Bitumen Lecture Notes
Bitumen Lecture Notes
DR O. S ABIOLA
BITUMEN
• Bituminous – bitumen or tar
• Bitumen – natural or fractional distillation of crude oil
• Tar – destructive distillation of bituminous coal or cracking petroleum
vapours, wood tar, mineral tar (bituminous shale)
• Quality and quantity depends on the crude oil source and refining method
• Composition:
molecular weight wise, bitumen is a mixture of about 300-2000 chemical
components, with an average of around 500-700.
- elementally, it is around 95% carbon and hydrogen (+/- 87% C & +/- 8% H), 5%
S, 1% N, 1% O and 2000ppm metals.
- compose of highly condensed polycyclic aromatic & hydrocarbons
Chemical components in bitumen are:
- Asphaltenes
- Resinous components (polar aromatics)
- Non-polar aromatics (naphtene aromatics)
‘ - Saturates
• Asphaltenes
- fairly high molecular weight, polar n-heptane insoluble solids
- black and glassy
- 5-25% of the bitumen
- contain carbon, hydrogen, some nitrogen, sulphur and oxygen
- asphaltene content has a significant influence on the rheological properties of
the bitumen. Increasing the asphaltene content produces a harder, more viscous
binder
• Maltenes
- maltenes are the n-heptane soluble phase of the bitumen
- separated into components broadly based on molecular mass and polarity
- consist of resins, aromatics and saturates
• Resins
- mostly hydrogen and carbon with small amounts of oxygen, sulphur and
nitrogen, (30-50% of the total bitumen)
- dark brown solids or semi-solids act as a dispersing (peptising) agent for the
asphaltenes
- polar in natural-strongly adhesive
Aromatics
- dark brown, low molecular weight, viscous fluids making up 40-65% of the total
bitumen
- a high dissolving ability for other, high molecular weight hydrocarbons
- aromatic content of the bitumen determines to a significant extent its
compatibility with polymers used for modification
Saturates
- straw coloured or white, viscous oils with a molecular weight similar to that of
aromatics
- contain both waxy and non-waxy saturates and make up 55-20% of the bitumen
Properties of Bitumen
• Adhesion – bitumen has the ability to adhere to a solid surface in a fluid state
depending on the nature of the surface. The presence of water on the surface will
prevent adhesion
• Resistance to water- bitumen is water resistant. Under some conditions water may
be absorbed by minute quantities of inorganic salts in the bitumen or filler in it
• Hardness – to measure the hardness of bitumen, the penetration test is
conducted, which measures the depth of penetration in tenths of mm. of the
weighted needle in bitumen after a given time, at known temperature. The
penetration is a measure of hardness
• Viscosity and flow – the viscous or flow properties of bitumen are of importance
both at high temperature during processing and application and at low
temperature to which bitumen is subjected during service. The flow properties of
bitumen vary considerably with temperature and stress conditions.
• The chemical constituents and structure play a major role in the behaviour of
bitumen
the effects are:
- aging; permanent deformation; fatigue; thermal effects; stripping & moisture
damage
Testing of bitumen
• Bitumen are classified by their physical properties
• Different tests for different types of bitumen
- penetration
- viscosity
- softening point
- flash point
- solubility
- ductility
SHRP – Strategic Highway Research Program – Superpave (Superior
Performance Asphalt Pavements) -
Types of Bitumen
• Cutback bitumen- are penetration of bitumen that have been diluted with
an appropriate solvent to reduce their viscosity. Cutbacks are classified by
their kinematic viscosity at 600C. The type of solvent used is associated
with this, either medium curing (MC)- kerosene; rapid curing (RC) –
paraffin or naphtha; slow curing (SC) – diesel.
• the lower limit of the viscosity range is used in the grade designation,
while the upper limit is double this lower figure, e.g. MC30 has viscosity at
600C in the range of 30 – 60 cSt (centistokes).
• Evaporation of solvent leaves primary (base) binder
Classification
- Type of application – seal; asphalt; crack sealant
- Type of modifier – elastomer; plastomer; rubber crumb; hydrocarbon
- Type of binder system – emulsion-the letter C follows directly after the
letter indicating the type of application
- Level of modification – A numerical value is used to indicate increasing
softening values (1 = low; 2 = high)
Examples : S-E1 – hot polymer modified bitumen (< 3% polymer); S-E2- hot
polymer modified (> 3% polymer); S- R-1 – rubber crumb hot modified binder
(20% rubber crumb); SC-E1- polymer modified emulsion (typically 5% SBR
polymer)
• Bitumen emulsion-dissolving bitumen in a solvent is dispersing the
bitumen in water as emulsion. In this process the bitumen is physically
broken down into micron-sized globules that are mixed into water
containing an emulsifying agent.
• Emulsifying bitumen typically consist of about 60% to 70% bitumen, 30%
to 40% water and a fraction of a percent of emulsifying agent
• Two-types – cationic and anionic
- cationic & anionic derive from the electrical charges on the bitumen
globules
- anionic emulsion has negatively charged bitumen particles
- cationic emulsion has emulsion has positively charged bitumen particles
- cationic emulsions are more widely used as they have superior adhesive
properties to a range of mineral aggregates
• Performance grading – using two numbers (average seven-day maximum
pavement temperature and the minimum pavement design temperature
likely to be experienced) e.g. PG 58-22 ( 58 – maximum pavement
temperature & -22 the expected minimum pavement temperature)
• Compliance of South Africa bitumen as per Superpave