Artigo Revisado por pares

Binder Oxidative Aging in Texas Pavements: Hardening Rates, Hardening Susceptibilities, and Impact of Pavement Depth

2006; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 1962; Linguagem: Inglês

10.3141/1962-02

ISSN

2169-4052

Autores

Nasser Al-Azri, Sung Nam Jung, K M Lunsford, A G Ferry, J A Bullin, R. R. Davison, Charles J. Glover,

Tópico(s)

Concrete and Cement Materials Research

Resumo

Aging of binders in pavements is much less understood than laboratory aging of neat binders because of a number of complications. Complications include suitable extraction and recovery methods; uncontrolled variables and unknowns such as mixture characteristics (e.g., air voids), maintenance treatments, traffic, and climate; sustaining of a research effort to study a given pavement during an appropriate time frame (in excess of one decade); and cost. An ongoing research effort sponsored by the Texas Department of Transportation studied binder oxidative hardening at 15 pavements across Texas. Results indicate that typically unmodified binders in pavements oxidize and harden to a degree that exceeds generally accepted pavement aging assumptions. In addition, this hardening may extend much deeper into the pavement than has been previously assumed or documented. Data suggest that pavements can oxidize at surprisingly uniform rates with depth once early oxidation occurs and that these rates continue for an extended time. As a rough measure, 1 month environmental room aging of 1-mm neat binder films at 60°C was equivalent to about 15 months in Texas Highway 21 after the early higher hardening rate period.

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