Skip to main content

Gipave - in it for the long haul in Italy

Graphene-enhanced additive Gipave, from Iterchimica, has been used in binder layers of Italy’s A4 motorway in a 28-year rehabilitation trial.
By Kristina Smith June 21, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Work on the 5.5km-long section of Italy's A4 motorway

Graphene-enhanced Gipave additive, developed by Italian specialist Iterchimica, has been used in the binder layers of Italy’s A4 motorway in a rehabilitation intervention designed to last for 28-years. The goal is to lower maintenance costs and carbon emissions as well as conserve resources.

Motorway operator Autostrada Brescia-VeronaVicenza-Padova is responsible for the A4 motorway which runs between Brescia and Padova in Italy. This is a route carrying very heavy traffic - an average of 95,000 vehicles daily, of which 25% are heavy goods vehicles. On a 5.5km-long section of the eastbound motorway towards Padova, the operator is trialling an approach that aims to deliver a higher performance highway, with different materials and interventions used on the different lanes.

For the slow lane, the contractor milled and removed the entire depth of asphalt, stabilised the ground beneath to a depth of 300mm and then laid a 120mm modified bitumen base, a 70mm-thick binder layer modified with Gipave and a 50mm layer of soundabsorbing porous asphalt.

For the middle lane, only the asphalt layers were replaced and for the third one, only the surfacing layer. Gipave technology was selected due to its superior performance compared to mixes made with standard polymer modified bitumens.

Gipave combines graphene with polymers extracted from carefully selected waste hard plastics, which would not normally be recycled. Iterchimica developed Gipave in a six-year research and development programme, working with graphene supplier Directa Plus, G.Eco and the University of Milan Bicocca. The first trial section was laid in Italy in 2018 and further trial sections laid in the UK and Brazil.

To plan repairs and other interventions on the motorway, Autostrada Brescia-VeronaVicenza-Padova uses a pavement management system into which survey information and other data can be fed. The software then uses algorithms and models to forecast what interventions will be needed when. The main parameters that are monitored and entered into the system are the Sideways Force Coefficient, Roughness Index of Roads, Wearing Course Permeability, layer thickness using a GPR georadar and deflection analysis.

For the rehabilitation project, a software design package was used to determine the layer thicknesses needed. Using inputs including traffic volumes, climate and the properties of various materials, the pavement design was produced to give a design life of 28 years with a reliability index of 99%.

Should the life expectancy of the reconstructed pavement be as designed, the operator has calculated that the savings due to reduced maintenance will result in 42% fewer carbon emissions per km, 33% less bitumen and 34% less energy consumption.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Polymer enhanced bitumen technology improves performance
    July 11, 2012
    As overall traffic volumes increase, the contribution from commercial vehicles with increased axle loads is growing, putting ever more strain on roads and highway maintenance budgets. Highway authorities are looking for products that will be able to cope better and are more cost effective over the life of a road. Technical innovation is the only way to answer this challenge effectively, says BP Bitumen, one of a number of specialist companies involved in bitumen technology.
  • Polyfunctional Polymeric Systems (PPS) help stressed roads
    May 12, 2016
    Increases in mobility and loads to which roadways are subjected has led, over the past decade, to new technologies for increasing the life of highly stressed pavements. Alongside traditional layers in asphalt concrete with normal or modified binders, there are new technologies which make it possible to produce high performance bituminous layers through the use of polyfunctional polymeric systems (PPSs).
  • Utah pioneers 15cm thick-lift
    March 9, 2022
    Thick-lift paving could reduce road maintenance costs, as a recent trial in the US state of Utah is showing, reports Kristina Smith.
  • Benefits of bitumen technology research
    March 15, 2012
    Bitumen technology is benefiting from years of research and development - Kristina Smith. On a 2.7km loop of road in Auburn in Alabama, US, a lorry driver drives his triple-truck round and round. During his eight-hour shift, he will have covered 544km, with another driver waiting to take over from him for the next shift. Their mission is to seriously damage the road. This is the National Center for Asphalt Technology (NCAT), where sponsors from states and private companies pay to test out new materials and