Use of Crude Palm Oil in Warm Mix Asphalt to Mitigate Temperature Effects

Authors

  • Alan Garcia Mendoza Universidad Nacional De Barranca: Barranca, Pe
  • Luis Alex Alzamora de los Godos Urcia Pontificia Universidad Católica Del Perú - (Pe)
  • Jully Pahola Calderón Saldaña Universidad De San Martín De Porres - (Pe)
  • Fiorella Sthefany Valladolid Marcos Universidad Norbert Wiener - (Pe)
  • Javier Alejandro Pineda Medina Pontificia Universidad Católica Del Perú - (Pe)
  • Juan Godoy Caso Universidad César Vallejo - (Pe)
  • Rodolfo Arévalo Marcos Universidad Norbert Wiener - (Pe)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18687/LACCEI2025.1.1.1704

Keywords:

Crude palm oil, warm asphalt mix, temperature mitigation, Marshall test.

Abstract

This study aimed to determine the optimal percentage of crude palm oil in asphalt mixtures during production to mitigate temperature effects, using the Marshall test conducted in 2021. The research employed a deductive, quantitative approach with a retrolective and longitudinal data collection process within an experimental design framework. The findings indicate that conventional asphalt exhibits the highest specific gravity, but as the proportion of crude palm oil increases, specific gravity also rises. Regarding air voids, the null hypothesis was accepted, signifying that palm oil incorporation did not cause statistically significant variations in void content. A similar trend was observed in flow measurements, where no substantial differences were detected across experimental groups. Furthermore, the study revealed that the most significant number of air voids occurred at 1% and 1.5% palm oil concentrations, although these values did not differ markedly from other tested formulations. The highest flow values corresponded to conventional asphalt, but an increase in palm oil concentration led to a proportional rise in flow. However, the corrected stability of the asphalt mixture decreased as the palm oil content increased, with conventional asphalt demonstrating the highest stability. Additionally, the stiffness index followed a declining trend as palm oil concentration rose, indicating a reduction in the mixture’s structural rigidity.

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Published

2025-04-09

How to Cite

Garcia Mendoza, A., Alzamora de los Godos Urcia, L. A., Calderón Saldaña, J. P., Valladolid Marcos, F. S., Pineda Medina, J. A., Godoy Caso, J., & Arévalo Marcos, R. (2025). Use of Crude Palm Oil in Warm Mix Asphalt to Mitigate Temperature Effects. LACCEI, 1(12). https://doi.org/10.18687/LACCEI2025.1.1.1704

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