Skip to main content

Reduced-temperature asphalt

Asphalt plant maker Benninghoven is preparing itself for a future trend, with an industry moving towards the greater use of reduced-temperature asphalt. This type of mix offers a substantial energy reduction, lowering costs.
October 13, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Reduced-temperature asphalt can help the construction industry meet sustainability targets

The production of reduced-temperature asphalt, which is also known as low-temperature asphalt, warm asphalt or warm mix, is nothing new. The process was already tested back in the 1990s. But now that road construction authorities are also focusing on issues such as CO2 balance, protecting resources and reducing the energy input, reduced-temperature asphalt has once again come to the fore.

According to Benninghoven, asphalt mixing plants from the firm are in use all over the world and are providing customers with high-quality mix and cost-effective operation as well as low emissions, and meeting stringent health and safety requirements.

Reduced-temperature asphalt is a mixture produced at temperatures between 110°C and 130°C. By comparison, hot asphalt is typically produced between 140°C and 180°C, usually with bitumen at 160°C as a binder. One advantage of the reduced-temperature mixtures is that they can be conveniently produced and processed in the conventional manner.

The bitumen requires a temperature of at least around 140°C to achieve good wetting and coating of the aggregates in the mixer. Below this temperature, it remains too viscous. To lower the temperature during asphalt production, the bitumen viscosity has to be reduced temporarily. This is achieved by adding water (foam bitumen) or additives. When the hot bitumen is mixed with water, the bitumen foams and the volume increases many times over. The increased surface area enables better wetting of the aggregates in the mixer. This means that the mineral is coated effectively even at a lower temperature.

According to the German Asphalt Association, a temperature reduction of just 30°C results in a saving of 0.9litre of heating oil (or a fuel equivalent)/tonne of finished asphalt.

For a plant delivering a daily production of 2,000tonnes of mixture, this corresponds to a saving of 1,800litres of oil or up to three quarters of the annual heating energy consumption of a home. The reduction in CO2 emissions is 6,000kg/day.

Given the current focus on reducing CO2 emissions, this switch to low temperature asphalt could help the construction sector meet its targets on sustainability and help address climate change.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Multiple asphalt plants supply major highway construction
    July 12, 2012
    One company has produced eight asphalt plants for a major project, and others are introducing new models as Patrick Smith reports Algeria's US$11.2 billion East-West Highway development, the world's largest current highway construction project, forms part of the larger Trans-Maghreb Motorway project, and is scheduled for completion in 2010. It will run for 1,216km, ensuring the link between Annaba in the north-east and Tlemcen in the north-west, passing directly through 24 provinces and linking Algeria to T
  • New generation asphalt plants coming to market
    April 21, 2016
    New generation asphalt plants offer key benefits such as being more versatile, more mobile and able to cope with greater quantities of recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) - Mike Woof writes Several asphalt plant manufacturers are introducing new technologies for 2016. Key developments focus on issues such as the use of recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) and plant mobility, as well as improved mix control. Output quality has been improved by the latest technology, which can allow for much higher quantities of RA
  • It’s in with the new for asphalt plants
    April 4, 2013
    A leading asphalt plant manufacturer is playing a key role in the upgrade of a major European airport, while another is said to have created one of the most modern plants in Europe. Meanwhile, a host of new plants and plant concepts have been, or are about to be, unveiled. Guy Woodford reports Intrame says its ultra-mobile UM-280 asphalt plant has played a key role in the resurfacing of the runway and taxiways at Gatwick Airport in southern England – the busiest single runway airport in the world. Around 35
  • Warm asphalt is a hot topic
    June 12, 2012
    Lower temperature mixes – a key advance in bitumen technology - Kristina Smith reports Warm and cold mix asphalts were not on the original agenda for this year’s Eurasphalt & Eurobitume Congress, being held in Istanbul in June. But when the organisers took a look through the papers submitted for their sustainability-themed event, they realised that this is one of the industry’s hottest topics. “We hadn’t quite anticipated the high level of research in this area,” says E&E’s technical programme committee c