Applied Sciences (Oct 2021)

Methodology for Efficient Bitumen Storage with Reduced Energy Consumption

  • Amina Tahri,
  • Mohsine Bouya,
  • Mokhtar Ghazouani,
  • Ouafae Achak,
  • Tarik Chafik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app11199319
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 19
p. 9319

Abstract

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This paper studies the possibility of minimizing energy consumption during 35/50 bitumen storage. Similarly to most bitumen companies, the company with which we collaborated uses fossil fuel to maintain bitumen tanks at 150 °C. The main objective is to optimize energy usage. To achieve this purpose, we tested two new storage processes. One is based on dynamic temperature storage between 140 and 160 °C, and the other on room temperature conditions. This work evaluates the effect of these storage conditions on the quality of 35/50 bitumen, and studies the energy aspect to calculate the energy profit for every storage method. After storage, we have studied short-term and long-term ageing using the Rolling Thin Film Oven (RTFOT) and the Pressure Ageing Vessel (PAV) tests, respectively. We characterized the samples using needle penetration at 25 °C, the softening point, and Attenuated Total Reflectance-Fourier Transform Infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy. We observed that the change in physical properties is negligible after the tested storage processes. Chemically, both the storage conditions affected the oxidative behavior acceptably; the carbonyl index was the same in the long term. We conclude that we can store 35/50 bitumen at room temperature conditions, which follow us to save more than three times the energy needs compared to the standard configurations.

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