Title: Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
1Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Soil Definition (Engineering)
- refers to all unconsolidated material in the
earths crust, all material above the bedrock - mineral particles (gravel, sand, silt, clay)
- organic material (top soil, marshes)
- Aggregates
- mineral particles of a soil
- specifically, granular soil group
- gravel, sand, silt
2Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Granular Soil Group (Aggregates)
- Physical weathering
- action of frost, water, wind, glaciers,
plant/animals .. - particles transported by wind, water, ice
- soils formed are called granular soil type
- grains are similar to the original bedrock
- Larger grain sizes than clays
- Particles tend to be more or less spheres/cubes
- Bound water is small compared to overall mass
3Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Granular Soil Group (Aggregates)
- ability to achieve greater densities
- well graded granular material
- increased soil strength
- lower permeability
- reduced future settlement
- These improvements dictate the use of aggregates
in pavement layers where wheel loads are greater
4Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Aggregates for asphalt concrete include
- coarse aggregates
- aggregate particles larger than the 4.75 mm sieve
- fine aggregates
- aggregate particles smaller than the 4.75 mm
sieve - mineral filler
- aggregate particles smaller than the 75 um sieve
5Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Mineral Filler
- provides the fines that are important in
producing a dense-graded strong material - however the amount of mineral filler must be
limited - covering them would require excess asphalt cement
- strength of the concrete mix would be reduced as
the mixture would depend on friction between
smaller particles, which is less than between
larger particles - limestone dust is the most common material
6Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Aggregate Properties
- Well graded-dense including mineral filler
- Hard-resistance to wear and traffic polishing
- Sound-resistance to breakdown due to freeze/thaw
cycles - Rough Surfaced-crushed rough surfaces
- higher friction strength
- better adhesion to asphalt cement
- Avoid cubical-thin elongated particles that break
easier
7Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Aggregate Properties (contd)
- Free from Deleterious Substances
- clay, dust, dirt, lightweight pieces
- lower quality of asphalt film on the particle
- breaking of some particles
- Hydrophobic water hating
- siliceous aggregates such as quartz are
hydrophilic - greater affinity for water than asphalt cement
due to surface charges - stripping, asphalt coating comes away from the
particle in the presence of water
8Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Stripping Tests
- Visual tests (Saskatchewan Highways)
- samples saturated under vacuum / stripped
- Strength Tests
- ASTM D1075, Effect of water on Compressive
Strength of Compacted Bituminous Mixtures - samples are submerged for 4 days
- ASTM D4876, Effect of Moisture on Asphalt
Concrete Paving Mixtures - samples are submerged under vacuum 80 saturation
- AASHTO T 283, Modified Lottman Test
- 80 saturation / freeze thaw
9Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
10Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
11Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
12Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
13Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
14Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave Aggregate Properties
- three critical distress mechanisms
- rutting
- fatigue cracking
- low temperature cracking
- central role in overcoming permanent deformation
ie. Rutting - lesser role in pavement fatigue and low
temperature cracking
15Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Consensus Aggregate Properties
- pavement experts agreed that these aggregate
properties were critical to well performing mixes
and wide agreement in their use and specified
values - criteria are based on traffic levels and position
within pavement structure
16Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Source Aggregate Properties
- pavement experts agreed that there were other
critical aggregate properties that were dependant
on local sources and experience and were left to
local agencies to specify
17Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave consensus aggregate properties
- Coarse aggregate angularity
- ensures a high degree of internal friction and
rutting resistance - percent by weight of aggregates larger than 4.75
mm with one or more fractured faces - Fine aggregate angularity
- ensures a high degree of fine aggregate internal
friction and rutting resistance - percent air voids in loosely compacted aggregates
smaller than 2.36 mm
18Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
19Asphalt Concrete Aggregates Superpave consensus
aggregate properties
20Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
21Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave consensus aggregate properties
- Flat and Elongated Particles
- percentage by mass of coarse aggregates that have
a maximum to minimum dimension ratio greater than
five - particles are undesirable because of their
tendency to break during construction and under
traffic - procedure uses a proportional caliper device to
measure the dimensional ratio of a representative
sample of aggregate particles - percentage of flat percentage of elongated
particles
22Asphalt Concrete Aggregates Flat and Elongated
Particles
23Asphalt Concrete Aggregates Flat and Elongated
Particles
24Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave consensus aggregate properties
- Clay content
- percentage of clay material contained in the
aggregate fraction that is finer than the 4.75 mm
sieve - sand equivalency test is used in which a sample
is mixes with a flocculating solution forcing
clay particles into suspension - after a settling period the height of suspended
clay and sedimented sand is measured - sand equivalent is the ratio of sand to clay
readings
25Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
Clay Content
26Asphalt Concrete AggregatesClay Content
27Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave source aggregate properties
- Toughness
- percent loss of material from an aggregate blend
larger than 2.36 mm using a Los Angeles Abrasion
Test - estimates the resistance of coarse aggregate to
abrasion and mechanical degradation during
handling, construction and in service - maximum loss values typically range from 35 to 45
percent
28Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave source aggregate properties
- Soundness
- percent loss of material from from an aggregate
blend during the sodium or magnesium sulfate
soundness test - can be used on both coarse and fine aggregates
- resembles freeze/thaw in the field
- test result is total percent loss over various
sieve intervals for a required number of cycles - maximum loss values typically range from 10 to 20
percent for five cycles
29Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave source aggregate properties
- Deleterious materials
- defined as mass percentage of contaminants such
as clay lumps, shale, wood, mica, and coal in a
blended aggregate - performed on both coarse and fine aggregates
- mass percentage of material lost as a result of
wet sieving is reported as the percent of clay
lumps and friable particles - values range as low as 0.2 percent to 10 percent
depending on the exact composition of the
contaminant
30Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave aggregate properties
- Gradation Chart
- the 0.45 power gradation chart is used in which
sieve sizes are raised to the power 0.45 on the
horizontal axis (normal sieve gradation graph
already in use) - maximum density gradation is a straight line from
the maximum aggregate size to the origin - maximum size is defined as one sieve size larger
that the nominal maximum size - nominal maximum size is defined as one sieve size
larger than the first sieve to retain more than
10
31Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave source aggregate properties
- Gradation Chart (contd)
- specifies two new features to the gradation chart
- Control Points placed on the nominal maximum
sieve, an intermediate sieve (2.36 mm), and the
smallest sieve (75 um) through which the
gradation must pass - Restricted Zone placed on the maximum density
line between an intermediate sieve and the 0.3 mm
sieve through which the gradation cannot pass.
Gradations that pass through the restricted zone
are called humped gradations
32Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave source aggregate properties
- Gradation Chart (contd)
- Humped gradations indicate an
- oversanded mixture and/or a mixture that contains
too much fine sand in relation to total sand - restriction zone discourages the use of fine
natural sand and encourages the use of a clean
manufactured sand
33Asphalt Concrete Aggregates
- Superpave source aggregate properties
- Gradation Chart (contd)
- Results
- mixtures that poses compaction problems during
construction tender mixes - offers reduced resistance to rutting
- gradations that follow to close to the maximum
density line for fine aggregates often have
inadequate VMA to allow enough asphalt for
adequate durability
34Asphalt Concrete Aggregates Gradation Chart
35Asphalt Concrete Aggregates Gradation Chart