Skip to main content

Beyond warm mix

A move to warm mix should be just one part of a much broader strategy to reduce the impact of road paving activities on climate change, says Nynas.
November 22, 2019 Read time: 3 mins
Even when using a more carbon-intensive PMB, a pavement that lasts 50% longer saves 25% in embodied Carbon. Source: Nynas]

Though reducing production temperatures is an important way to lower the industry’s carbon dioxide emissions, there is a far more obvious – and impactful - way of reducing a highway’s carbon footprint: building roads that last longer.

“The easiest environmental gain is for the contractor to use the right materials and do the right job,” said Nynas’ technical director bitumen, Carl Robertus.

Increasing a pavement’s life by one-third reduces its embodied carbon dioxide by 25%. Doubling its life leads to a halving in embodied carbon, according to Nynas. Even using polymer modified bitumen, which requires more carbon to produce than a standard one, delivers similar carbon savings (see graph).

 However, ensuring that the bitumen in a mix is right for the job is not as easy as it used to be.  The rheology of bitumen has changed over the last decade, so that although a bitumen may meet the parameters defined and measured by traditional, empirical tests, its long-term behaviour may not be as good as expected.

To try and better predict long-term performance, US researchers have developed new parameters ΔTc - or Delta Tc – and the Glover-Rowe parameter to help express long-term durability and cracking behaviour.  Though more widely used in the US, where ΔTc was first referenced in 2011, there is little wider awareness of these parameters in Europe, other than among researchers.

“Some of the major asphalt contractors are now picking up on it,” said Dennis Day, technical support manager for Nynas Bitumen in the UK. “On the client side, I suspect they are not aware of it. We need to raise awareness of the new rheological characterisation of bitumen which is the only way to ensure you have good quality bitumens.”

The composition of bitumen has changed as refining processes have been updated. Advanced refining technology means that more high-value products can be extracted from a barrel of crude oil, leaving different products at the bottom of the barrel which are often blended with other products to create a bitumen that meets the standard property tests.

“Most refineries focus on producing fuel, with bitumen being only being a fraction of the total throughput,” adds Robertus. “These refineries generally maximise their economy by being flexible on the crude oil used as refinery feed. Consequently, the bitumen produced comes from a range of different oils which contributes to variations in product quality.”

According to Robertus, Nynas as a specialist bitumen producer has a different approach: “Most of Nynas’ bitumen is produced by straight run vacuum distillation from a limited number of crude oils. This brings consistency in the quality of the product.”

Nynas would like to further the industry’s understanding of parameters such as ΔTc, by analysing existing pavements. “We would like to look at certain sites that have done particularly well, or particularly poorly to analyse what has happened. We would take a sample and extract the bitumen to see how it looks in terms of the Delta Tc and the rheology,” said Robertus.

This would help increase our understanding of how the qualities of bitumen contribute to pavement lives – and carbon reduction.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New Roadmap Shows Industry and Agencies How to Decarbonize Asphalt Pavements
    August 14, 2024

    In a detailed follow-up to its 2022 GHG Emissions Inventory for Asphalt Mix Production in the United States (SIP 106), the National Asphalt Pavement Association (NAPA) is providing a comprehensive roadmap for reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with asphalt pavements.  

  • Rubber recycling for South African roads
    November 5, 2012
    South Africa takes crumb rubber use to the next level - *Anders Marschall Jensen The preservation of the environment is a global concept, and in the road construction industry, it is all about preservation of roads. In earlier days, roads were built with the primary goal of moving passenger traffic from one place to another, but these days, roads are very different. Not only is there passenger traffic, and more of it, but roads must also deal with extensive movement of products in heavy vehicles. Therefore,
  • Recycling advances from Wirtgen
    June 18, 2012
    German firm Wirtgen is retaining its lead in road recycling technologies – Mike Woof writes Tests on cold recycling with a new layer thickness using Wirtgen's sophisticated WR 4200 machine have shown impressive results according to the firm. The road construction and traffic authority Landesbetrieb Mobilität (LBM) Cochem-Koblenz commissioned a pilot project as part of its plan to optimise the cold in-place recycling process (CIR). The aim was to examine the extent to which the layer thickness can be reduced
  • It's all about profit, people and the planet
    February 18, 2025
    Sit in on our latest roundtable discussion on sustainability in the construction and aggregates industries, brought to you by Global Highways and Aggregates Business. AB editor Guy Woodford has been talking to two world-class experts: Jeremy Harsin from Cummins and Michael Gomes from Topcon. Make your planning, your workflows, your contract tenders, and your sites as sustainable as possible. “Sustainability is really about profit, people and the planet,” say our experts. “Being able to drive that is the work that matters.”