Skip to main content

Magic microcapsules could prevent potholes

A UK university has started research on using solar-to-ground heat exchange to prevent freeze-thaw damage to roads.
By Kristina Smith December 4, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Upheaval for the road pavement sector: could freeze-thaw damage be avoided using solar-to-ground heat exchange technology? (image © Ints VikmanisDreamstime)

A five-year research programme led by Benyi Cao, a lecturer in civil and environmental engineering at the University of Surrey, aims to unlock a cost-effective way of using solar-to-ground heat exchange to prevent freeze-thaw damage of road pavements.

Freeze-thaw action is one of the main causes of potholes in the UK, explained Cao, alongside traffic loads and water. By preventing the road temperature falling below zero, roads would last longer, reducing the cost and carbon emissions due to maintenance works and improving road safety.

“There were 5,000 pothole-related injuries over the past five years,” said Cao.

The £80,000 project, 80% funded by the Royal Academy of Engineering and 20% by Surrey University, will boost the heat-storing potential of soil beneath or beside the roads using special microcapsules under development by advanced engineering materials company Versarien. “Soil does not naturally have enough heat storage capacity which is why we want to introduce the capsules to increase it."

The capsules will consist of an inner core of a phase change material (PCM), a substance, such as paraffin, which releases or stores a huge amount of energy as it changes phase between liquid and solid. This will be surrounded by a polymer and coated in graphene which has a high thermal conduction capacity. Versarien will be developing the capsules with Cambridge University, where Cao previously worked extensively on microcapsule technology.

The system would see a network of pipes, with water running through them, installed in the road layer beneath the surface. These would be connected to a network of storage pipes in the sub-grade of the road. In the summer, heat would be taken away from the road in and stored in the ground so that in the winter, it could be reversed to prevent the road pavement from freezing.

Initially, the system could be used with a heat pump, to boost the temperature of the warmer water in the winter. Or it may even be possible to run the system without a heat pump, said Cao, which would be a far more cost-effective solution.

The development of the microcapsules is already underway, together with the start of numerical modelling to simulate the mechanical performance of the road with heating. The next step will be to install a test system on the University of Surrey campus, with a location already earmarked. National Highways will then trial it somewhere on the strategic road network.

Related Content

  • Bitumen technology: from potholes to PMB plants
    November 21, 2014
    This month we look at how warm mix is helping to pave dirt roads, a new way to tackle potholes, and bring news of a new distribution centre for the UK - Kristina Smith reports The creation of a new mix design, incorporating MWV’s warm mix additive Evotherm, is providing cost-effective solutions for dirt roads in the US’s Charleston County. The first stretch to be paved with the new porous paving in April this year, Joseph White Road in the town of Adams Run, resulted in the estimated US$1.1 million construc
  • Zero emissions cement
    May 10, 2023
    An innovative zero emissions cement trial is starting in the UK, with the aim of developing net zero cement for the global construction industry
  • Long life pavements trials
    July 6, 2012
    Seven countries have confirmed their participation in field trials for the proposed third phase of the Long Life Pavement Project, being operated under the auspices of the OECD (Organisation for Economic Development and Cooperation) and International Transport Forum (ITF).
  • Improving road asset monitoring with TRL
    September 24, 2023

    TRL Software has rolled out a new digital pavement asset management system for National Highways (NH) called P-AMS. The new P-AMS system is a customised for NH version of TRL Software's cloud-based digital product iROADS, which is a commercially available off-the-shelf platform designed for various infrastructure assets.