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==Abstract==
  
 +
Asphalt mixture faces damage due to vehicle speed, repeated loads, and ultraviolet
 +
radiation over time, regardless of being a self-healing material. Induced healing mechanisms
 +
are necessary to promote autonomous pavement recovery due to adverse in-service conditions,
 +
and the capsule-asphalt mixture system incorporating low-viscosity oils (rejuvenators) has
 +
shown to be a possible solution in laboratory tests. This study aims to numerically investigate
 +
the effect of rejuvenator-modified mastic (activated capsules) on the stiffness properties of
 +
asphalt mixtures within the discrete element method. A three-dimensional model previously
 +
validated for rejuvenator-modified mastics with different rejuvenator-to-bitumen ratios (0, 2.5,
 +
and 10 wt%) is adopted. A generalised Kelvin contact model represents the time-dependent
 +
contacts, and its contact parameters define the rejuvenator amount in the mastic phase. The
 +
analysis assesses the impact of the modified mastic amount and the rejuvenator-to-bitumen
 +
ratio. Results show that the increasing modified mastic content progressively reduces the
 +
mixture dynamic modulus. When the total mastic phase has rejuvenator-modified properties,
 +
the mixture stiffness modulus significantly reduces, and the phase angle performs differently
 +
from the expected (decrease with frequency) at a 10% rejuvenator-to-bitumen ratio due to the
 +
excessively softened state, possibly compromising the pavement mechanical performance. For
 +
a 0.30 wt% modified mastic ratio case adopting a local effect, the embedded elements do not
 +
significantly influence the mixture rheological properties, especially the stiffness modulus,
 +
which may be insufficient for self-healing purposes. Nevertheless, the negligible impact on the
 +
phase angle highlights the potential of the rejuvenator-modified asphalt mixture across different
 +
traffic and temperature condition

Revision as of 13:39, 23 November 2023

Abstract

Asphalt mixture faces damage due to vehicle speed, repeated loads, and ultraviolet radiation over time, regardless of being a self-healing material. Induced healing mechanisms are necessary to promote autonomous pavement recovery due to adverse in-service conditions, and the capsule-asphalt mixture system incorporating low-viscosity oils (rejuvenators) has shown to be a possible solution in laboratory tests. This study aims to numerically investigate the effect of rejuvenator-modified mastic (activated capsules) on the stiffness properties of asphalt mixtures within the discrete element method. A three-dimensional model previously validated for rejuvenator-modified mastics with different rejuvenator-to-bitumen ratios (0, 2.5, and 10 wt%) is adopted. A generalised Kelvin contact model represents the time-dependent contacts, and its contact parameters define the rejuvenator amount in the mastic phase. The analysis assesses the impact of the modified mastic amount and the rejuvenator-to-bitumen ratio. Results show that the increasing modified mastic content progressively reduces the mixture dynamic modulus. When the total mastic phase has rejuvenator-modified properties, the mixture stiffness modulus significantly reduces, and the phase angle performs differently from the expected (decrease with frequency) at a 10% rejuvenator-to-bitumen ratio due to the excessively softened state, possibly compromising the pavement mechanical performance. For a 0.30 wt% modified mastic ratio case adopting a local effect, the embedded elements do not significantly influence the mixture rheological properties, especially the stiffness modulus, which may be insufficient for self-healing purposes. Nevertheless, the negligible impact on the phase angle highlights the potential of the rejuvenator-modified asphalt mixture across different traffic and temperature condition

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Document information

Published on 23/11/23
Submitted on 23/11/23

Volume Discrete and Particle Methods in Solid and Structural Mechanics, 2023
DOI: 10.23967/c.particles.2023.031
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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