Skip to main content

Polyfunctional Polymeric Systems (PPS) help stressed roads

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).
May 12, 2016 Read time: 3 mins

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).

These systems are multifunctional compounds formed of fibers and polymers joined in a single pellet.
 
Resulting from several years of research by 252 Iterchimica, the formulation has been designed and adapted to meet production needs and performance targets determined during the planning stage.

Polyfunctional Polymeric Systems (PPSs) are made from a compound of fibers of differing nature, plastomeric or elastomeric polymers, paraffinic compounds, liquid components and other additives (depending on the type and purpose of the PPS). They are manufactured in pellets to reduce dosing problems.

Each type of fiber selected for the compound has a specific behavior.

Traditional fibers serve to thicken and stabilise the mastic - filler plus bitumen. They are usually made from micro-fibers of cellulose origin.

Multipurpose fibers consist of various types of cellulose, mineral and synthetic micro-fibers. In addition to the functions of traditional fibers, they have a structuring effect that ensures greater resistance to fatigue and complex modulus.

PPSs act simultaneously on several properties, causing a physical and chemical modification in bituminous mixtures. In particular, they acting on the characteristics of the bitumen, for example penetration, softening point and viscosity, and create a micro-structural reinforcement of the bitumen film.

Another feature is the method of use. Pellets are used in the production phase of asphalt concrete, allowing the modification of the mixture directly inside the mixer.

This technology is extremely versatile and can be used even in poorly served geographically areas. It has also, in the past year, been particularly successful in various pavements, especially in Italy where it has been used for high modulus binder, draining and wearing layers. It has also combined with other types of additives with the function of uniting the advantages of warm mix to those related to the use of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP).

In particular, they are being widely used in split mastic asphalt (SMA) and in highly modified wearing courses. These bituminous mixtures, in addition to having a granulometric grading as reference, require high percentages of bitumen and high performance levels achieved through the use of polymers.

On the other hand, the use of fibers - mostly composed of cellulose - is necessary to prevent the percolation of the bitumen, in addition to having a stabilising and structuring effect. In particular, this technology has also been used for the construction of the A53 (Pavia-Bereguardo) motorway in Italy. This project involved the expansion of the area around the city of Bereguardo, at the A7 Milano-Genova motorway, improving the western ring road of Pavia, for about 9.5km. Work includes the modification of the road due to heavy traffic. Completion is scheduled for mid-2016.

More specifically, the new project includes both the expansion of the existing pavement and the construction of the roadway’s pavement structure:

  • Mix stabilised in situ with recycled materials, polypropylene fibrillated fiber-reinforced;
  • Base binder, high modulus with PPS (BBHM) = 9 cm;
  • High-modulus wear layer with PPS (UHM) = 9 cm.

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.
  • Italian highway benefits from road recycling job
    October 3, 2014
    The latest equipment from Wirtgen has been used to recycle a stretch of Italy’s busy A4 Autostrada, one of the country’s most important highways. The Wirtgen machine was the first WR250 recycler/reclaimer to be delivered to Italy and was put to work on the A4 Turin-Trieste highway where it proved highly productive. The A4 Autostrada runs 522km from Turin to Trieste via Milan and Venice across northern Italy from west to east. The A4 is divided into five segments, the Turin-Milan, Milan-Brescia, Brescia-Pad
  • Economic and environmental asphalt recycling
    February 27, 2012
    Recycling materials offers the road ahead for highway construction - * Don Brock writes. Recycling has been used in the US for over 50 years in various industries. Today, steel is 100% recycled, and many other products that we have can be recycled.Environmental groups have aggressively pushed industries to recycle more, but it is either economically driven or legislatively driven.In the highway industry it has predominately been economically driven and discouraged by stakeholders such as aggregate producers
  • International Call for Abstracts – Deadline to Submit March 15, 2018
    December 14, 2017
    Technology and innovations are evolving at a pace never seen before in the history of the road and transport sector. From innovations in materials, such as self-healing concrete and rubberised asphalt, to advances in construction equipment automation, and of course, the dawn of the connected and automated vehicle, we are on the verge of a new era.