Skip to main content

Phoenix’s new pellets save money and use less asphalt

Phoenix Industries, which specialises in products made from recycled rubber tyres, unveiled a new type of rubber pellet at Conexpo called PelletPAVE Plus, designed to allow less virgin asphalt to be used when preparing a mix. “This new product decreases the amount of asphalt you need in your mix by up to 0.5%,” said Serji Amirkhanian, director of research and development for Phoenix Industries. Amirkhanian has been researching the use of recycled rubber in asphalt mixes for more than 25 years.
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
302 Phoenix Industries, which specialises in products made from recycled rubber tyres, unveiled a new type of rubber pellet at Conexpo called PelletPAVE Plus, designed to allow less virgin asphalt to be used when preparing a mix.

“This new product decreases the amount of asphalt you need in your mix by up to 0.5%,” said Serji Amirkhanian, director of research and development for Phoenix Industries. Amirkhanian has been researching the use of recycled rubber in asphalt mixes for more than 25 years.

The process brings substantial cost savings too, and mixes produced using the rubber pellets can result in asphalt with similar properties to polymer modified asphalt. The main difference between Phoenix Industries’ standard pellets and PelletPAVE Plus pellets is the proportion of rubber: around 18% in standard ones and 50% in PelletPAVE Plus.

Phoenix Industries grinds up between two and there million tyre trucks every year, blending the rubber granules with asphalt, hydrated lime and additives to create the pellets at its Las Vegas manufacturing facility.

The pellets can then be transported and stored dry and added to any asphalt plant without modification … the only change in process required is that the aggregate is heated to around 20 degrees higher than for a standard mix.

Phoenix came up with the concept of pellets around five years ago, said Amirkhanian, and started producing them commercially two years ago. The firm recently signed a Deal with UK firm Billian to manufacture there.
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 12812 0 oLinkExternal www.phoenixindustries.com Visit Phoenix Industries LLC Website false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12812 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Phoenix’s new pellets save money and use less asphalt
    March 11, 2014
    Phoenix Industries, which specialises in products made from recycled rubber tyres, unveiled a new type of rubber pellet at Conexpo called PelletPAVE Plus, designed to allow less virgin asphalt to be used when preparing a mix. “This new product decreases the amount of asphalt you need in your mix by up to 0.5%,” said Serji Amirkhanian, director of research and development for Phoenix Industries. Amirkhanian has been researching the use of recycled rubber in asphalt mixes for more than 25 years.
  • From rubber to nanotechnology, new additives give longer life
    March 12, 2014
    This month: rubber comes to the rescue for cash-strapped UK authorities and Italian towns plagued by road noise; Japanese nanotechnology fights monsoon damage in India; and a new research programme promises to help define whether ‘sustainable’ bitumen technologies really live up to their billing - Kristina Smith writes A new venture in the UK aims to encourage the use of recycled tyres in road pavements. Billian UK is now manufacturing GTR Pellets which combine bitumen, ground tyre rubber (GTR) and miner
  • Advances in bitumen technology will boost surface wear life and quality
    September 19, 2012
    From chip fat to banana bags, the race is on to find new bitumen additives which will solve two problems with one solution: replace diminishing petrochemical-based products and make use from waste rather than landfilling it - Kristina Smith reports It is not just the desire to preserve our environment which is driving the industry’s search for products which don’t eat up raw materials. The hunger of emerging economies – particularly China – mean that resources can be hard to come by, so it makes sense for s
  • Bauma exhibit of model of Astec’s M-Pack asphalt facility
    February 28, 2013
    Astec, an Astec Industries company, and one of North America’s leading manufacturers of state-of-the-art asphalt plants, will exhibit as part of the Astec Industries stand. On display will be a one-eighth scale model of a complete Astec M-Pack relocatable asphalt facility. Since its debut at ConExpo 2005, the award-winning Astec model has garnered acclaim by putting an entire asphalt plant on a human scale with remarkable attention to detail. “The innovative M-Pack facility features the Astec exclusive Doub