Skip to main content

Scottish application for SMA surfacing technology

A new Scottish specification for stone mastic asphalt could help with some of the durability issues sometimes experienced in the UK An alternative specification for stone mastic asphalt has been used on the A90 in Scotland, with tests suggesting that the material will be more durable than thin surfacing produced under the standard UK specification, Clause 942 of the Specification for Highway works.
May 20, 2014 Read time: 3 mins
A stretch of the A90 in Scotland now has an innovative thin layer wearing course featuring PMB
A new Scottish specification for stone mastic asphalt could help with some of the durability issues sometimes experienced in the UK

An alternative specification for stone mastic asphalt has been used on the A90 in Scotland, with tests suggesting that the material will be more durable than thin surfacing produced under the standard UK specification, Clause 942 of the Specification for Highway works.

The Scottish specification, TS 2010 (soon to be renamed Clause 942TS), is much more prescriptive than the English system and specifies a polymer modified binder, a grading and binder envelope and an air void content of the finished product. It also specifies thickness requirements, the use of fibre, resistance to deformation and early life skid resistance as measured by a GRIP tester. Each quarry requires a separate approval for each mix type.

“Bearing in mind the higher binder contents specified and the void content required, this type of product must be more durable than a standard clause 942 material. I believe many failures of thin surfacing are directly attributable to high voids and low binders,” said Neil Anderson, technical director of Leiths Group which supplied and laid the material.

“Given that exactly the same plant and labour resources are used to manufacture and lay a clause 942 material compared with a TS 2010 material, the case for following the TS 2010 specification and producing a more durable material are compelling.”

The contract – for resurfacing the A90 trunk road near Aberdeen – called for a clause 942 thin surfacing using a polymer modified binder and 10mm aggregate laid 30mm thick along a 2.5km stretch of road. Aggregates had to have a minimum polished stone value of 55, a maximum AAV of 14 and a flakiness index of FI 20. Wheel tracking level 3 and road/tyre noise level 1 were specified along EME2 support layers for the surfacing, and a performance guarantee of five years.

“Two sections of the new construction required a higher PSV of 68 – however, higher PSV aggregates tend to be less durable than lower PSV mixes when used as thin surfacing,” said Anderson.
Leiths offered an alternative, a material that would meet all of the contract requirements Plus also meet TS 2010. “It was decided to proceed with two SMA mixes, a 10mm and a 6mm using local granite aggregates of PSV56, laid to a target thickness of 35mm,” Anderson says. For the polymer modified bitumen Leiths used 294 Nynas Nypol 103, a highly modified elastomeric binder which demonstrates substantial resistance to deformation and cracking.

To comply with TS2010, two stages of trials were required as part of the approval process, involving laboratory mix designs and production and laying trials. Deemed satisfactory, the material was laid on the A90 for a trunk road network trial.

Extensive tests of the laid material included taking nuclear density gauge readings every 20m in alternative wheel tracks to check in situ density compliance. Voids were found to comply with the specification. A GRIP test was carried out immediately the contract was completed and values greater than 0.7 (0.62 Scrim) were achieved. This was a greater skid resistance than required by the contract, and higher than the 0.55 Scrim level required for a Class 3 site.

On the A90 project, 6mm SMA was laid in the areas of the junctions where a greater degree of skidding resistance was required. A PSV test of the aggregate fraction used in this layer gave results of 73. The early life skid resistance values of the 6mm surfacing proved marginally higher than the 10mm surfacing made with the same aggregate type.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Vögele's global paving vision
    January 4, 2013
    German paver specialist Vögele is taking a global view of the construction equipment market, with machines developed for very different markets. A prime example of this is with the Dash 3 models now coming to market. The new SUPER 2100-3 paver is also available as the SUPER 2100-3i, a highly sophisticated machine that meets the European emissions requirements while offering high productivity and performance. At the same time, the company is also offering a heavy duty (HD) version of its proven SUPER 1800-2
  • Recycled porous asphalt trial in Netherlands
    May 15, 2017
    An innovative reuse of porous asphalt is being tested on secondary roads in the Netherlands. The promising LE2AP European Life demonstration project involves test sections of durable, silent asphalt on roads in the Netherlands. LE2AP stands for Low Emission 2 Asphalt Pavement, with the 2 indicating reduced emissions for both CO2 and sound. BAM recently installed two test sections of a novel surface material in collaboration with the Dutch provinces of Noord-Brabant and Gelderland. This asphalt road surface
  • Recycled porous asphalt trial in Netherlands
    May 15, 2017
    An innovative reuse of porous asphalt is being tested on secondary roads in the Netherlands. The promising LE2AP European Life demonstration project involves test sections of durable, silent asphalt on roads in the Netherlands. LE2AP stands for Low Emission 2 Asphalt Pavement, with the 2 indicating reduced emissions for both CO2 and sound. BAM recently installed two test sections of a novel surface material in collaboration with the Dutch provinces of Noord-Brabant and Gelderland. This asphalt road surface
  • Asphalt: checking properties
    July 18, 2012
    Specialist equipment is available for carrying out a variety of important tests on asphalt It is important to know how asphalt will react to various conditions such as heat, cold and traffic loads when it is laid on roads. Project specifications will give detailed criteria of what is required, and companies will either ask outside laboratories to make sure the material meets the specs, or will often carry out such tests themselves with trained staff in an on-site laboratory. This will be equipped with the