While there is undoubtedly much yet to learn, even by the experts, in the matter of the materials to be used, a quite satisfactory working basis has been arrived at, particularly as to the practical side of the work, and a large mass of data accumulated by study and experience is available to the municipal engineer, and the services of independent experts is readily obtainable. There is no longer any good reason, therefore, why the character of the materials to be used, the methods followed, and the quality of the work secured should not be quite definitely and fully specified in the same manner and to the same extent as in the case of other kinds of pavement and with equally satisfactory results.
SPECIFICATIONS
42. General.—Asphalt pavement surface shall be laid upon a foundation of hydraulic cement concrete, or of stone blocks relaid, over a sub-grade, to be constructed in accordance with Articles 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36 and 37.
Asphalt pavement surface shall be constructed in two courses, called the base-course and the surface-course. The base-course may be from one (1) inch to one and one-half (1½) inches thick, and the surface-course may be from one (1) inch to two (2) inches thick, as shall be hereafter specified.
43. Crude Asphalt.—The cementing element in asphalt pavements shall be prepared from crude native, solid asphalts or from the proper distillation of crude asphaltic oils.
Crude asphalts as obtained from the mines or natural deposits shall be properly refined to drive off water and to separate foreign substances, by melting at a temperature not exceeding four hundred and fifty degrees F. (450° F.). Crude asphalts of the quality commonly called “glance pitch” or “iron pitch” which do not distinctly soften at a temperature of two hundred degrees F. (200° F.), and detached or deteriorated material from deposits otherwise acceptable will be rejected.
44. Refined Asphalt.—Refined asphalt produced from native crude asphalt shall be free from water and shall not contain an injurious quantity of light oils or foreign matter. It shall not contain more than four per cent. (4%) of organic matter nor more than thirty-six per cent. (36%) of inorganic matter other than bitumen, and not more than eighteen per cent. (18%) of fixed carbon, and not less than fifty-five per cent. (55%) of bitumen soluble in cold carbon di-sulphide. Of the bitumen soluble in carbon di-sulphide not less than sixty-three per cent. (63%) shall be soluble in Pennsylvania petroleum naphtha of specific gravity eighty-eight (88) degrees Baume at a temperature of sixty-five degrees Fahrenheit (65° F.) and not less than ninety-eight per cent. (98%) shall be soluble in chemically pure carbon tetra-chloride. When exposed for seven hours to a temperature of three hundred and twenty-five degrees F. (325° F.) in a shallow dish the bottom of which is covered with bitumen to a depth of three-fourths (¾) inch, the refined asphalt shall not lose more than five per cent. (5%) by evaporation.
Asphalts that are injuriously affected, in the pavement, by water (to be determined by the test immediately hereinafter described), shall not be used except under the conditions specified in Section 45. Cylinders made from the surface mixture it is proposed to use, one (1) inch in diameter and two (2) inches long, compressed to a density of two and one-tenth (2.1), when immersed forty-five (45) days in ten (10) times their volume of rain-water, shall retain a sound surface, unchanged and uncorroded by the action of the water.
Refined asphalts resulting from the distillation of crude asphaltic oils will not be accepted unless the distillation shall have been effected by the use of suitable apparatus, at a temperature not exceeding seven hundred (700) degrees F. The bitumen must not be over-distilled and “cut back” by adding oil. The product, to be acceptable, shall possess the following qualities: It shall melt and flow at a temperature not below one hundred and forty (140) degrees F., but below a temperature of one hundred and eighty (180) degrees F., and when tested in the standard New York State closed oil-testing apparatus shall not flash at a temperature below four hundred and fifty (450) degrees F. When exposed in a shallow dish, the bottom of which is covered to a depth of three-fourths (¾) inch with the bitumen, to a temperature of four hundred (400) degrees F., for seven (7) hours, it shall not lose by evaporation more than seven (7) per cent. by weight. Not less than ninety-eight (98) per cent. shall be soluble in cold carbon di-sulphide, and not less than sixty-five (65) per cent., nor more than seventy-five (75) per cent. of the bitumen shall be soluble in cold Pennsylvania naphtha of gravity eighty-eight (88) degrees Baume. Not less than ninety-nine (99) per cent. of the bitumen shall be soluble in carbon tetra-chloride, and it shall not contain more than sixteen (16) per cent. of fixed carbon.[[15]]
Bitumens resulting from destructive distillation or from artificial oxidation, and bituminous compounds prepared from oil or oil residuums heated with sulphur or other substances, or coal or gas tars, will not be accepted, nor shall they be mixed with the asphalt used.[[16]]