Skip to main content

Better road surfaces to last longer

Preservation can make roads perform better and last longer - and save money in the long run. Kristina Smith reports BAM Wegen has laid the first ever half-warm porous asphalt section on a major highway in the Netherlands. The asphalt for the 500m-long test section on the A18 near Varsseveld was produced at 105°C rather than 160°C, representing a saving on energy and CO2 emissions of around 30%.
August 23, 2013 Read time: 4 mins
On the A18 near Varsseveld in The Netherlands in April this year, BAM Wegen demonstrated that it is possible to produce and pave Porous Asphalt at around 100°C
RSS

Preservation can make roads perform better and last longer - and save money in the long run. Kristina Smith reports

7456 BAM Wegen has laid the first ever half-warm porous asphalt section on a major highway in the Netherlands. The asphalt for the 500m-long test section on the A18 near Varsseveld was produced at 105°C rather than 160°C, representing a saving on energy and CO2 emissions of around 30%.

The trial follows on from the successful application of the half-warm porous asphalt, LEAB-PA, on a rural road, the N314 near Zutphen in 2010. “The results of this short test-section were so good that we and the Dutch Highway Administration, Rijkswaterstaat, thought we were ready for a large test-section on a highway,” said BAM Wegen road engineer Marco Oosterveld.
The use of porous asphalt, a surface layer, is mandatory on the Dutch primary network. One of the main reasons why porous asphalt has to be replaced is due to ravelling, the loss of stones from the road surface, which means that it is critical to get the composition of the mix right, according to BAM Wegen. The firm is part of the Royal Bam Group and laid over 150,000tonnes of low-energy asphalt (LEAB) in base layers in the Netherlands between 2011 and 2012. This year it has installed the LEAB technology at three of its eight asphalt plants and has sold the right to use the patented production technique to a large Japanese road construction company, and has also recently completed similar negotiations with a large asphalt producer in Germany.

The contractor also laid a second test-section on the A18, which is part of the IGO-ON-project for the Dutch Ministry of Transport, Public Works and Water Management, surfaced with a fibre reinforced porous asphalt. Panacea fibres, fine acrylic fibres, were added to the mix to prevent bitumen erosion and extend surface life.

The cost of the half-warm porous asphalt is similar to traditional mixes, said Oosterveld, with the investment in technologies more-or-less equivalent to the savings due to lower energy consumption during production. The next step will be to monitor the two test sections, comparing their performance to standard porous asphalt. BAM will use its own road research laboratory in Utrecht to perform tests on cores taken from the test strips. The firm has received a grant for research into sustainable innovations in processing and use of asphalt through the European program LIFE +. The four-year research period has been named AP ² LE (Low Energy and Emission Asphalt Pavements).

Iterchimica asphalt rejuvenator

A green rejuvenator from Italian road pavement asphalt additive specialist 252 Iterchimica is proving popular. The product, Iterlene ACF1000 Green, allows up to 40% RAP to be used whilst lowering the temperature required at the asphalt plant, and emissions, by up to 50%. “If you used 40% RAP normally without using an additive, you must heat the virgin aggregate up to 250° or 270°C,” said Alessandro Giannattasio of Iterchimica. “When you add the RAP, you create a lot of steam, emissions, and smell. By using our additive you can lower the temperature down to 160° or 170° which is the normal mixing temperature.”

The combination of a higher proportion of RAP combined with less energy use at the plant can make for cost savings, said Giannattasio. Launched three years ago, with other products forming Iterchimica’s ‘Green Line’ range, ACF 1000 has found favour with Italian contractors. In Italy the roads industry faces the twin challenges of cost -cutting and meeting stringent environmental rules relating to emissions at asphalt plants. “All the contractors are trying to squeeze prices down, so they are looking to use as high a quantity of RAP as they can,” said Gianattasio. “At the same time the authorities here are sensitive to the problem of emissions. Plants that don’t meet the reduction targets are closed down.”

Iterchimica also reports the use of its rejuvenator in Belgium, Switzerland and Spain. And the company is talking to UK contractors following on from a research report from the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory which confirmed ACF1000’s rejuvenating properties.






















RSS

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Innovative additive for use in recycled asphalt applications
    August 13, 2014
    Biorefiner Arizona Chemical has spent three years developing a new asphalt additive which it says will revolutionise the use of RAP in road pavements. Sylvaroad RP1000 will allow much higher proportions of RAP to be used and produce a better-performing pavement, according to the manufacturer. “What it essentially does is mobilise the chemical matrix of these aged binders,”
  • Multitask additive B2last® for road pavement from BASF
    September 1, 2023
    In 2020, BASF launched their brand-new additive for warm mix asphalt, B2Last®, a new liquid modifier in both Europe and in the USA. By chemically modifying the asphalt binder, BASF developed an innovative solution for the paving industry. After nearly four years of field usage and trials in different regions, B2Last has proven to be an efficient and cost-effective way to modify bitumen.
  • Easy operating
    July 31, 2012
    Modern asphalt plants are a far cry from the early models, and are capable of producing a wide variety of mixes at the touch of a button. Patrick Smith reports Cutting-edge software-based control technology makes today's asphalt mixing plants simple and efficient to operate. The tightening of clean air regulations is reducing the emissions from the plants, and the current focus is on the goal of raising the processed portion of reclaimed asphalt (RA) towards 100%, says Ammann Group, which has been involved
  • New road in Slovakia
    July 25, 2022
    Asphalt from a new Ammann plant is helping with the construction of the new R2 Highway in Slovakia. Passing by the town of Zvolen, the R2 will provide an important route for the country.