Abstract:
The chemical composition of bitumen is a reinvigorated aspect of looking into the origin of
bitumen behavior. Diversification of crude sources, emphasizing high-value products of refining,
and addition of rejuvenators, extenders, modifiers lead to unusual behavior of bitumen compared
to unmodified bitumen. There are many cases where the integrity of bitumen as a chemical was
understood to be compromised but not captured by usual lab tests. Therefore, the use of bitumen
chemistry as a predictor of performance and quality control is being pursued in multiple research
fronts. However, analysis of bitumen chemistry is challenging due to the need for specialized
equipment and a protective environment.
In a recent study, Sakib and Bhasin (2019) used a novel method called ‘Si-SARA’ for extracting
bitumen chemical fractions on the scale of milligrams. The key elements of that procedure were
(i) a syringe-filter-based separation to isolate asphaltene and (ii) pre-packaged silica cartridges
(Solid Phase Extraction– SPE cartridges) for fractionation of maltene into saturates, aromatics,
and resins using chromatography in a procedure similar to ASTM D4124 and IP469. The ‘SiSARA’ procedure is an order of magnitude speedier, cheaper, and more compact than that of other
existing processes. This procedure leads up to the present work which offers a further refinement
of the ‘Si-SARA’ procedure. Proposed modifications in the present paper make the procedure
suitable for field labs and labs without a dedicated chemical handling facility, thereby offering
even faster results and point-of-use quality control.
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The compact new process calls for an enclosed metallic chamber, a manual or motorized vacuum
pump, an air pump, a magnetic stirring heating mantle, and a condenser setup. While the method
uses syringe filters and SPE cartridges like the original method, this innovation removes two major
and relatively expensive equipment; namely glass-made vacuum manifold and drying oven. The
new process actually combines the vacuum manifold and drying oven chamber into a single metal
‘lunch box’-commercially available as a steel-made airtight food container- alternately used either
as vacuum chamber or as drying chamber mode. When operated in vacuum manifold mode, the
system is relatively basic with no flow control regulators though an off-on valve facilitates the
elution process’ initiation and termination. A vacuum pump helps the liquid flow as shown in
Sakib and Bhasin (2019). However, when operated under drying mode, a heating plate is placed
under the box, which heats up and evaporates solvents. Solvent-rich gas inside the box then passes
through a cold condenser coil with the help of an air pump. After condensation, the accumulated
liquid is collected in a bottle, and gas/air is returned to the chamber to complete the iteration. This
process offers a closed system and thus removes the necessity of a chemical hood. During drying,
nitrogen or other inert gas blanket requires only a small amount of gas or is completely made
redundant as the same volume of gas is iterated and thus the amount of oxygen is very limited.
Additionally, the use of metal cans in place of glass vials to collect elute in the new process offers
a quick-drying and rugged system regarding heating and transportation.
To summarize, the newly proposed system uses the ‘Si-SARA’ method but utilizes more
accessible and economic tools, which enables the chemical analysis of bitumen in limited resource
labs, field labs, or labs previously not suitable for chemical testing
Description:
Supervised by
Dr. Nazmus Sakib,
Assistant Professor
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE),
Islamic University of Technology (IUT),
Board Bazar, Gazipur, Bangladesh.