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Evaluation of the Effect of Lime Modification on the Dynamic Modulus Stiffness of Hot-Mix Asphalt
15
Citations
4
References
2005
Year
Materials SciencePavement Design GuidePavement EngineeringHighway PavementEngineeringCement ManufactureTest MethodsHot-mix AsphaltCivil EngineeringHma MixturesLime-modified Hma MixturesLime ModificationCivil Engineering MaterialsConstruction EngineeringMechanics Of MaterialsAsphaltAsphalt BinderDynamic Modulus Stiffness
Hydrated lime is often used as a mineral filler or antistripping additive in hot-mix asphalt (HMA). Many agencies across North America require the use of lime in all HMA mixtures being placed on high-volume roadways. Despite this wide use of lime, its effects on the HMA mixture dynamic modulus (E * ) stiffness have rarely been evaluated. The new mechanistic–empirical (M-E) pavement design guide, Guide for Mechanistic–Empirical Design of New and Rehabilitated Pavement Structures, developed under NCHRP Project 1–37A uses E * as the primary material property of asphalt mixtures for the HMA characterization. A comprehensive study was completed at Arizona State University to assess the effect of lime addition on the E * stiffness of HMA mixtures. The study demonstrated that the standard test and design methodologies of the new M-E pavement design guide could be used effectively for lime-modified HMA mixes. With these methodologies, hydrated lime was found to increase the E * of HMA mixtures by 17% to 65% across the range of mixtures, lime contents, and temperature, with an overall average of 25% increase found from 17 mixture–lime percentage combinations across six different HMA mixes. This paper also outlines a provisional protocol for evaluating the E * master curve for lime-modified HMA mixtures using any of the three hierarchical levels found in the new NCHRP Project 1–37A pavement design guide.
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