Optical second harmonic generation in bitumen films

Date

2012-12

Authors

Roberts, Aaron Joseph

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Abstract

The ability of asphalt binders (bitumen) in road surfaces to self-heal after cracking is important to developing a robust transportation system that can tolerate heavy traffic and varying weather conditions. In order to develop improved binders, there is a need for noninvasive, in-situ, interface-specific methods of monitoring the kinetics, physics and chemistry of self-healing bitumen interfaces. Here the feasibility of using optical second-harmonic generation (SHG) by focused femtosecond laser pulses to monitor bitumen surfaces is demonstrated. SHG signals are observed in transmission through a sample composed of bitumen spin-coated onto a borosilicate microscope coverslip. The SHG signals are absent from uncoated coverslips, demonstrating that they originate from the bitumen layer. Further tests demonstrate that the bitumen-air surface makes the dominant contribution to the SHG signal. The SHG signal is observed to decay on a time scale comparable to typical self-healing times because of sample heating by the incident laser irradiation. Methods to control this effect by translating the sample during data acquisition are developed. Although the present results were obtained with a single incident wavelength (800 nm), they demonstrate the feasibility of probing bitumen interfaces spectroscopically with tunable light sources in order to monitor bond-specific chemical kinetics.

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