US2350649A - Method for asphalt saturation - Google Patents

Method for asphalt saturation Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2350649A
US2350649A US400814A US40081441A US2350649A US 2350649 A US2350649 A US 2350649A US 400814 A US400814 A US 400814A US 40081441 A US40081441 A US 40081441A US 2350649 A US2350649 A US 2350649A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
asphalt
saturant
foaming
oil
moisture
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US400814A
Inventor
Wallace E Spelshouse
Arthur H Boenau
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
ExxonMobil Oil Corp
Original Assignee
Socony Vacuum Oil Co Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Socony Vacuum Oil Co Inc filed Critical Socony Vacuum Oil Co Inc
Priority to US400814A priority Critical patent/US2350649A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2350649A publication Critical patent/US2350649A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08LCOMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08L95/00Compositions of bituminous materials, e.g. asphalt, tar, pitch

Definitions

  • This invention relatesto a non-foaming asphalt saturant and to the manufacture of that product.
  • the foaming of the asphalt associated with .the evaporation of water from the sheet is a highly undesirable feature both from the standpoint of efficiency of the plant and quality of the product.
  • This invention has for its object the provision of a non-foaming asphalt saturant and a method of producing that saturant, which is not restricted to the source materials formerly used.
  • principal object of this invention is the production of high quality non-foaming asphalt saturants from materials not heretofore believed to be capable of producing such saturants.
  • Viscosity index 50 minimum Viscosity from 40" Saybolt Universal 100 F.
  • the base In making the asphaltic base for the saturant, the base should be reduced to a softening point at least five degrees Fahrenheit, as expressed by the Ring and Ball A. s. T. M. method D36-26 above the specification desired for the final saturant.
  • the amount of cutback oil to be used may, of
  • Column 2 represents an asphalt saturant prepared by blowing a 50/50 blend of Duo-Sol tar and a straight run residuum from 2. Coastal crude. This material is unsatisfactory with respect to foaming characteristics.
  • Column 3 represents a material produced by blending 74% of Duo-Sol tar blown to 180 softeningpoint and cut back with 26% of the same straight run residuum from a Coastal crude as in column 2. This material is equivalent to that represented by column 1.
  • a '7 minute asphalt would indicate a saturant with considerably poorer foaming characteristics than a 3 minute asphalt.
  • a 3 minute asphalt may be considered as an example of anexcellent non-foaming saturant, and 4-5 minute as good; and above 9 unsatisfactory.
  • the following table includes the physical char- 'acteristicof four asphalt saturants.
  • a method for avoiding excessive foaming in the saturation of moisture-containing fibrous material with asphalt at a temperature at which evaporation of moisture contained in said material normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing'fibrous material to be saturated in a heated bath of an asphaltic material produced by re-- ducing a petroleum fraction having a viscosity-,
  • a method for avoiding excessive foaming in the saturation of moisture-containing fibrous material with asphalt at a temperature at which evaporation of moisture contained in said material normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing fibrous material to be saturated in a heated bath of an asphaltic material produced by reducing a petroleum fraction having a viscosity-gravityconstant of at least .890 to an asphalt having a hardness of at least about 5 F. (R. I: B.
  • soft terial normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing fibrous material to'be saturated in' a heatebath of an asphaltic material produced by reducing a residual petroleum fraction havingwa point) greater than that desired for the finished saturant, and cutting the asphalt back to desired saturant specifications by blending from 95 to 25 parts of the asphalt with from 5 to '15 parts of a less viscous oil having a viscosity index of at least 50.
  • a method for avoiding excessive foaming in the saturation of moisture-containing fibrous material with asphalt at a temperature at which evaporation of moisture contained in said material normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing fibrous material to be saturated in a heated bath of an asphaltic material produced by reducing solvent tar derived from petroleum, which solvent tar has a vlscosity-gravity-constant of at least .890 to an asphalt having a hardness of at least about 5 F. (R. 81 B. soft point) greater viscosity-gravity-constant of at least .890 to an asphalt having a hardness of at'least about 5.
  • a method for avoiding excessive foaming in the saturation of moisture-containing fibrous material with asphalt at a temperature at which evaporation of moisture contained in said material normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing fibrous material to be saturated in a heated bath of an asphaltic'material produced by blowing a "Duo-Sol tar, having a viscosity-gravityconstant of at least .890 to an asphalt having a hardness of at least about 5 F. Re 8: 8. soft point) greater than that desired for the finished asphalt saturant, and cutting back the asphalt to desired saturant specifications by adding at least five percent of a less viscous oil thereto.

Description

Patented June 6,
UNITED V STATES PATENT} I 2 ,350,649 OFFICE METHOD FOR ASPHALT SATURATION New York No Drawing. Application July 2, 1941,
Serial No. 400,814
7 Claims. (01. 117.-168) This invention relatesto a non-foaming asphalt saturant and to the manufacture of that product.
In the manufacture of linoleum, waterproofing materials for the building trade, waterproofing packing materials, and similar fibrous materials, it has been customary to saturate burlap, and other fabrics, as well as paper, felt, and other fibrous materials, with melted bituminoussat-- urants. In modern plants this process is accomplished by pulling a continuous sheet of fabric or paper through a vat containing the hot asphalt. vThere is always some moisture present in the fabric and sheet paper which suddenly evaporates when the fabric or sheet paper is immersed in the asphalt bath which is at temperatures above the boiling point of water. Usually the temperatures of such asphalt baths are between 250 and 450 F.
The foaming of the asphalt associated with .the evaporation of water from the sheet is a highly undesirable feature both from the standpoint of efficiency of the plant and quality of the product.
It has been observed that asphalts derived from certain crudes produce a more tenacious foam while asphalts from selected crudes such as Mexican, produce a foam which subsides very quickly and does not cause vdifllculties in the process of saturation.
The methodof control of foaming characteristics of saturant asphalts presently used in the art is wholly one of control by selecting the source of crude from which the asphalt is produced, no method as yet havingbeen developed for producing non-foaming saturants from sources other than those wherein material of the grade desired is fortuitously endowed with the property.
This invention has for its object the provision of a non-foaming asphalt saturant and a method of producing that saturant, which is not restricted to the source materials formerly used. A
principal object of this invention is the production of high quality non-foaming asphalt saturants from materials not heretofore believed to be capable of producing such saturants.
Conventional methods of preparing satisfactory asphalt'saturants comprise'first selecting a suitable crude oil, say Mexican asphaltic crude,
and reducing it to the desired consistency by mm, and then cutting that base back to specification with a liquid or semi-liquid petroleum oil, which may be either a residual product or a distillate, it is possible to control the foaming characteristics of the asphalt saturant.
We can use as a raw material for the preparation of such a hard base any hydrocarbon residual product with a viscosity-gravity constant of .890 minimium. The conception of, V. G. C. for
expressing the naphthenicity, aromaticity or paraifinicity of the hydrocarbon fractions has been introduced by Hill & Coates in 1928 (see Industrial 8: Engineering Chemistry 1928, page 641) Solvent tars such as obtained from single and double solvent refining operations; pressure back to the form the finished saturant may be;
any oil of the following characteristics: Viscosity index, 50 minimum Viscosity from 40" Saybolt Universal 100 F.
to 4000" Saybolt Furol 210 F.-
In making the asphaltic base for the saturant, the base should be reduced to a softening point at least five degrees Fahrenheit, as expressed by the Ring and Ball A. s. T. M. method D36-26 above the specification desired for the final saturant.
The amount of cutback oil to be used may, of
course, vary, not-only with the physical characteristics of the cut-back oil itself, but also with the excess hardness of the asphalt base. In general, however, the blending and related figures may be described as falling within the following limits.
Degree of overblowing of asphaltic base 5 to 100' degrees F. v(It. 8: B.)
Physical characteristics of cutback oil "Viscosity 40" S. U. V. 100 to 40,000" S. U. V
210 F. 4 V. 1. --50 minimum. Percentage of cutback oil added, 5% to In order to give a clear idea of an acceptable asphalt saturant, the following is a typical specification as used in many industries.
Example Soft. point (R. 8; B.) ISO-160 F. Penetration:
@ 77/100/5 15-25 32/200/60 '5 115/50/5 max.
Foam break, seconds 420 max. (7 min) The roofing, linoleum and similar industries where asphalt'saturants are used, have adopted a practical laboratory test for the evaluation of asphalts from the standpoint of foaming characteristics. This test, while not endorsed by the American Society of Testing Materials, or any similar recognized organization, has found wide application in industrial laboratories. This test can be described. as follows:
250 grams of asphalt are weighed into a 1000 cc. high type glass beaker and heated to 400 F. on an oil bath. The level of the oil bath should. be below the level of the asphalt and care should be taken that the oil levelnever rises above the level of the asphalt. An oil bath temperature of about 435 F. should maintain the proper asphalt temperature but this will have to be determined for the particular apparatus as no thermometer should be in the asphalt during the test.
Using a 3" x 12" piece of 40-point feltplace 0.25 cc. of water on each side not more than one saturant prepared from Mexican crude and meeting the above specifications previously given.
Column 2 represents an asphalt saturant prepared by blowing a 50/50 blend of Duo-Sol tar and a straight run residuum from 2. Coastal crude. This material is unsatisfactory with respect to foaming characteristics.
Column 3 represents a material produced by blending 74% of Duo-Sol tar blown to 180 softeningpoint and cut back with 26% of the same straight run residuum from a Coastal crude as in column 2. This material is equivalent to that represented by column 1.
Column 4 represents an asphalt saturant produced by steam refining (vacuum distilling) Duo- Table II D. S. tar/coastal Bl. D. S. tar St. Ref. D. S. tar s g residuum blown +coastal +coastal m after mix residuum residuum MP (R. and 13. .F 150 153 152 150. 5 Penetration:
A 11 a0 11 15 7 9 8 6 74 63 67 75 3 2,! W 48!! 4! 6! 25!! inch from one end. Allow the water to soak in -one minute, then submerge the wet end of the felt in the asphalt and hold '15 sec. Remove the felt and note the time for the first break of bubbles to give a clear surface. As the foam breaks there will finally be ,a single layer of bubbles on the surface, then suddenly this layer will break revealing the surface of the asphalt. This is the end point.
Inasmuch as the results of the foaming test are expressed interms of time necessary for the foaming to subside. a '7 minute asphalt would indicate a saturant with considerably poorer foaming characteristics than a 3 minute asphalt. A 3 minute asphalt may be considered as an example of anexcellent non-foaming saturant, and 4-5 minute as good; and above 9 unsatisfactory.
In order to show results of compounding asphalt saturants as taught herein in comparison with other methods, the following data is given, in which a solvent tar derived from a Duo-Sol or counter-current propane-cresylic acid solvent treatment of a long residuum from mixed base crude was used, together with a straight run Coastal residuum. These starting materials had the following properties:
The following table includes the physical char- 'acteristicof four asphalt saturants.
Column one represents a conventional asphalt Composition Foam 01% 158.5 F. soft point blown Duosol tar.
9'7 residual Coastal oil...
37 196 F. soft point blown Duosol tar" 03 a 129 F. soft point steam refined asphalt from 'Ialco crude.
}6 min. 23 sec. }7 min.
Itwill be noted that these represent saturants with foaming "characteristics which are acceptable, though not highly satisfactory. In other words, they illustrate approaches to the previously mentioned limits of blending. In Example A, almost the minimum of cutback that can be used is illustrated and in B, the maximum is similarly illustrated. Obviously as more cutback is used, it must itself be more nearly of the desired saturant specification as to soft point, and if used to excess, its character predominates, and the mixture becomes merely the non-satisfactory foaming saturant produced from ill-chosen starting materials by the prior art.
We claim:
1. A method for avoiding excessive foaming in the saturation of moisture-containing fibrous material with asphalt at a temperature at which evaporation of moisture contained in said material normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing'fibrous material to be saturated in a heated bath of an asphaltic material produced by re-- ducing a petroleum fraction having a viscosity-,
gravity-constant of at least .890 to an asphalt having a hardness of at least about-5 I". (R. I: B. soft point) greater than that desired for the finished saturant, and cutting the asphalt back to desired saturant specifications with a less viaevaporation of moisture contained in said macous oil having a viscosity index of at least -50.-
2. A method for avoiding excessive foaming in the saturation of moisture-containing fibrous material with asphalt at a temperature at which evaporation of moisture contained in said material normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing fibrous material to be saturated in a heated bath of an asphaltic material produced by reducing a petroleum fraction having a viscosity-gravityconstant of at least .890 to an asphalt having a hardness of at least about 5 F. (R. I: B. soft terial normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing fibrous material to'be saturated in' a heatebath of an asphaltic material produced by reducing a residual petroleum fraction havingwa point) greater than that desired for the finished saturant, and cutting the asphalt back to desired saturant specifications by blending from 95 to 25 parts of the asphalt with from 5 to '15 parts of a less viscous oil having a viscosity index of at least 50.
3. A method for avoiding excessive foaming in the saturation of moisture-containing fibrous material with asphalt at a temperature at which evaporation of moisture contained in said material normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing fibrous material to be saturated in a heated bath of an asphaltic material produced by reducing solvent tar derived from petroleum, which solvent tar has a vlscosity-gravity-constant of at least .890 to an asphalt having a hardness of at least about 5 F. (R. 81 B. soft point) greater viscosity-gravity-constant of at least .890 to an asphalt having a hardness of at'least about 5.
F. (R... 8: B. soft point) greater than that desired for the finished saturant, and cutting the asphalt back to desired saturant specifications with a less viscous oil having a viscosity index of at least --50.
5. A method for avoiding excessive foaming in the saturation of moisture-containing fibrous material with asphalt at a temperature at which evaporation of moisture contained in said material normally tends to produce excessive foaming comprising submerging a moisture-containing fibrous material to be saturated in a heated bath of an asphaltic'material produced by blowing a "Duo-Sol tar, having a viscosity-gravityconstant of at least .890 to an asphalt having a hardness of at least about 5 F. Re 8: 8. soft point) greater than that desired for the finished asphalt saturant, and cutting back the asphalt to desired saturant specifications by adding at least five percent of a less viscous oil thereto.
. v WALLACE E. SPELSHOUSE.
ARTHUR H. BOENAU.
US400814A 1941-07-02 1941-07-02 Method for asphalt saturation Expired - Lifetime US2350649A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US400814A US2350649A (en) 1941-07-02 1941-07-02 Method for asphalt saturation

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US400814A US2350649A (en) 1941-07-02 1941-07-02 Method for asphalt saturation

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2350649A true US2350649A (en) 1944-06-06

Family

ID=23585139

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US400814A Expired - Lifetime US2350649A (en) 1941-07-02 1941-07-02 Method for asphalt saturation

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2350649A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2581685A (en) * 1948-06-16 1952-01-08 The Texas Co. Impregnation of absorbent material
US2923638A (en) * 1956-05-14 1960-02-02 Monsanto Chemicals Asphalt adhesive composition

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2581685A (en) * 1948-06-16 1952-01-08 The Texas Co. Impregnation of absorbent material
US2923638A (en) * 1956-05-14 1960-02-02 Monsanto Chemicals Asphalt adhesive composition

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2450756A (en) Air-blown asphalt and catalytic preparation thereof
US4211575A (en) Asphalt-sulfur emulsion composition
US2691621A (en) Improved asphalt compositions and method of producing same
US2317150A (en) Asphalt manufacture
US2855319A (en) Asphaltic paving composition
US4256506A (en) Asphalt composition for asphalt recycle
US3194846A (en) Stabilized chlorinated paraffin wax
US2350649A (en) Method for asphalt saturation
US4554023A (en) Modified asphalt
US2661301A (en) Compositions comprising bentoniteorganic amine compounds in asphalts, tars, or pitches
DE2112773A1 (en) Process for the production of bituminous mixtures
US2028922A (en) Process of making asphalt
US2481370A (en) Bitumen coated surface and method of making
US2131085A (en) Bituminous cement
US2904494A (en) Process for the preparation of age resistant asphalt compositions
US3607334A (en) Compositions containing asphalt and second pass foots oil
US2802798A (en) High grade paving asphalt and method of making same
US3272690A (en) Method of improving the wet strength of paper by addition of ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer thereto
US3372045A (en) Asphalt compositions and process for preparing same
US3782988A (en) Asphaltic coatings
US2524644A (en) Method of preparing molding bituminous material and product thereof
US2144694A (en) Asphaltic product and method of producing same
US2761823A (en) Ductile asphalt composition
US2453094A (en) Oxidized asphalt product and method of making same
US2069927A (en) Compositions of matter