Skip to main content

Lime in asphalt for longer road life

Hydrated lime acts as an anti-stripping additive, helping the bitumen binder to adhere to the aggregate.
By MJ Woof December 10, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Hydrated lime has been used in the asphalts designed for UK and international airport runways for decades and it is already a permitted, multi-functional additive in the UK’s National Highways asphalt specifications (image © Daniel Kirkegaard Mouritsen/Dreamstime)

Using hydrated lime in asphalt mixes could boost road surface life, according to European research. Adding hydrated lime can benefit the asphalt in numerous ways, helping to improve the climate resilience of asphalt infrastructure according to research from the EU and the US.

Hydrated lime acts as an ‘anti-stripping’ additive, helping the bitumen binder to adhere to the aggregate. It also helps reducing bitumen hardening with age and increasing moisture resistance. At the same time it stiffens the bitumen to reduce rutting, and improves resistance to fracture growth at low temperatures.

Research suggests that adding less than 2% of hydrated lime in the mix could boost asphalt life by up to 25%. This would reduce road wear and extend maintenance intervals, leading to fewer potholes and roadworks.

Hydrated lime has been specified widely particularly in the US for many years as an anti-stripping additive and there, and elsewhere, to increase moisture resistance of asphalts. There’s also proven evidence that it can reduce asphalt ageing by lowering the oxidation of the bitumen binder.

Hydrated lime has been used in the asphalts designed for UK and international airport runways for decades and it is already a permitted, multi-functional additive in the UK’s National Highways asphalt specifications and is in the register of durability improvement options towards achieving their zero carbon target.

Across Europe and the US hydrated lime is used frequently in asphalt and, in some locations, is compulsory because of the durability and performance improvement delivering resilient roads.

Research by the University of Nottingham shows how hydrated lime additions absorb unwanted carbonyls and asphaltenes within bitumen. Adding hydrated lime means that, with ageing, there are fewer oxidative reactions that cause bitumen to become stiffer, more brittle and lead to cracking and deterioration of roads, and development of potholes.

The study compared the performance of mastics containing hydrated lime to those made with granite or limestone fillers alone, and found that in all cases the hydrated lime made the asphalt softer after ageing – or less stiff – than its counterparts with standard filler alone.

Other researchers are now observing a long-term case study on asphalt that was laid on a stretch of the A38 near Burlescombe in Devon in 2021.

Related Content

  • UK universities' research shows potholes can be fixed better
    February 14, 2013
    Academic research by two UK universities shows that patch repairs on potholes could be far more durable if a few simple techniques were consistently used. An initial study - undertaken by Nottingham Trent University and the University of Nottingham in central England– found that the application of a coat of bitumen emulsion between two layers of asphalt in a clean, dry repair, greatly improved its resistance to further cracks. It was also confirmed that a hot mix repair – in which asphalt is heated to 140°C
  • Bitumen technology: counting carbon emissions from road works
    March 13, 2024
    This month we look at accurate carbon counting, a biobinder that does not come at a premium and efforts to increase recycled content - Kristina Smith reports
  • Advances in bitumen technology: new applications
    February 16, 2022
    This month, we look at four very different pavement technologies in four very different applications
  • Latest bitumen mixes improve roads, reduce noise
    February 14, 2012
    Special bitumen mixes and machines are capable of improving the service life of roads and reducing noise. Mike Woof and Patrick Smith report. The need to improve traffic flow in an important part of the City of Poznan, Poland, led to the decision to build a new 1.13km long dual carriageway.