Outline

Ingegneria Sismica

Ingegneria Sismica

Dynamic Tracking of Self-Healing Performance in Temperature-Sensitive Hydrogel Modified Asphalt Pavement Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

Author(s): Yongjun Qiao1, Mingji Li2, Fengwei Ma3
1Shandong University Capital Operation Co., Ltd., Jinan 250100, Shandong, China
2Shandong HuaTe Road Materials Co., Ltd., Binzhou 251900, Shandong, China
3Graduate School of Shandong University, Jinan 250100, Shandong, China
Qiao, Yongjun., Li, Mingji., and Ma, Fengwei. “Dynamic Tracking of Self-Healing Performance in Temperature-Sensitive Hydrogel Modified Asphalt Pavement Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).” Ingegneria Sismica Volume 43 Issue 3: 1-12, doi:10.65102/is20261258.

Abstract

Traditional repair methods suffer from poor penetration and limited effectiveness. This study uses SK-70 base asphalt as the matrix, incorporating 5% N-isopropylacrylamide-based temperature-sensitive hydrogel with particle size of 50~80 micrometers, lower critical solution temperature of 33°C, and crosslinking degree of 0.45% to prepare modified asphalt. A 7.0T MRI system was employed to dynamically track the crack healing process, combined with three-point bending tests and rheological measurements to evaluate its self-healing and pavement performance. Experimental results show that when triggered at 40°C, the relative signal intensity ratio in the crack region increased rapidly from 0.32 at 0 min to 0.68 at 30 min, reaching 0.91 at 240 min, and stabilizing at 0.92~0.95 at 480 min, with cracks completely disappearing from MRI images. Macroscopic self-healing efficiency improved with healing time, reaching 38.5% at 2 h, 67.2% at 4 h, and 89.3% at 8 h. Rheological tests demonstrate that the complex modulus of modified asphalt exceeds that of base asphalt at 20~35°C, with the modulus decline rate slowing at the 33°C phase transition temperature, indicating superior pavement performance. MRI enables intuitive and precise tracking of the entire micro-crack healing process. Temperature-sensitive hydrogel modified asphalt, leveraging its temperature-responsive phase transition characteristics, can efficiently fill micro-cracks, providing a reliable microscopic characterization method and novel technical pathway for asphalt pavement self-healing technology.

Keywords
temperature-sensitive hydrogel; modified asphalt; self-healing; magnetic resonance imaging; dynamic tracking

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