Oil-in-water bitumen emulsions stabilized by biobased surfactants such as lignin are in
line with the current sustainable approaches of the asphalt industry involving bitumen emulsions for
reduced temperature asphalt technologies. With this aim, three lignins, derived from the kraft pulping
and bioethanol industries, were chemically modified via the Mannich reaction to be used as cationic
emulsifiers. A comprehensive chemical characterization was conducted on raw lignin-rich products,
showing that the kraft sample presents a higher lignin concentration and lower molecular weight.
Instead, bioethanol-derived samples, with characteristics of non-woody lignins, present a high
concentration of carbohydrate residues and ashes. Lignin amination was performed at pH = 10 and 13,
using tetraethylene pentamine and formaldehyde as reagents at three different stoichiometric molar
ratios. The emulsification ability of such cationic surfactants was firstly studied on prototype silicone
oil-in-water emulsions, attending to their droplet size distribution and viscous behavior. Among the
synthetized surfactants, cationic kraft lignin has shown the best emulsification performance, being
used for the development of bitumen emulsions. In this regard, cationic kraft lignin has successfully
stabilized oil-in-water emulsions containing 60% bitumen using small surfactant concentrations,
between 0.25 and 0.75%, which was obtained at pH = 13 and reagent molar ratios between 1/7/7 and
1/28/28 (lignin/tetraethylene pentamine/formaldehyde)