Skip to main content

Epoxy resins for resilient roads in Ethiopia

Using epoxy bitumen in chip seals could significantly increase the life of high-volume roads in low-income countries and make them more resilient to climate change impacts. The technology, which has been developed and used in New Zealand, will be trialled in Ethiopia this year.
April 4, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
A modified spray bar has two sets of nozzles for the two-component epoxy bitumen system

Modified epoxy chip seal is one of three technologies under investigation in the 18-month Climate Resilient Sustainable Road Pavement Surfacing (CRISPS) programme; the others are modified epoxy asphalt surfaces and fibre mastic asphalt. The programme is being led by the University of Birmingham in the UK, in collaboration with the University of Auckland, the Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) and the International Road Federation (IRF).

New Zealand and the Netherlands have been interested in using epoxy bitumen since the early 2000s, when they worked on a research programme together, explained David Alabaster, principal pavement engineer at New Zealand transport agency Waka Kotahi, at a seminar in December 2021, hosted by the IRF. Engineers observed that the material had been installed on bridge decks and was still intact 40 years later.

“There have been bridge decks that have survived for 40 years so there’s a track record of durability in these materials,” said Alabaster.

Those initial studies showed that epoxy bitumen had several advantages over a standard binder: it proved to be more resistant to rutting; to low temperature crack initiation; and to surface abrasion from tyre action, even after oxidation. Oxidation is a major problem in New Zealand, said Alabaster.

Epoxy bitumen is a two-part system which has to be used relatively quickly after mixing. Part A is epoxy resin and Part B is a curing agent which is mixed into the bitumen.

Having perfected the manufacture of epoxy bitumen mixes, New Zealand began trialling its use for porous asphalt. Its standard material, though safe and quiet, was only lasting between seven and eight years and costing between NZ$20 and NZ$30/m2 to replace.

“Testing suggested we could get to a 40-year life with the way we were doing it for an extra NZ$6/m2 which is a tiny amount for the increase in performance,” said Alabaster.

From 2016, normal production of the epoxy bitumen began, with 25% epoxy. New Zealand has laid over 100,000m2 on all the busiest highways, and the country’s first home-manufactured bitumen blend has been approved. Having come on a fact-finding mission to New Zealand, Netherlands contractor Duravermeer laid the first epoxy modified material on a ringroad in Boekel in 2021.

New Zealand then began looking at modified epoxy chips seals to tackle the problem of flushing, where binder rises out of the surface leading to a decrease in skid resistance and sometimes damage to the surface. After initial hand trials, researchers built a modified spray bar with two sets of nozzles, one for the part A and the other for the Part B.

To date, New Zealand has laid the modified epoxy chip seal on two trial sites which have been performing significantly better than standard materials in terms of texture loss. The next step is the trials in Ethiopia.

Related Content

  • Istanbul’s new airport benefits from Wirtgen Group machines
    November 22, 2017
    Construction of Istanbul’s new airport facility is benefiting from the use of a large fleet of machines from the Wirtgen Group. When it is complete, this will be the world’s largest airport and will be able to handle 150-200 million passengers/year as well as 6 million tonnes of freight/year. This will make the facility substantially larger than the world’s current largest airport, the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, which handles around 105 million passengers/year.
  • Modified asphalt trials in Brazil
    October 17, 2012
    An urgent need to improve and extend its road network means that Brazil is open to innovation and new ideas - the timing looks good for Kraton and its highly modified asphalt. Kristina Smith reports On 15th August Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff announced a US$66 billion (BRL 133 billion) investment package for the country’s road and rail networks. Of that, $21 billion (BRL 42 billion) is earmarked for the upgrade or construction of 7,500km of highways through a series of concessions. “We’re starting an
  • Balanced Mix Design in the US could revolutionise pavement design and testing
    April 30, 2018
    Roads in the US keep failing so the Federal Highways Authority is proposing a new approach to mix design, but what does this mean for tests and testing? - Kristina Smith reports How do you test an asphalt mix for rutting? In the US, the answer could be any one of several tests, depending on which State you are in: Asphalt Pavement Analyser, Flow Number, Hamburg Wheel Tracking Test, Superpave Shear Test or Triaxial Stress Sweep Test. But that could all change. The Federal Highways Agency (FHWA), part of
  • Eurobitume Congress: Prague promises
    June 22, 2016
    Held every four years, the Eurasphalt and Eurobitume congresses have a reputation for revealing developments that will shape the future of bitumen use on Europe’s roads. This year’s event in Prague promises to uphold that reputation. By Kristina Smith The list of locations for the Eurobitume and Eurasphalt (E&E) Congresses reads like a traveller’s dream itinerary: Strasbourg, Barcelona, Vienna, Copenhagen, Istanbul. Now the beautiful city of Prague has been added to the list. Between 1-3 June, presenter