Application of Fickian and non-Fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics

The objective of this study was to investigate certain aspects of asphalt mastic moisture diffusion characteristics in order to better understand the moisture damage phenomenon in asphalt mixtures. Moisture sorption experiments were conducted on four asphalt mastics using an environmental chamber ca...

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Main Authors: Apeagyei, Alex K., Grenfell, James, Airey, Gordon
Format: Article
Published: Springer 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50815/
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author Apeagyei, Alex K.
Grenfell, James
Airey, Gordon
author_facet Apeagyei, Alex K.
Grenfell, James
Airey, Gordon
author_sort Apeagyei, Alex K.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The objective of this study was to investigate certain aspects of asphalt mastic moisture diffusion characteristics in order to better understand the moisture damage phenomenon in asphalt mixtures. Moisture sorption experiments were conducted on four asphalt mastics using an environmental chamber capable of automatically controlling both relative humidity (85 %) and temperature (23 °C). The four mastics tested were identical in terms of bitumen type (40/60 pen), bitumen amount (25 % by of wt% total mix), mineral filler amount (25 % by wt%) and fine aggregate amount (50 % by wt%). The materials differed in terms of mineral filler type (granite or limestone) and fine aggregate type (granite or limestone). Preliminary data obtained during the early part of the study showed certain anomalous behavior of the materials including geometry (thickness)-dependent diffusion coefficient. It was therefore decided to investigate some aspects related to moisture diffusion in mastics by applying the Fickian and two non-Fickian (anomalous) diffusion models to the moisture sorption data. The two non-Fickian models included a two-phase Langmuir-type model and a two-parameter time-variable model. All three models predicted moisture diffusion in mastics extremely well (R 2 > 0.95). The observed variation of diffusion coefficient with thickness was attributed in part to microstructural changes (settlement of the denser fine aggregates near the bottom of the material) during the rather long-duration diffusion testing. This assertion was supported by X-ray computed tomography imaging of the mastic that showed significant accumulation of aggregate particles near the bottom of the sample with time. The results from the Langmuir-type model support a two-phase (free and bound) model for moisture absorbed by asphalt mastic and suggests about 80 % of absorbed water in the free phase remain bound within the mastic. The results also suggest that moisture diffusion in asphalt mastic may be time-dependent with diffusion decreasing by about four times during a typical diffusion test lasting up to 500 h. The study concludes that both geometry and time-dependent physical characteristics of mastic are important factors to consider with respect to moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics.
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spelling nottingham-508152020-05-04T20:08:45Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50815/ Application of Fickian and non-Fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics Apeagyei, Alex K. Grenfell, James Airey, Gordon The objective of this study was to investigate certain aspects of asphalt mastic moisture diffusion characteristics in order to better understand the moisture damage phenomenon in asphalt mixtures. Moisture sorption experiments were conducted on four asphalt mastics using an environmental chamber capable of automatically controlling both relative humidity (85 %) and temperature (23 °C). The four mastics tested were identical in terms of bitumen type (40/60 pen), bitumen amount (25 % by of wt% total mix), mineral filler amount (25 % by wt%) and fine aggregate amount (50 % by wt%). The materials differed in terms of mineral filler type (granite or limestone) and fine aggregate type (granite or limestone). Preliminary data obtained during the early part of the study showed certain anomalous behavior of the materials including geometry (thickness)-dependent diffusion coefficient. It was therefore decided to investigate some aspects related to moisture diffusion in mastics by applying the Fickian and two non-Fickian (anomalous) diffusion models to the moisture sorption data. The two non-Fickian models included a two-phase Langmuir-type model and a two-parameter time-variable model. All three models predicted moisture diffusion in mastics extremely well (R 2 > 0.95). The observed variation of diffusion coefficient with thickness was attributed in part to microstructural changes (settlement of the denser fine aggregates near the bottom of the material) during the rather long-duration diffusion testing. This assertion was supported by X-ray computed tomography imaging of the mastic that showed significant accumulation of aggregate particles near the bottom of the sample with time. The results from the Langmuir-type model support a two-phase (free and bound) model for moisture absorbed by asphalt mastic and suggests about 80 % of absorbed water in the free phase remain bound within the mastic. The results also suggest that moisture diffusion in asphalt mastic may be time-dependent with diffusion decreasing by about four times during a typical diffusion test lasting up to 500 h. The study concludes that both geometry and time-dependent physical characteristics of mastic are important factors to consider with respect to moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics. Springer 2015-05 Article PeerReviewed Apeagyei, Alex K., Grenfell, James and Airey, Gordon (2015) Application of Fickian and non-Fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics. Materials and Structures, 48 (5). pp. 1461-1474. ISSN 1871-6873 Fickian diffusion; Non-Fickian diffusion; Moisture diffusion; Asphalt mastics; Asphalt mixtures; X-ray CT https://link.springer.com/article/10.1617/s11527-014-0246-2 doi:10.1617/s11527-014-0246-2 doi:10.1617/s11527-014-0246-2
spellingShingle Fickian diffusion; Non-Fickian diffusion; Moisture diffusion; Asphalt mastics; Asphalt mixtures; X-ray CT
Apeagyei, Alex K.
Grenfell, James
Airey, Gordon
Application of Fickian and non-Fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics
title Application of Fickian and non-Fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics
title_full Application of Fickian and non-Fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics
title_fullStr Application of Fickian and non-Fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics
title_full_unstemmed Application of Fickian and non-Fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics
title_short Application of Fickian and non-Fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics
title_sort application of fickian and non-fickian diffusion models to study moisture diffusion in asphalt mastics
topic Fickian diffusion; Non-Fickian diffusion; Moisture diffusion; Asphalt mastics; Asphalt mixtures; X-ray CT
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50815/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50815/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/50815/