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Asphalt Binders

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Asphalt Binders Introduction Terminology / Uses Sources / Manufacturing Composition / Product Types Temperature Susceptibility Specifications / Testing Modifiers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Asphalt Binders


1
Asphalt Binders
2
Introduction
  • Terminology / Uses
  • Sources / Manufacturing
  • Composition / Product Types
  • Temperature Susceptibility
  • Specifications / Testing
  • Modifiers / Additives

3
Terminology
  • Asphalt/Bitumen
  • A mixture of heavy carbon-based compounds
    containing a high percentage of multiple-ring
    aromatics, many involving sulfur, nitrogen and
    oxygen atoms
  • hydrocarbons soluble in CS2
  • Brown-Black semi-solid material which is solid at
    room temp but softens and flows when heated
  • Asphalt Cement - binder - oil
  • Asphalt Concrete - Pavement
  • Asphalt Cement plus Aggregate

4
Asphalt Uses
  • Paving Material
  • Preservative / Protection
  • Waterproofing / Roofing
  • Insulator / Adhesive / Lubricant
  • Industrial Building Material
  • Fuel oil - Bunker, LIFO, MIFO
  • Conversion Feedstock
  • produce lighter petroleum products - gasoline,
    diesel etc

5
Asphalt Uses
6
Asphalt Uses
7
Asphalt Uses
8
Asphalt Uses
9
Asphalt Uses
10
Asphalt Uses
11
Asphalt Sources
  • Native or Natural Asphalts
  • bitumens with inorganic impurities
  • Trinidad lake has 25-50 insolubles
  • Asphaltites - no impurities, high asphaltene
    content
  • Gilsonite - Eastern Utah
  • Rock Asphalts -- asphalt in rock
  • impregnated sandstones - Oklahoma
  • tar sands - Alberta
  • oil shales - Colorado

12
Asphalt Sources
  • Tars - distillation of coal
  • Pitch is distillation residue of tar
  • Petroleum asphalts from crude oil

13
Manufacturing
  • Asphalts produced from crude oil
  • Crude Oil Taxonomy - 18 Classes
  • Light, Intermediate, heavy
  • Sweet, Intermediate, Sour
  • Paraffinic, Napthenic
  • Best crudes for paving asphalts are heavy
    napthenic crudes

14
Crude Oil
  • Crude oil is found as a natural deposit on the
    earths surface or buried up to 18,000 ft deep
  • First oil wells were drilled in China in 347 AD
    using bits attached to bamboo poles and achieved
    depths up to 800 ft
  • Modern oil era was originally driven by kerosene
    oil for lamps
  • Edisons light bulb reduced demand but was offset
    by internal combustion engine gasoline

15
Petroleum Deposit of Western Canada
  • Western Canada has the complete spectrum of
    hydrocarbons from light sweet crude to tar sands
  • Generally oil is heavier towards the northeast.
    That is the closer to the Rockies, the lighter
    the crude.
  • Lloydminister heavy oil can be produced by
    conventional means while Cold Lake can only be
    recovered by thermal stimulation
  • The tar sands must be physically mined

16
Refining Crude
  • Most impact on the asphalt properties is from the
    crude source but the manufacturing process can
    also have an effect
  • There are 80 refineries in North America
    producing asphalt - 5 in Western Canada
  • Typically integrated refineries produce asphalt
    as a by-product, but there are dedicated asphalt
    refineries as well.
  • Primary asphalt manufacturing is by fractional
    distillation

17
Refining Crude
18
Cracked Asphalts
  • Very poor paving materials
  • breaking down large hydrocarbons into smaller
    molecules through the application of temperature
    pressure and use of catalysts
  • Thermal crackers
  • Cokers
  • Catalytic Cracking
  • Hydrocracking

19
Constitution of Asphalt
  • Asphalt - colloid multiphase mixture of millions
    of different components

Identification by groups of components
Asphalt
heptane
methanol toluene
asphaltenes
TCE
toluene
polar aromatics
naphthene aromatics
saturates
20
Asphaltenes
  • Dark brown or black solids insoluble in nonpolar
    solvents
  • Elemental composition varies only over narrow
    range

Carbon 82 ? 3 Hydrogen 8.1 ? 0.7
  • General belief that unaltered asphaltenes have a
    definite composition
  • Notable variation in the proportion of
    heteroatoms
  • Oxygen 0.3 -4.9
  • Sulphur 0.3 - 10.3
  • Nitrogen 0.6 - 3.3

21
Asphaltenes
22
Resins
  • Dark semisolid or solid, very adhesive fractions
  • Soluble in liquids that precipitate asphaltenes
  • C/H ratio 7.5 9.1
  • Hydrogen 9.5 11
  • Polycyclic structures with 56 rings (23
    aromatic on which there are aliphatic substituents

23
Oils
  • Lowest molecular weight hydrocarbons in asphalt
  • Similar to lubricating oils - highest boiling
    fraction of lubricants
  • Control the harness of asphalt
  • Single or condensed naphthene and aromatic rings
    with side chains of varying length

24
Oils
  • mono-, di-, polynuclear aromatics
  • C/H ratio 6.8 8
  • molecular weight 240 800, most 360 500

25
Structure and Colloidal Properties of Asphalts
  • Physical properties of asphalt f (dispersion of
    asphatenes in maltenes)
  • Peptizing effect of aromatic and resin portions
    of maltenes keep the colloidal structure of
    asphalt
  • Prime consideration - rate of absorption of
    higher MW maltenes on the asphaltene particles
    f(time, temperature)

26
Structure and Colloidal Properties of Asphalts
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Asphalt Products
  • Asphalt Cements
  • reduce viscosity by heating
  • Cutback Asphalts
  • reduce viscosity by blending with a solvent
  • RC, MC, SC
  • Asphalt Emulsions
  • Asphalt in water - or inverted
  • Anionic or Cationic - charge of particles
  • RS, MS, SS

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Asphalt Testing
  • Penetration
  • Viscosity (shear rate)
  • Softening Point (R B)
  • Ductility
  • Flashpoint (COC, PM)
  • Solubility (TCE)
  • TFOT, RTFOT
  • Mass Loss, Aging Index

34
Specifications
  • Classical Specifications were designed to
    describe the material not its performance
  • Recent specifications (CGSB ) have incorporated
    some performance criteria
  • Superpave specifications are used to define
    performance using new methods of measuring
    properties

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