The use of de-vulcanized recycled rubber in the modification of road bitumen

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Abstract

Rubber from recycled car tires and styrene-butadiene-styrene (SBS) were used for the chemical modification of commercially available road bitumen 50/70 (EN 12591). The modification process began with the addition of rubber into asphalt and heating the whole amount at the temperature of 190 _C or 220 _C. Under such conditions, de-vulcanization of rubber took place. Next, SBS and sulfur as a cross-linker were added and the heating was continued so that cross-linking of SBS and the de-vulcanized rubber proceeded. In the studies on the influence of rubber concentration on the final properties of asphalt 10% or 15% of rubber was considered. Chemical modification reactions were performed within 2, 4, and 8 h. The results showed that both the modification at 190 _C and 220 _C a_ected the properties of the base asphalt e_ciently, although the asphalt modified at 190 _C contained more non-degraded rubber. Increasing the modification time led to dissolution of the rubber crumbs and its de-vulcanization. Bitumens modified in this way are characterized by high storage stabilities. Their behavior at low temperatures also deserves attention.

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Gawdzik, B., Matynia, T., & Błażejowski, K. (2020). The use of de-vulcanized recycled rubber in the modification of road bitumen. Materials, 13(21), 1–12. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13214864

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