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BITUMEN
What is Bitumen?
DEFINITION
A non-crystalline solid
or viscous material
having adhesive
properties derived from
petroleum either by
natural or refinery
processes, and
substantially soluble in
carbon disulphide.
Bitumen are black or
brown in colour. This
may occur naturally but
are usually made as end
products from
distillation of, or
extracts from, selected
petroleum oils.
NOMENCLATURE
Bitumen and asphalt are
both generic terms. In
USA, the word asphalt is
used as synonymous with
bitumen- the refinery
product which has now
largely replaced the
natural asphalts that
occur in Trinidad,
Venezuela, Cuba etc.
Outside USA however, the
word asphalt is
generally taken to mean
a mixture of refinery
bitumen with a
substantial proportion
of solid mineral matter.
Frequently used in road
constructions are
cutbacks, in which
bitumen is mixed with a
solvent such as Kerosene
or gas oil which
evaporates after the
material is laid, and
bitumen emulsions i.e.
emulsions of bitumen
with water.
Bitumen is always
applied hot, cutbacks
are applied either hot
or cold and emulsion is
always applied cold.
When the emulsion breaks
the water evaporates
leaving bitumen.
END USE
The uses of bitumen are
numerous. The chief one
in most countries is for
road construction. It is
also used for surfacing
airfield runways and
taxi tracks, hydraulic
applications such as
canal lining, river bank
protection, dam
construction and sea
defenses. There are also
numerous industrial
applications like
roofing felt
manufacture, printing
inks, electrical cable /
Junction boxes, mastic
for roofing of terraces,
duplex paper manufacture
etc.
SIGNIFICANCE OF
PROPERTIES
Asphaltic bitumen is
valued for a variety of
properties. It is water
proof, ductile,
adhesive, chemically
inert and resistant to
atmospheric exposure and
the effects of dilute
acids and alkalis.
Obtained from the
residues of naphthenic
crude oils after
distillation of the
volatile products, it is
marketed in a wide range
of grades, ranging from
soft to hard.
PENETRATION
The test determines the
hardness of Bitumen by
measuring the depth ( in
tenths of a mm) to which
a standard, and loaded
needle will vertically
penetrate in 5 seconds,
a sample of Bitumen
maintained at a
temperature of 25 deg C
( 77deg F). Hence the
softer the bitumen, the
greater will be its
number of penetration
units.
SOFTENING POINT
This test is carried out
by the Ring and Ball
method, which consists
of suspending a brass
ring containing the test
sample of Bitumen in
water at a given
temperature. A steel
ball is placed upon the
bituminous material, the
water is then heated at
the rate of 5 deg C
increase per minute. The
temperature at which the
softened bituminous
material first touches a
metal plate at a
specified distance below
the ring is recorded as
the Softening point of
the sample.
FLASH POINT
In the interest of
safety, legislation has
been introduced in most
countries fixing minimum
flash point limits to
prevent the inclusion of
highly inflammable
volatile fractions in
kerosene distillates.
According to Controller
of Explosives
classification it falls
in the category of Class
B Petroleum Products.
Its flash point (Abel)
is stipulated as Min. 35
deg C in the IS
specification.
SPECIFIC GRAVITY
As with colour, specific
gravity has no relation
to burning quality, but
it is a useful aid for
quantity reckoning and
identity
TARGET MARKETS
Although the Iranian
petroleum products
specially bitumen are
exported to all
international markets
but generally most of
the importers, road
constructors and end
users of bitumen in
Persian Gulf, CIS, South
& Far East Countries as
well as the other
neighboring countries of
Iran do prefer to import
bitumen from Iran not
only because of the
quality but also because
of the suitable freight
costs.
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