6533b820fe1ef96bd12790ad

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Reclaimed asphalt binders and mortars fatigue behaviour

Massimo LosaDavide Lo PrestiCristina RiccardiAna Jiménez Del Barco Carrión

subject

050210 logistics & transportationMaterials scienceFatigue cracking05 social sciences0211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyFatigue limitReclaimed asphalt pavementFatigue resistanceBrittlenessAsphalt pavementtime sweepAsphalt021105 building & construction0502 economics and businessmortarSettore ICAR/04 - Strade Ferrovie Ed AeroportifatigueMortarComposite materialCement mortarfatigue; mortar; Reclaimed asphalt pavement; time sweep; Civil and Structural EngineeringCivil and Structural Engineering

description

Fatigue cracking is one of the most important failure mechanisms occurring in asphalt pavements, especially when mixtures incorporate considerable amount of rReclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP). In fact, aged binders contained in RAP generally make asphalt more brittle and specifically reduce fatigue resistance of the resulting asphalt mixtures. Binders and mortars play a key role in this phenomenon, considering fatigue cracking usually starts within these asphalt components. However, performance-related tests and specifications commonly regard binders and there are no sound methodologies allowing the use of mortars to predicting fatigue performance of asphalts containing RAP. For this reason, in this paper, fatigue resistance of extracted binders from high-RAP content mixtures and of RAP mortars (passing sieve with an opening size of 0.15 mm) were assessed and compared. Binders were extracted from asphalt mixtures manufactured with 30%, 60% RAP and rejuvenators. Mixtures recipes were then reproduced to manufacture mortars accordingly. Time sweep tests in stress-controlled mode were carried out on both materials (binders and mortars) and the resulting fatigue laws were compared. As a result, a strict correlation was obtained, leading to affirm fatigue-related properties of RAP mixture could be assessed by directly testing RAP mortars. This makes the recovery of RAP binders unnecessary. Moreover, a relationship between the two fatigue laws versus the percentage of fine particles in the mortar was found. This latter relationship allows determining the fatigue law of mortars corresponding to any percentage of fine particles and therefore corresponding to any percentage of RAP.

10.1080/14680629.2017.1305148http://hdl.handle.net/11568/857564