海角社区app

海角社区app

Fri September 20 2024

Related Information

Five products to transform highway maintenance

31 Jul 14 Will Mann examines new, or new-ish, products and techniques in road surfacing.

Porous paving materials have struggled to find favour in the UK
Porous paving materials have struggled to find favour in the UK

1. Low temperature asphalt

Low temperature asphalt is acclaimed for many reasons 鈥 efficiency, speed, cost, sustainability and working conditions. Lafarge Tarmac reckons the product could bring 拢46.2m in energy cost-savings over 10 years, cutting carbon emissions by 39%. It is also more efficient. Brian Kent, national technical director at Lafarge Tarmac, says: 鈥淭he job doesn鈥檛 take as long, because the material doesn鈥檛 have to cool down as much. On a typical Highways Agency night shift, around 250 tonnes would be laid. We reckon you could lay an extra 50 tonnes a night with low temperature asphalt, so in a 14-day contract, you could take a day off in terms of time. That also means less public disruption.

鈥淭he product means no changes in terms of the construction process, but with less fumes, there is a more pleasant working environment.鈥

Following a demonstration in Leicestershire for the Highways Agency, Lafarge Tarmac is waiting for the green light.

2. Rubberised asphalt

The use of recycled rubber in asphalt is untried in the UK but growing in use in North America.

Paving Pellets, a product aimed at the UK market by manufacturer Billian, is a rubber modifier that aims to be a sustainable alternative to polymer-modified binders.

Rubber modifiers do not store well when blended with bitumen, but Paving Pellets has developed a patented process which allows the product to be cooled down and used whenever required.

鈥淪tudies in the USA indicate that rubber has a beneficial effect when mixed with other products, including recycled materials,鈥 explains Billian owner Harry Pearl. The firm has since developed a 100% recycled mix, and a purpose built machine 鈥 the Roadmender 鈥 which can hold 250kg. Pearl describes it as 鈥渋deal for pothole patching鈥.

3. Bitumen rejuvenators

Considerable progress has been made in techniques for the removal and processing of asphalt for recycling. However, reuse of waste asphalt is hampered by contaminants from products the material will have come into contract with in its 鈥榩revious life鈥, including oils, resins and road markings.

Related Information

By adding rejuvenators - typically oil or wax - to the old or contaminated asphalt, the 鈥榓ging effect鈥 of the recycled asphalt can effectively be reversed. As well as a beneficial effect on the bitumen, the binder properties are also improved.

Rejuvenators are typically used with bitumen on footpaths, cycle ways and for minor highway repairs.

4. Bauxite anti-skid surfacing

Anti-skid products typically last two to four years, and are expensive. Lafarge Tarmac claims its Ulticolour Bauxite can last for 10 to 12 years, while achieving comparable properties to other anti-skid products. 鈥淲e use a clear, and very strong, polymer binder, with bauxite aggregate (an aluminium ore),鈥 explains Lafarge Tarmac鈥檚 Brian Kent. 鈥淚t offers improved whole life costs, avoids resurfacing delays, and reduces the risk of accidents and legal claims.鈥 He adds that the firm is currently trialling the product with Leicestershire County Council, with a view to getting further performance data, and is also in discussion with the M25 maintenance team over trialling the product on the orbital motorway.

5. Porous asphalt

Urban roads in Germany and the Netherlands now use a modified 鈥榩orous鈥 asphalt mix, which provides approximately 12% surface air voids. This can significantly reduce traffic noise, says a spokesperson for the Highways Term Maintenance Association (HTMA). The nominal size is 8mm and the mixture is bound by a polymer modified binder.

According to the HTMA, the UK industry 鈥渄oes not appear to favour such a material, with concerns over the ability of the material to 鈥榮elf-clean鈥 under the action of HGV traffic. There is the perception that the increased void content will lead to premature oxidation and consequent failure of the binder鈥. However, the trade body would like to see more trials of such materials.

This article first appeared in the July 2014 issue of 海角社区app magazine, which can be viewed in full at:

While the magazine is free to view online, a subscription is required to receive you own hard copy every month. This can be purchased for just 拢35 a year at

Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk

MPU
MPU

Click here to view latest construction news »