With the shortage of natural aggregates and the massive accumulation of iron tailings (ITs) solid waste restricting the sustainable development of asphalt pavement engineering, replacing natural aggregates with ITs has become a promising low-carbon solution with prominent economic and social benefits. However, the poor interfacial adhesion between ITs and asphalt severely restricts the engineering application of tailings, and the micro-interaction mechanism at their interface still lacks systematic clarification, which is the key research gap addressed in this work. Different from conventional macro road performance tests, this study innovatively combined molecular dynamics (MD) simulation with microscopic characterization, including Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and atomic force microscopy (AFM), to comprehensively reveal the interfacial interaction mechanism between ITs and asphalt at the molecular and microscales. The results indicate that asphalt molecules exhibit higher aggregation concentration and diffusivity on Al2O3 and Fe2O3 surfaces than on SiO2 surfaces, proving stronger interfacial interaction between asphalt and iron-rich oxide minerals. Moderate temperature optimizes the adhesion performance of asphalt with Al2O3 and Fe2O3, while the interfacial bonding of asphalt on CaCO3 and SiO2 weakens as temperature rises. The silane coupling agent KH-550 can effectively react with acidic minerals, SiO2 minerals in ITs, which significantly increases the concentration, diffusion coefficient, and distribution uniformity of asphalt molecules at the interface. FT-IR results verify that the combination of ITs and asphalt mainly relies on physical adsorption without generating new chemical bonds. AFM tests further confirm that alkaline minerals improve the surface roughness of asphalt mastic, and KH-550 greatly enhances the micro-adhesion force of the interface. The novelty of this work lies in clarifying the mechanism of typical mineral components in ITs and revealing the modification enhancement law of silane coupling agent and alkali minerals at the micro level. This study provides a scientific theoretical support for the high-value engineering utilization of ITs in asphalt pavement, and offers a reference for optimizing the interfacial modification design of solid waste aggregate.
Cui et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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