphere they are now rarely used.
  • Emulsions When mixed with water binders will
    generally settle out. An emulsifier must be added
    to give a stable solution. Bitumen paints are
    made this way. The water evaporates and the
    bitumen remains on the surface. The current
    types of cold rolled materials are based on
    emulsions.

13
Rubberised bitumens
  • The viscosity and softening point are increased
    and penetration is decreased.
  • The elasticity is increased.
  • The sensitivity to temperature changes is
    decreased.
  • The beneficial properties are lost with prolonged
    heating. 
  • The increased elasticity and penetration
    resistance makes this material ideal for
    expansion joints and repairs in roads.

14
PART 8 BITUMINOUS MATERIALS
  • 8.1 Introduction
  • 8.2 Binders
  • 8.3 Bituminous mixtures
  • Components
  • Properties
  • Testing
  • 8.4 Applications

15
The four components of a typical mix are
  • Coarse aggregate (retained on 2.36mm sieve)
  • Fine aggregate (passing 2.36mm sieve but retained
    on 75?)
  • Filler (passing 75?), may be cement.
  • Binder Bitumen etc.

16
Asphalt Mixing Plant
17
Adding aggregate to a binder has the following
general effects
  • The cost is reduced.
  • The strength is generally increased.
  • If the mix has to be laid hot the aggregate must
    also be heated (at considerable cost)
  • May fail due to loss of adhesion between
    aggregate and binder

18
TESTING Bituminous Mixtures
  • Penetration test This test is similar in
    principle to the penetration test for binders but
    on a larger scale. The steel pin is 6.35mm
    (0.25") diameter and the load is 10 N/mm2
  • Marshall test In this test asphalt mixes are
    made at several different binder contents.
    Cylindrical specimens are loaded in compression
    on their curved surfaces. The maximum load
    (stability) and the deformation (flow) is
    recorded.
  • Dissolution of binder There are a number of BS
    tests which involve dissolution of the binder in
    solvents. The mix proportions and the nature of
    the binder may be determined.
  •  Percentage refusal density This test is used to
    measure compaction in road construction. The
    density of a core from the road is compared with
    the maximum density achievable using heat and
    heavy compaction (the refusal density).

19
Marshall Test
20
TESTING Bituminous Mixtures
  •  Penetration test This test is similar in
    principle to the penetration test for binders but
    on a larger scale. The steel pin is 6.35mm
    (0.25") diameter and the load is 10 N/mm2
  •  Marshall test In this test asphalt mixes are
    made at several different binder contents.
    Cylindrical specimens are loaded in compression
    on their curved surfaces. The maximum load
    (stability) and the deformation (flow) is
    recorded.
  • Dissolution of binder There are a number of BS
    tests which involve dissolution of the binder in
    solvents. The mix proportions and the nature of
    the binder may be determined.
  •  Percentage refusal density This test is used to
    measure compaction in road construction. The
    density of a core from the road is compared with
    the maximum density achievable using heat and
    heavy compaction (the refusal density).

21
PART 8 BITUMINOUS MATERIALS
  • 8.1 Introduction
  • 8.2 Binders
  • 8.3 Bituminous mixtures
  • 8.4 Applications

22
Applications
  • Roads
  • Tanking
  • Roofing

23
Road construction types
24
Paving machine
25
Surfacing materials
  • Hot rolled asphalt Coarse aggregate dispersed in
    a mortar composed of sand, filler and bitumen.
    This is gap graded.
  • Asphaltic concrete Asphalt in which the
    aggregate particles are continuously graded to
    form an interlocking structure.
  • Surface dressing Sprayed bitumen binder with
    stone chippings rolled on. This is used for
    repair work.
  • Slurry surfacings and micro asphalts Bitumen
    emulsions with selected aggregate combinations.
    Also used for repair.
  • Stone mastic asphalt gap graded asphalt composed
    of a coarse crushed aggregate skeleton with
    mastic mortar.

26
Hot Rolled Asphalt Surface
27
Surfacing materials
  • Hot rolled asphalt Coarse aggregate dispersed in
    a mortar composed of sand, filler and bitumen.
    This is gap graded.
  • Asphaltic concrete Asphalt in which the
    aggregate particles are continuously graded to
    form an interlocking structure.
  • Surface dressing Sprayed bitumen binder with
    stone chippings rolled on. This is used for
    repair work.
  • Slurry surfacings and micro asphalts Bitumen
    emulsions with selected aggregate combinations.
    Also used for repair.
  • Stone mastic asphalt gap graded asphalt composed
    of a coarse crushed aggregate skeleton with
    mastic mortar.

28
Failure mechanisms.
  • Wearing course
  • Rutting (shear failure)
  • Potholes (bond failure)
  • loss of skid resistance (viscous flow)
  • Lower courses
  • Cracking (Fatigue failure)
  • Breakdown due to failure of lower courses (e.g.
    reflected cracking from dry-lean concrete)

29
Applications
  • Roads
  • Tanking
  • Roofing

30
Tanking a basement(modern systems use sheet
materials)
Asphalt trowelled onto walls after casting
Base slab cast on layer of mastic asphalt
31
Applications
  • Roads
  • Tanking
  • Roofing
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