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Article

Microscopic Study of the Interaction between Bitumen Emulsion and Aggregate: Effect of Surfactants

1ENSAU, Université de Bondoukou, Côte d’Ivoire

2Institut de Recherche en Constructibilité, Ecole Spéciale des Travaux Publics, France

3Laboratoire de Sciences Géographiques Génie Civil et Géosciences, INP-HB, Côte d’Ivoire


American Journal of Civil Engineering and Architecture. 2025, Vol. 13 No. 6, 123-129
DOI: 10.12691/ajcea-13-6-1
Copyright © 2025 Science and Education Publishing

Cite this paper:
Yacouba Konate, Layella Ziyani, Athanas Konin, Anne Dony. Microscopic Study of the Interaction between Bitumen Emulsion and Aggregate: Effect of Surfactants. American Journal of Civil Engineering and Architecture. 2025; 13(6):123-129. doi: 10.12691/ajcea-13-6-1.

Correspondence to: Athanas  Konin, Laboratoire de Sciences Géographiques Génie Civil et Géosciences, INP-HB, Côte d’Ivoire. Email: athanas.konin@inphb.ci

Abstract

The use of cold-mix asphalt is an effective approach to environmental protection. These materials are intended for low- to medium-traffic roads and have significant potential for secondary road networks in African countries. The objective of this article is to study the influence of surfactant use on the bitumen emulsion-aggregate interaction from a microscopic perspective. Two surfactants (designated A and B) and four types of materials (granite, diorite, limestone, and silica) were studied. The tests performed were: emulsion-aggregate compatibility tests, tests to determine the optimal water content of the mixtures, UV-visible adsorption tests by spectrometry, and tests to assess emulsion bond breakdown upon contact with fine minerals. The results show that the surfactant adsorption differed according to the surfactant-substrate pair considered and adsorption tests performed by UV-visible spectrophotometry revealed that surfactant A adsorbed more readily onto the substrates than surfactant B. This could be due to the charge of the respective hydrophilic heads of the surfactants. Adsorption is stronger with surfactant A because its polar charge is greater than that of surfactant B at pH 2. The emulsion – aggregates rupture was all the more rapid as the SiO2 content increased in aggregates. At the rheological level, the behavior of the emulsion-filler mixtures was influenced by the surfactant nature and content, the specific surface area of the aggregates and the emulsion-filler mass ratio.

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