Skip to main content

Cutting cracking of asphalt surfaces

The HUESKER Group says that it has a durable solution for asphalt reinforcement that can help combat road repair backlogs.
February 6, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
The properties of HUESKER’s HaTelit asphalt reinforcement offer key benefits even during on-site works

The firm’s HaTelit product can extend the service life of asphalt pavements, reducing the time it takes for reflective cracking to become a problem by a factor of four. Other benefits include shorter construction times and lower CO2 emissions from congestion around construction sites as a result.

The HaTelit asphalt interlayer product has been optimised since it was first introduced. It can lengthen maintenance intervals, reduce maintenance effort and cost, and cause less disruption.

Reflective cracking is one of the most common types of failure in asphalt road construction. Exposure to traffic loads, daily freeze-thaw cycles and seasonal temperature variations encourage the upward propagation of cracks in the base to the pavement surface. The infiltration of water and oxygen into the asphalt hastens the deterioration of the road condition. Standard rehabilitation methods for cracking in roads often involve renewal of the binder and surface courses. However, HaTelit simplifies the repair procedure: instead of milling off and replacing the binder course, a user can install the asphalt reinforcement directly on top of it. By taking up the tensile stresses and preventing overloading of the asphalt, the reinforcement grid delays existing cracks from propagating into the surface course.

Depending on the type and nature of the pavement to be repaired and the planned rehabilitation solution, the HUESKER Group recommends geosynthetic reinforcement products made from polyester (PET) or polyvinyl alcohol (PVA).

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • A breakthrough in the horizontal reuse of PA (porous asphalt)
    May 12, 2016
    An ambitious objective has led to significant steps in the reuse of PA (porous asphalt). While the market incidentally produces PA with a maximum of 30% of recovered raw materials, BAM has introduced its own innovations, enabling more than 90% of raw materials to be reused. And this year, subsidies from the European Commission will enable the LE2AP demonstration project to be constructed: one kilometre of sustainable PA. Large-scale production is also being developed.
  • Beijing airport runway features novel asphalt solution
    December 7, 2017
    Beijing ranks amongst the five busiest airports across the globe and its runway surfaces face tough stresses as a result. Over 94 million passengers flew through Beijing Capital Airport (BCA) in 2016 and as many as 70 flights/hour can take off and land during peak times. The 60m-wide middle runway of Beijing Capital International Airport is the busiest of the three runways, with a landing and take-off flight ratio of up to 40%. This runway was first rehabilitated in 1996 and then repaired in 2013 and 2015
  • Historic promenade given a facelift
    July 17, 2012
    In the UK, Foster Contracting was part of the team that carried out road improvements to the main route along the historic promenade of the seaside town Great Yarmouth, in eastern England. The harshness of the sea environment coupled with traffic loading caused the road surface to deteriorate, leading to brittle cracking of the thin surface course and also reflective cracking from overlain service trenches and patches. The town centre was already undergoing a major regeneration and as part of this scheme, i
  • The environmental case for geosynthetics
    August 8, 2022
    Huesker, a global manufacturer of geosynthetics and technical textiles, explains how incorporating geosynthetic material can boost a project’s environmental credentials*.