construction materials in concrete b.ppt

assefatekla5 11 views 16 slides Feb 26, 2025
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About This Presentation

construction materials in concrete b


Slide Content

Properties of Asphalt
Important properties
of asphalt include:
•Adhesion
•Consistency
•Specific Gravity
•Durability
•Rate of curing
•Ductility
•Aging and hardening
•Resistance to
reaction with water
•Temperature
Susceptibility
Penetration is the consistency of a bituminous
material expressed as the distance in tenths of a
millimeter that a standard needle penetrates a
sample of material vertically under standard
conditions of loading, time and temperature (above).
The standard loads are 100 and 200 grams, and the
time is 5 seconds. A penetration depth of 2.2 cm. is
220.

Temperature Susceptibility
is a measure of the change
in viscosity with change in
temperature.
For best durability, asphalts used in climates with wide variations in
temperature should have low temperature susceptibility

Viscosity is a measure of a
material’s resistance to flow
when subjected to a load.
It is expressed as the ratio of
shear stress () to shear rate 







1 cm.



Units for viscosity are Pascal
seconds (Pa-s, N/m
2
*s) or
poise (P). 10P = 10 Pa-s
Viscosity varies widely with changes in temperature. At room
temperature, water = 10
6
Pa-s, light motor oil = 200-500 x 10
6
Pa-s,
and honey = 10
11
Pa-s. Glass is considered solid at a viscosity of 10
12

Pa-s.

Specific Gravity is the density
of asphalt at 77
o
F divided by
the density of water at the
same temperature
Durability is defined as the
property that permits a
pavement to withstand the
detrimental effects of moisture,
air and temperature.
Oxidation is a chemical
reaction that occurs when a
material is exposed to air.
Hydrogen in the asphalt
combines with oxygen to
make water, leaving behind a
material rich in carbon, leading
to hardening and loss of
ductility and adhesion.
Volatilization occurs when lighter
hydrocarbons evaporate from asphalt.
When asphalt is heated and allowed to
cool, its molecules will rearrange to form
a gel-like structure, which hardens with
time. This is called age hardening

Asphalt Grading Systems
Asphalt is graded according to its viscosity (at various temperatures) or its
penetration. Note that the AC-XX number corresponds to the viscosity divided
by 100.

Additional Grading Systems

Additional Grading Systems

Performance Grading requires that tests be performed at the critical pavement
temperature – which is different for different grades depending on the
temperature during service – with the criteria fixed or the same for all grades.
Three reasons pavement fails:
1.Deformation or rutting at high temperatures as asphalt softens
2.Fatigue resulting in cracks due to high loads or aging
3.Low-temperature cracks, as asphalt becomes brittle and shrinks in cold
weather
The first number
represents the maximum
service temperature, and
the second the minimum.
For example, PG 64-34 is
suitable for application
when the maximum
temperature is between 39
and 64
o
C, and the
minimum is not less than
034
o
C

Asphalt cement is held together by
aggregate interlock or internal friction.
Air pockets account for 2-6% of the volume.
Aggregates constitute 70-75% by volume,
or 90-95% by weight.
Excessive amounts of binder tend to
lubricate the particles and lower the stability
of the pavement
Gravel has very little internal
friction and interlocking, while
crushed stone has high
interlocking friction.
Particles should always be at
the surface, to provide traction
when the surface is wet.
Too much asphalt results in
segregation of the asphalt and
aggregate, called bleeding or
flushing.

Aggregate Grading
Coarse aggregate is graded aggregate made up of
particles that are retained on a No. 4 Sieve. Fine
aggregate almost entirely passes through a No. 4 sieve.
Open graded aggregate contains little or no fine
aggregate. It has relatively large void space, and is
good for roads requiring high permeability.
Intermediate-graded aggregate contains more sand
than coarse aggregate. Dense-graded aggregate
has high fill fraction, and slow curing rate.
Both Coarse and Intermediate-graded require a
seal coat to make them impermeable to water, while
Dense-graded aggregate does not require a seal
coat.

Grading Requirements for Aggregates

There are two types of asphalt concretes:
Hot mixed, hot-laid mixtures (HMA) and
Cold-mixed, cold laid bituminous mixtures
Hot-mixed asphalt cement is aggregate
mixed with asphalt cement, tar or emulsified
asphalt. It must be heated to ~300
o
F prior to
mixing.
Cold-mixed asphalt is aggregate mixed with
emulsified asphalt, cutback asphalt, or
tar, and applied at ambient temperature.
Hot-mixed asphalt is:
•Durable
•Resistant to rutting
•Can sustain high loads and
wider temperatures
Cold-mixed asphalt is:
•Made for lighter use
•Cheaper to apply
•Good for road repairs,
resurfacing

Asphalt pavement is flexible, requires less preparation than concrete
pavement, and it can be repaired quickly.
It also requires a higher amount of maintenance, periodic surface
treatments, and becomes hard and brittle with age and under load.
Pavement is made up of four
elements:
•Subgrade
•Subbase course
•Base course
•Surface course
The subgrade acts as the foundation, and may be stabilized.
The subbase is made of aggregates, sometimes mixed with lime.
The base course supports the wearing surface, and may be made of asphalt
or untreated aggregate, such as crushed stone, gravel, sand, or cement.
The surface coarse is the finished asphalt concrete, sometimes topped with
a sealant

The base course may
be designed to provide
good drainage.
Various spray applications to pavement include:
Seal Coats – sprayed asphalt followed by application of stone/gravel cover. The largest
aggregate is never more than twice the size of the smallest.
Fog seal is a light application of slow-setting emulsified asphalt, with or without aggregates
A prime coat is liquid asphalt applied to an untreated foundation layer or subgrade of
stabilized soil, gravel, or water-bound macadam.
A tack coat is a thin coat of bituminous material applied to an existing surface to provide bond
between the new construction and the existing surface
A slurry seal is a mixture of slow-setting emulsified asphalt, fine aggregate, mineral filler and
water applied to the pavement without heat
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