Skip to main content

Cold recycling with foamed bitumen – an innovative technique

The pressure to conserve materials in road construction means that resource-saving technologies are more in demand than ever before. Wirtgen’s cold recycling process is already proven and has the potential to meet future demand. Roads subjected to continuous and heavy traffic often show signs of damage that extend down to the road base. To eliminate this damage, the entire road needs structural rehabilitation. Full reuse of the milled material as well as its cost-effective treatment make cold recycling with
November 7, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Wirtgen offers a comprehensive range of equipment and expertise for cold-in-place-recycling methods

The pressure to conserve materials in road construction means that resource-saving technologies are more in demand than ever before. 2395 Wirtgen’s cold recycling process is already proven and has the potential to meet future demand.

Roads subjected to continuous and heavy traffic often show signs of damage that extend down to the road base. To eliminate this damage, the entire road needs structural rehabilitation. Full reuse of the milled material as well as its cost-effective treatment make cold recycling with foamed bitumen efficient and economical.

Foamed bitumen is produced by injecting small quantities of water and air into hot bitumen under high pressure. The water evaporates and makes the bitumen foam up to 15-20 times its original volume. The foam is then injected into a mixer through injection nozzles and mixed into cold and moist construction materials. The quality of the foamed bitumen is primarily described in terms of the parameters ‘expansion ratio’ and ‘half-life’. The greater the expansion ratio and half-life, the more easily the foamed bitumen can be processed.

Cold recycling with foamed bitumen is attracting increasing interest in road construction for asphalt road rehabilitation. It allows the paving of flexible and durable base layers, providing a suitable foundation for the final, thinner asphalt surfacing. New technology is used to produce foamed bitumen from normal bitumen which has been heated to approximately 175°C. With the in-situ method, a precisely dosed quantity of binding agent is added to mineral aggregate inside the Wirtgen 2200 CR or 3800 CR cold recycler or the soil stabilisers of the WR series, using microprocessor-controlled injection systems.

The cold recycling process has proven its worth around the world. In practical use, there are two different methods: an in-situ approach using wheeled or tracked Wirtgen cold recyclers, and the in-plant method using the Wirtgen KMA 200i, a mobile cold recycling mixing plant. The methods allow a large number of materials to be recycled such as milled asphalt, crushed asphalt or new material. The application range for foamed bitumen is varied, and it can also withstand very high traffic loads.

The Ayrton Senna Highway in Sao Paulo is used by more than 250,000 vehicles every day, 15% of them trucks. During the rehabilitation project in 2011, milled material from the asphalt pavement was recycled with foamed bitumen in a Wirtgen cold recycling mixing plant and repaved in two layers by a road paver.

In Greece, the cold recycling projects carried out with foamed bitumen back in 2003/2004 on the motorways between Iliki, Korinthos and Athens have been demonstrating their strength for more than 10 years. These have been carrying traffic volumes of 40,000 vehicles/day including a 25% share of heavy vehicles.

To achieve such results, extensive preliminary tests must be conducted on the entire pavement structure, while the mix produced with foamed bitumen must pass a rigorous mix design test.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Advanced technologies will increase the wear life of bitumen further
    February 28, 2012
    Bitumen has been used for thousands of years, but now a wide variety of products are available that can be added to it to produce blends with improved properties. According to the Refined Bitumen Association (RBA) bitumen is the oldest known engineering material. Indeed, the organisation says that its versatility as a construction material is unparalleled, and having been used as an adhesive, sealant and waterproofing agent for over 8,000 years, its uses include the construction and maintenance of roads, ai
  • Asphalt and bitumen - testing for performance
    February 29, 2012
    The stresses placed on modern asphalt and bitumen means that specialist equipment is essential to make sure performance specifications are met. As road traffic increases at a rapid pace and road safety becomes a priority issue, asphalt is put under increasingly higher stresses. For example, road surfaces are subject to compression, flexural tensions and tangential stresses: internal friction, depending on the aggregates, and the cohesion, guaranteed by bitumen's composition, are the two main properties whic
  • How bitumen technology solutions are solving paving problems around the world
    March 2, 2017
    This month we hear how additives can bring RAP back from the dead and fight the ravages of salt damage, how pellets reach parts that PMB can’t and how Shell and WeedsWest are expanding their respective businesses - Kristina Smith writes
  • What’s new and what’s next in sustainable asphalt production
    May 10, 2021
    Maximising sustainability is a key driver in asphalt production as Dr Hans-Friedrich Peters at Ammann believes