Skip to main content

Further bio-binder trials for the UK

Further trials of biogenic binders are being carried out on UK roads.
By MJ Woof October 15, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The latest trials are on the A2 near the city of Canterbury and A34 near the down of Newbury in England

In England, National Highways has extended trials of biogenic binders to include warm mix asphalt and up to 30% reclaimed asphalt.

Heidelberg Materials and the AtkinsRéalis Jacobs Joint Venture have partnered with National Highways for the trials carried out on the A2 and A34 highways. The companies said that the trial sections will be monitored to review performance and whole-life carbon reduction.

The trials of bio-binders, warm mix asphalt (WMA) and recycled material will help ensure compliance with National Highways’ Works Clause 942 specification for thin surface courses.

Heidelberg Materials has used its CarbonLock asphalt containing polymer modified bitumen (PMB) bio-binders, produced as both hot mix and warm mix asphalts. They contain up to 30% reclaimed asphalt to test the feasibility of various configurations.

Bio-binders contain natural biogenic material, which absorbs and stores CO₂, even when the asphalt is recycled. In addition, the PMB binder used in the trials is expected to boost durability and extend the life of the asphalt, reducing maintenance frequency.

The latest trials are on the A2 near Canterbury and A34 near Newbury. On the A2, four sections were carried out as part of the National Highways – A2 Kingston Scheme. The A2 trials used more than 1,500tonnes – and the A34 around 500tonnes – of CarbonLock asphalt, reducing the carbon emissions associated with the asphalt by around 26%.

The A34 trials, carried out as part of the National Highways A34 SB South Isley to Beedon Scheme, replicated the A2 section works but added a fifth trial section: CarbonLock PMB asphalt containing 30% reclaimed asphalt produced as WMA.

The work was coordinated by the AtkinsRéalis Jacobs joint venture as part of the National Highways research project Future Asphalt Surface Course Linking to NH Net Zero under SPaTS 2. The trial sections are undergoing laboratory testing and are being monitored to see how they compare with standard PMB asphalt used in the control sections in terms of performance and whole-life carbon reduction.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Warm mix asphalt offers green solution
    September 4, 2019
    A new report from the UK highlights that utilising warm mix asphalt (WMA) can help cut CO2 emissions. The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Highways has issued a report highlighting how the use of WMA can reduce carbon emissions and improve efficiencies on highways projects. WMAs are manufactured and laid at lower temperatures than traditional asphalts, using less energy and delivering carbon savings without compromising performance. Their use can reduce CO2 emissions associated with asphalt production for
  • Road recycling train from Wirtgen in Nigeria
    March 9, 2022
    The Wirtgen Group has worked with Julius Berger Nigeria (JBN) in Nigeria to deliver a landmark project
  • Rubber recycling for South African roads
    November 5, 2012
    South Africa takes crumb rubber use to the next level - *Anders Marschall Jensen The preservation of the environment is a global concept, and in the road construction industry, it is all about preservation of roads. In earlier days, roads were built with the primary goal of moving passenger traffic from one place to another, but these days, roads are very different. Not only is there passenger traffic, and more of it, but roads must also deal with extensive movement of products in heavy vehicles. Therefore,
  • Asphalt and bitumen - testing for performance
    February 29, 2012
    The stresses placed on modern asphalt and bitumen means that specialist equipment is essential to make sure performance specifications are met. As road traffic increases at a rapid pace and road safety becomes a priority issue, asphalt is put under increasingly higher stresses. For example, road surfaces are subject to compression, flexural tensions and tangential stresses: internal friction, depending on the aggregates, and the cohesion, guaranteed by bitumen's composition, are the two main properties whic