GUERRA, T. D.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4924737835071651; GUERRA, Thamires Dantas.
Resumo:
In recent years, several techniques have been developed in order to reduce mixing
and compacting temperatures of conventional asphalt mixtures, which cut pollutant
emissions and energy consumption. In this scenario, the warm mix asphalt (WMA) has
been developed, which refers to mixtures composed of aggregates and asphalt binder
modified by additives either of chemical or organic nature, or foamed asphalt, leading to
drops in the production temperatures and improving the workers’ health safety during
paving execution. This study has as objective to assess the physical and mechanical
properties of asphalt mixtures composed of asphalt binder modified by the canola oil
addition. The canola oil was used as a viscosity-modifier additive due to its low cost and
great availability in the market. Samples of pure binder and binder modified with 1.0; 2.0
and 3.0% canola oil were tested. The research was divided into three stages: the first stage
remarks the physical characterization of the asphalt binders before and after the Rolling
Thin-Film Oven (RTFO) procedure; the second step concerns the design of the mixtures
performed following the SUperior PERforming Asphalt PAVEments (SUPERPAVE)
methodology, obtaining an optimal binder content of 5.1 %; at last, the mechanical
characterization of the asphalt mixtures was carried out by performing the following tests:
Flow Number, Modified Lottman, Resilience Modulus, Dynamic Modulus, Indirect
Tensile Strength and Fatigue Life. In general, all samples with canola oil achieve
mechanical results within the parameters established by the current requirement. The
results show that the canola addition in the asphalt mixtures reduces the mixing and
compacting temperatures up to 6 °C, yet this reduction does not allow the classification
of the modified binder as a WMA. It is impossible to reduce the possibility of a
classification of the modified binder in a typical MAM. It was concluded that due to the
decrease in the fatigue life and the reduction of about 50% of the flow number in relation
to the reference mixture it is not possible to indicate the use of the asphalt binder with
canola oil. However, asphaltic mixtures with oil presented positive aspects, increasing the
resistance to the deleterious action of water.