Relationship between bond energy and total work of fracture for asphalt binder-aggregate systems

Jonathan Howson*, Eyad Masad, Dallas Little, Emad Kassem

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Surface free energy is a thermodynamic material property representing the work required to create new surfaces of unit area in a vacuum. Surface free energy has been used to quantify and screen both the cohesive bond energy of asphalt binders and the adhesive bond energy of asphalt binder-aggregate interfaces in wet and dry conditions. The bond energy is computed based on the surface free energies of the constituent materials. The total work of fracture is the cumulative effect of energies applied to the sample to create two new surfaces of unit area. These energies include the bond energy, calculated from surface free energy, dissipated plastic energy, and dissipated viscoelastic energy. This paper presents experimental results from a series of pull-off tests using asphalt binder-aggregate samples that demonstrate the relationship between bond energy and total work of fracture. In order to fully explore this relationship, temperature, loading rate, specimen geometry, and moisture content were varied.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)635-663
Number of pages29
JournalAsphalt Paving Technology: Association of Asphalt Paving Technologists-Proceedings of the Technical Sessions
Volume81
Publication statusPublished - 2012
Externally publishedYes
EventAsphalt Paving Technology 2012, AAPT - Austin, TX, United States
Duration: 1 Apr 20124 Apr 2012

Keywords

  • Aggregate
  • Asphalt binder
  • Bond energy
  • Pull-off test
  • Surface free energy
  • Total work of fracture

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