Skip to main content

BOMAG joins innovative repair

A durable and cost-efficient method of road rehabilitation has been carried out on a local road in Germany using an innovative cold recycling technology.
February 6, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
A durable and cost-efficient method of road rehabilitation has been carried out on a local road in Germany using an innovative cold recycling technology.

The method was employed in the German district of Rotenburg/Wümme, Lower Saxony, to repair a local road while keeping costs in check. Its aim was to provide a better surface quality than with conventional systems and to recycle material from the existing road.

Large parts of the district are made up of coastal heathland with sand deposits and extensive woods and moors, this means that the roads often have sub-surfaces with low bearing capacities and are prone to major deformation, unevenness, edge damage and cracking.

Repair budget limits rule out completely rebuilding roads, so the local authorities have relied on re-using sub-base layers, new asphalt surfaces or localised patching. The wear life and quality of these repairs was not meeting expectations so the Office for Water Management and Road Construction for the district opted to try the innovative recycling system to repair the K101 district road linking Mintenburg with Fahrendorf.

Good results had already been achieved with this method in 2005 and 2007, using cold recycling with foamed bitumen.

The main contract was awarded to specialist company Kutter, while a number of other companies were involved in the work.

A planer was employed to mill the existing surface to a depth of 300mm in sections. The pulverised asphalt was graded, levelling settlement in the old road, and after pre-compacting this layer with a 10tonne single drum roller, the coarse 150mm upper layer was sized in a crusher to reduce maximum aggregate to around 32mm. The 150mm thick layer was then cold recycled using a foamed bitumen additive.

The grading and quantity of additional material was tested and the additive percentages of reaction water and mixing water were calculated. Specialist stabilisers or recyclers featuring the appropriate water and bitumen additive equipment are required for this type of work to produce the base layer.

High mix quality, uniform working depth and water and binder dosage accuracy are key factors in the quality of the new layer. For this project a 172 Bomag MPH125 stabiliser played a key role.

Foamed bitumen and water were added to produce the optimum water content in the 150mm recycled layer. The recycler was hooked up to bitumen and water tankers. Dosage criteria such as the density of the mixed material and the specified bitumen percentage, as well as the proportions of reaction and mixing water, were entered and registered in the machine's data terminal, an electronic dosing controller that ensured the flow rate was continuously adjusted to the targets.

The cold recycled layer was continuously monitored, after which a 10tonne single drum roller was used for pre-compaction, followed by a grader and another 10tonne roller. Finally a surface course with hot binder was laid and two chipping layers applied, using conventional paving and compaction techniques and equipment.

The quality of the finished repair met the requirements of the authorities and the method will now be used more widely in the area. The costs were comparable to conventional replacement of the sub-base layer and a new surface layer, while a higher quality was achieved: eliminating the transport of material to and from the site brought added cost savings.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Rainforest road repair and rehabilitation with stabilisation
    May 23, 2014
    A limited amount of aggregate and resources, including fuel, in the Riau province of Indonesia can challenge roadbuilders, but Indonesian contractor PT Harap Panjang overcame the obstacles on a recent project. The province rests in a tropical rainforest. The 2600mm of annual rainfall take a toll on the area’s roads, particularly those developed by oil company Chevron Pacific Indonesia. The remote roads were built to service Chevron operations, crucial to the economies of the city, region and country. The r
  • Bitumen technology ideal for road repairs
    July 4, 2012
    Mike Woof discusses some novel developments relating to bitumen In the developed countries of Western Europe there is an increasing shift away from new highway construction to maintaining and rebuilding existing roads. In Germany alone, a network of asphalt roads extending more than 600,000km will have to be maintained or repaired. Highway maintenance techniques do vary between European countries but some commonalities exist. There are techniques that have been sidelined in the last few years but which now
  • Asphalt plant technology meets market needs
    February 16, 2012
    Plants for mixing asphalt are becoming more sophisticated than ever, while users are looking for ecological and technological benefits. Patrick Smith reports. When the Adige Bitumi Group decided to renew its old M 260 plant it chose to collaborate with Marini for the design and development of a plant with production of 280-300tonnes/hour.
  • Efficient processing of RAP in the mix
    December 19, 2017
    There are important methods aimed at the reuse and recycling of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) a number of problems have to be solved however, mainly concerning the elimination of moisture content and how best to heat the RAP without damaging the binder. When RAP is used in percentages of up to 30-40% of the final mix, heating can be carried out through direct contact with hot aggregates. On the other hand, in order to use higher RAP percentages, up to 100%, the plant has to be fitted with a specific h