Skip to main content

Asphalt: checking properties

Specialist equipment is available for carrying out a variety of important tests on asphalt It is important to know how asphalt will react to various conditions such as heat, cold and traffic loads when it is laid on roads. Project specifications will give detailed criteria of what is required, and companies will either ask outside laboratories to make sure the material meets the specs, or will often carry out such tests themselves with trained staff in an on-site laboratory. This will be equipped with the
July 18, 2012 Read time: 5 mins

Specialist equipment is available for carrying out a variety of important tests on asphalt

 It is important to know how asphalt will react to various conditions such as heat, cold and traffic loads when it is laid on roads. Project specifications will give detailed criteria of what is required, and companies will either ask outside laboratories to make sure the material meets the specs, or will often carry out such tests themselves with trained staff in an on-site laboratory.

This will be equipped with the machines capable of carrying out a whole series of tests, and these are done at regular intervals with all the data recorded.

Asphalt is the final product of the refining process of crude oil whose lighter constituents are distilled off to yield gas products such as methane, ethane, propane and butane; naphthas (for processing into gasolines); kerosenes (for processing into jet fuels and light diesels), and gas oils (lubricating oils, and fuel oils). Asphalt is basically crude oil with these lighter products removed.

Asphalts are complex chemical mixtures whose compositions vary widely depending mainly on the source of the crude oil and to a lesser degree, the manufacturing process.

As such, there are numerous tests that can be carried out on them, some are fairly simple and others more complex.


For example, one test among many is the determination of the resistance to hardening under the influences of heat and air and to complete this Italian company 2139 Controls offers its Model 81-B0161/A bitumen oven for the rolling thin-film oven test/RTFOT (EN/European Norm version).

"As is well known, bitumen can be considered as a colloidal system consisting of a mix of high molecular weight hydrocarbons dispersed in minor molecular weight hydrocarbons," says Controls.

By the heat and air action, during mixing, laying and rolling, bitumen loses part of the lighter components, at lower molecular weight, and therefore more volatiles [oils].

"Consequently, the binder is affected by a 'short term ageing' after the mixing and laying work. The bitumen content of the bituminous mixes grants usually a complete cover of aggregates by an average thickness of 9-11 microns on a surface of aggregate mix of the order of 5,000-6,000m²/kg. The high mixing temperature, about 150°C, and the over-heated air affects the binder shared in a very thin film and causes an increase of viscosity and stiffness. The effect is particularly evident at the ambient temperatures." Controls explains that by using the RTFOT apparatus it is possible to perform the loss-on-weight test and to provide the sample 'aged' ready for other tests such as softening point, penetration, dynamic viscosity at 60°C, ductility and other tests in order to verify that the hardening data of bitumen falls within the limits fixed by the specifications for road binders.

According to the US-based 5045 Pioneer Asphalt Company (part of Ziegler Chemical and Mineral Corporation) the softening point and penetration are usually the most commonly used measurements for classifying the properties of asphalts.

Generally, when comparing asphalts, as the softening point increases, the viscosity also increases, the penetration drops and the flash point rises, says the company.

Using various 4814 ASTM (originally the American Society for Testing and Materials) guidelines, the softening point is a range of temperatures that the asphalt softens using a 'ring and ball' technique and is sometimes thought of as the melting point, while penetration (at a prescribed temperature) is how far a weighted needle or cone will sink into the asphalt during a set period of time.

Viscosity (at a prescribed temperature) is an indication of how thick or thin the liquid asphalt is at various temperatures (measured in poises, centipoises (cps), centistokes (cst) or SSU) and the flash point is the temperature that the heated asphalt will flash (ignite briefly).

Indeed, for testing the softening point of asphalts and tar pitches the 81-B0143 Automatic Ring and Ball apparatus is offered by Controls.

The company says the advanced microprocessor-controlled automatic tester is used to determine the softening point of bitumen using, as the heating fluid, water or glycerol.

"The softening point is taken by the interruption of two light barriers suitably positioned, and it can detect the position of the two balls in an independent way.

The temperature is measured by a PT100 sensor placed in a middle position. During operation a magnetic stirrer with adjustable speed assures temperature uniformity in the vessel, and the current temperature and the barriers' status are displayed. The temperature gradient is strictly maintained conforming to the standards throughout the test by the microprocessor control unit.

"The apparatus allows tests to be performed at two different temperature ranges: with boiled or distilled water (the maximum temperature is 80°C) and with glycerol the maximum temperature is 150°C. At the end of the test, the result data are stored in the internal database, or downloaded to a serial printer or to a PC," says Controls.

The company offers its 81-B0100/D and 81-B0101/D Semiautomatic Penetrometers for penetration of bituminous material.

The devices feature a precise digital measurement system as standard, and the 81-B0100/D is the new standard version proposed with the micrometer vertical adjustment and digital measurement of the penetration.

The 81-B0101/D is the new semi-automatic version proposed also with the micrometer vertical adjustment and digital measurement of the penetration and automatic controller for the penetration time.

Both models are provided as standard with the micrometer vertical adjustment fitted in the column base, offering an easier setting of the penetration needle on the sample cup, and a new digital reading of the penetration with 0.01 mm resolution, an exremely accurate reading for a standard penetrometer device.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Road repairs take to the air
    November 29, 2018
    Automated road repairs using 3D printing could save money and reduce disruption, reports Kristina Smith It’s the middle of the night and in the street below a team is busy carrying out repairs to the road surface. But there isn’t a human in sight. A road-repair drone has landed at the site of a crack and a 3D asphalt printer is now busy filling in that crack. A group of traffic cone drones have positioned themselves around the repair location to protect the repair drone and divert traffic around it.
  • Hot Bitumen Safety – Still an Issue, Eleven Years On
    April 22, 2016
    Despite clear industry guidelines published over a decade ago and revised in 2015, level measurement experts Hycontrol still regularly encounter asphalt plants with insufficient safety protocols for preventing spills of hot bitumen. Introduction – Bitumen Storage in the UK Recently-issued information from Eurobitume UK has reinforced the need for stringent safety precautions on sites with bitumen storage facilities; key amongst them being the implementation of a robust level monitoring and alarm system (‘Si
  • New M90 surfacing in the UK gain praise
    January 8, 2013
    Early evaluation of surfacing work on the M90 at Rosyth – the first major application of Scotland’s new TS2010 specification – has earned positive praise. Transport Scotland’s determination to obtain pavement that is durable, long lasting and safe (especially in early life) is clearly apparent on the M90 just north of the Forth Road Bridge. Here surfacing has been carried out this spring to TS2010, a tough new specification designed to ensure thin surfacing pavements that work. And the initial prognosis is
  • All-new road markings on world’s highways
    June 28, 2013
    Road marking manufacturers have many innovative new products either currently being used on major highways or set to be made available within the next couple of years. Guy Woodford reports. Daan Roosegaarde, an artist, and Hans Goris, a manager at Dutch construction and infrastructure firm Heijmans, are developing intriguing new products for the road markings market. One innovation involves painting road markings with glow-in-the-dark paint.