http://lattes.cnpq.br/0847973469707571; ARRUDA, Sonaly Mendes.
Resumo:
After a lifetime of service exposed to bad weather and various traffic conditions, the pavement
quality declines until it becomes unsatisfactory. To rebuild a new pavement, it is necessary to
remove the old one using milling techniques. Milling the pavement generates, as a byproduct,
the milled asphalt. The inappropriate disposal of this material causes a relevant environmental
liability, in addition to representing a waste of potentially reusable good quality material. When
used in new mixtures, this material is called Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement (RAP). Research
involving the use of RAP in asphalt mixtures has expanded, but knowledge of the behavior of
a recycled coating in the long term is still incipient, if not nonexistent.
In this sense, this
research aimed to evaluate the mechanical performance and selfregeneration
capacity of
recycled asphalt mixtures with the incorporation of milled asphalt at levels of 0%, 10%, 30%
and 50% by weight, before and after ageing. The study has four stages: the first, when the
mechanical properties of the recycled mixtures were evaluated through the Tensile Strength
by Diametral Compression (RT), Resilience Modulus (MR), Induced Moisture Damage (DUI),
Resistant to Permanent Deformation (Flow Number) and Fatigue Resistance (RF); the second
phase consisted of the study of the selfhealing
using the fatigue life test; in the third and fourth
phases, the same tests were made on mixtures subjected to longterm
oven ageing. The MR,
RT and Flow Number tests indicated an increase in stiffness and a decrease in deformability
as the RAP content in the mixture composition increases, and the ageing accentuate these
properties. The moisture damage susceptibility was not affected for the inserted RAP contents,
neither in the aged condition. Fatigue resistance increased as the RAP content increased and
the behavior of the reference mixtures (0% RAP) and 10% RAP were similar, as well as the
mixtures with 30% and 50% of RAP. The aged mixtures were more resistant to fatigue. They
presented an increase in the number of cycles until failure, as well as a decrease in
deformability compared to the mixtures in the nonaged
condition, due to the observed
increase in stiffness. Therefore, the results shows that the use of RAP makes the asphalt
mixtures more rigid, and strongly affected by ageing. The addition of RAP negatively affects
the selfhealing
index of the coating layer. Due to what has been observed, it is necessary to
pay attention to the rigidity compatibility of the pavement's constituent layers so that the use of
recycled asphalt mixture is satisfactory.