Fuente:
Polymers
Polymers, Vol. 18, Pages 168: Sulfur Polymer to Develop Low-Carbon Reclaimed Asphalt Pavements
Polymers doi: 10.3390/polym18020168
Authors:
Mohammad Doroudgar
Mohammadjavad Kazemi
Shadi Saadeh
Mahour Parast
Elham H. Fini
The incorporation of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) offers significant environmental benefits; however, its use is often limited by an increased susceptibility to cracking due to the insufficient elasticity of the severely aged RAP binder. This limitation is conventionally mitigated using polymers such as styrene–butadiene styrene, which, despite their effectiveness, are costly and carbon intensive. This paper introduces a low-carbon sulfur-based ternary polymer developed through TiO2-catalyzed inverse vulcanization of elemental sulfur to be used as a modifier to address the abovementioned challenge at the asphalt mixture level. The sulfur polymer containing waste cooking oil and metal-rich biochar was incorporated into hot-mix asphalt having 25% RAP. The mixture specimens were evaluated before and after accelerated thermal and ultraviolet aging. Cracking resistance was measured using the Indirect Tensile Asphalt Cracking Test (IDEAL-CT), while resistance to rutting and moisture damage were assessed through the Hamburg Wheel Tracking Test (HWT). IDEAL-CT findings showed improved CTIndex values for the modified mixture under unaged conditions and after three days of thermal aging, with smaller variations noted after prolonged thermal aging and during the combined thermal–ultraviolet aging process. Results from the HWT test revealed that the addition of the sulfur polymer did not negatively impact resistance to rutting or moisture damage; all mixtures remained significantly below rutting failure thresholds. Furthermore, a simplified environmental analysis indicated that substituting 10 wt% of petroleum binder with the sulfur polymer lowered the binder’s cradle-to-gate global warming potential by around 11%. In summary, study results showed that the newly developed sulfur polymer system has the potential to improve cracking resistance even when exposed to select accelerated aging protocols while decreasing embodied carbon, thus endorsing its viability as a sustainable modifier for asphalt mixtures.