scholarly journals Obtaining Modified Bitumen Rubber Crumb for Cold-Rolled Roofing Materials

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andriy Nagurskyy ◽  
Oleg Grynyshyn ◽  
Yuriy Khlibyshyn ◽  
Taras Chervinskyy ◽  
Bohdan Korchak
2019 ◽  
Vol 105 ◽  
pp. 01018
Author(s):  
Sergey Ivanov ◽  
Nikita Martel

Kuzbass is a leader in the field of mining of coal as one of the main materials for industry and civilian use. Its production rate its is constantly increasing, which can not but affect the problem of using secondary material (in particular, rocks that are not used in further construction) that is produced during coal mining. Overburden rocks are often stored in dumps or they are used for filling coal mine roads, although this is the problem. In terms of their physical and chemical composition, the overburden rocks are of low strength, so there is a problem of strengthening this type of material, the solution of which can be found in the processing of rocks used for further construction with modified bitumen. The analysis of the effect of the adhesion ability of construction bitumen and crumb rubber modified bitumen produced according to the technology of stage addition of rubber crumb to bitumen (bitumen modified with crumb rubber by stages) is described in the article. Examples of the adhesion of construction bitumen and bitumen modified with crumb rubber by stages to various rocks are given. The characteristics of the adhesion ability of bitumen modified with crumb rubber by stages are substantiated.


Author(s):  
I. V. Gordeeva ◽  
D. A. Melnikov ◽  
V. N. Gorbatovа ◽  
D. S. Reznichenko ◽  
Yu. A. Naumova

Objectives. This study evaluates the effect of the modification process on the group composition of bitumen and bitumen binders containing rubber powder and hybrid modifier that is based on styrene–butadiene thermoplastic elastomer and rubber crumb. The aim of the study was to determine the presence or absence of functional groups that reflect the direction of physicochemical processes during the preparation of a hybrid modifier in rotary dispersers and during the modification of bitumen binders. Methods. Rubber powder and hybrid modifier were obtained by high-temperature shear grinding using a rotary disperser. Bitumen and modified bitumen binders were investigated via Fouriertransform infrared spectroscopy. Using the method of spectral subtraction, it was determined that during the process of manufacturing modified bitumen binders, structural changes occur in both bitumen and modifiers. During this study, the extraction of modifiers (rubber powder and hybrid modifier) in toluene was performed. Results. The quantitative analysis of changes in the group composition of modifiers before and after the modification procedure was carried out. The active polymer and structural indices were determined. The general trend of the change in the active polymer and structural indices was noted for the initial spectra of the rubber powder and hybrid modifier, and their spectra were obtained after the procedure of subtraction from the spectra of bitumen binders. Conclusions. The interdiffusion of aromatic compounds between the bitumen component and modifier particles was confirmed. On the basis of the results of the extraction of modifiers in toluene, and by taking into account the infrared spectroscopy data, it was determined that during the production of hybrid modifier during the simultaneous grinding of rubber crumb and styrene– butadiene thermoplastic elastomer, there was a chemical interaction between them. 


Author(s):  
Daniel M. Wolfe ◽  
Keith Goossen

Space heating and cooling contributes a significant percentage of a building’s overall energy usage profile. The construction of a building’s envelope is an essential component that impacts the overall heating and cooling load. For many years, flat roofs were covered with low albedo materials such as asphalt or modified bitumen, which can reach temperatures of 150°F to 180°F during summer months. More recently, alternative technologies, such as “white roofs”, have been put forth to mitigate the problem of unwanted thermal gain. However, these traditional roofing materials and recent innovations are passive structures and only promote seasonal benefits. This paper proposes and demonstrates the concept of an active variable reflectance roofing system that can tailor solar loads to desired heating or cooling, significantly reducing overall space heating and cooling energy requirements and costs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 420-425
Author(s):  
Andriy Nagurskyy ◽  
◽  
Yuriy Khlibyshyn ◽  
Oleg Grynyshyn ◽  
Victoria Kochubei ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel M. Wolfe ◽  
Keith W. Goossen

Space heating and cooling account for a significant percentage of a building's overall energy usage profile. The construction of a building's envelope is an essential component that impacts the overall heating and cooling load. For many years, flat roofs were covered with low albedo materials such as asphalt or modified bitumen, which can reach temperatures of 60 °C–80 °C during summer months. More recently, alternative technologies, such as “white roofs,” have been put forth to mitigate the problem of unwanted thermal gain. However, these traditional roofing materials and recent innovations are passive structures and only promote seasonal benefits. This paper proposes and demonstrates the concept of a controllable reflectance roofing system that can tailor solar loads to desired heating or cooling, significantly reducing overall space heating and cooling energy requirements and costs.


Author(s):  
Shiro Fujishiro ◽  
Harold L. Gegel

Ordered-alpha titanium alloys having a DO19 type structure have good potential for high temperature (600°C) applications, due to the thermal stability of the ordered phase and the inherent resistance to recrystallization of these alloys. Five different Ti-Al-Ga alloys consisting of equal atomic percents of aluminum and gallium solute additions up to the stoichiometric composition, Ti3(Al, Ga), were used to study the growth kinetics of the ordered phase and the nature of its interface.The alloys were homogenized in the beta region in a vacuum of about 5×10-7 torr, furnace cooled; reheated in air to 50°C below the alpha transus for hot working. The alloys were subsequently acid cleaned, annealed in vacuo, and cold rolled to about. 050 inch prior to additional homogenization


Author(s):  
H. Lin ◽  
D. P. Pope

During a study of mechanical properties of recrystallized B-free Ni3Al single crystals, regularly spaced parallel traces within individual grains were discovered on the surfaces of thin recrystallized sheets, see Fig. 1. They appeared to be slip traces, but since we could not find similar observations in the literature, a series of experiments was performed to identify them. We will refer to them “traces”, because they contain some, if not all, of the properties of slip traces. A variety of techniques, including the Electron Backscattering Pattern (EBSP) method, was used to ascertain the composition, geometry, and crystallography of these traces. The effect of sample thickness on their formation was also investigated.In summary, these traces on the surface of recrystallized Ni3Al have the following properties:1.The chemistry and crystallographic orientation of the traces are the same as the bulk. No oxides or other second phases were observed.2.The traces are not grooves caused by thermal etching at previous locations of grain boundaries.3.The traces form after recrystallization (because the starting Ni3Al is a single crystal).4.For thicknesses between 50 μm and 720 μm, the density of the traces increases as the sample thickness decreases. Only one set of “protrusion-like” traces is visible in a given grain on the thicker samples, but multiple sets of “cliff-like” traces are visible on the thinner ones (See Fig. 1 and Fig. 2).5.They are linear and parallel to the traces of {111} planes on the surface, see Fig. 3.6.Some of the traces terminate within the interior of the grains, and the rest of them either terminate at or are continuous across grain boundaries. The portion of latter increases with decreasing thickness.7.The grain size decreases with decreasing thickness, the decrease is more pronounced when the grain size is comparable with the thickness, Fig. 4.8.Traces also formed during the recrystallization of cold-rolled polycrystalline Cu thin sheets, Fig. 5.


Author(s):  
A. Paul ◽  
D. Kumar ◽  
R. Chaudhary ◽  
S. Bhusan ◽  
S. Nayak ◽  
...  
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