 
     This month’s bitumen technology pages bring you self-healing roads, slippery roads and slimmer roads and explains why one UK contractor has started manufacturing its own polymer modified bitumen - Kristina Smith reports    
     
Professor Erik Schlangen, who heads up experimental micromechanics at the 
     
The idea is simple. Tiny lengths of steel fibre are mixed in with the asphalt of a road’s wearing course; every few years, an induction machine is driven over the road, creating eddy currents in the wires which then heat up; the heat from the wires melts the bitumen around them which then runs in to fill up any tiny cracks that have formed.
     
The Dutch government believes the savings could be massive. It has calculated that if this material was laid on every highway in the Netherlands, the savings over the whole life of the roads would equate to €90 million/year. The fibres – which are like wire wool, 25 microns in diameter and 8 to 10mm long – add only 25% to the capital cost of the wearing course.
     
Schlangen’s team began working on the idea back in 2007, with the first trial section on the Netherland’s A58 laid in 2010. That section was treated with the induction machine in 2014 and tests prove that it is still in good condition. The next pass is planned for 2018.
     
“You have to treat it when there are only micro-cracks, before you see cracks or potholes and before the stones are driven out of the surface,” explained Schlangen. “We did testing in the laboratory to age samples in different conditions and from that research we found out that four years was the optimum time interval. We may have to increase that frequency in the future as the bitumen is still ageing so it may be damaged faster in the future.”
     
Porous asphalt is used in the Netherlands because it takes water away from the road surface and also because it absorbs sound. However, the open structure means that it is more vulnerable to damage with porous asphalt wearing courses having a standard life of around eight or nine years.
 
The self-healing asphalt has been laid on 11 other  roads by contractor 
     
There  were some practical issues to solve in manufacturing the mix. The  fibres, though small, were all wrapped in a big ball when they were  delivered so a means of separating them had to be devised; Schlangen  does not want to reveal this technical detail.
     
In  a few years’ time, the first trial section will provide proof that the  self-healing wearing courses do last longer than their standard  counterparts since most have to be renewed after eight or nine years.  Meanwhile, interested parties from Europe, North and South America and  Asia have all been on the phone.
     
Taking  the idea further, one of Schlangen’s PhD students has been testing an  alternative self-heal technology on a trial section in China, which sees  tiny capsules containing rejuvenator mixed into the road. A variety of  capsule materials are under trial, containing a light oil such as waste  cooking oil.
     
One of the  challenges is that the oil tends to migrate very slowly through the  hardened bitumen, a process that is speeded up with heat. So perhaps the  best solution could be a combination of both the capsules and the  induction-heated fibres, said Schlangen.
 
PR Industrie
While  most surfacing materials aim to provide adhesion, 
     
The  specialist additive manufacturer invented PR SLIDE, a two-part epoxy  resin system, for the APTH training centre in Le Creusot, France and  commercialised it 15 years ago. Since that time, the surfacing material  has been re-laid many times on the centre’s four tracks, with contractor  
 
Set  up initially over 20 years ago by the hydrocarbon transport  accident  prevention association (APTH), the centre in Le Creusot now  offers  training to a broader range of drivers including those who drive  HGVs,  LGVs and cars. In addition to 4km of tracks, the facility offers  driving  workshops, practice loading stations, a firefighting workshop  and  meeting rooms.
     
The   slipperiness of the track allows accident situations to be created at   around half the speed that they would normally occur, providing the   driver with the sensation of losing control without the danger of doing   it at high speed. The tracks are equipped with water obstacles that   squirt out water in front of the driver, simulating an event such as a   pedestrian stepping in front of the vehicle or a car stopping.
     
The   idea of the training sessions is to discourage drivers from driving  too  fast. “The aim is to show drivers what can happen if they drive at  the  limit,” explained PR Industrie’s business development manager  Michael  Lecomte. “According to the centre manager, a visit to the track  leads to  an accident rate that is halved because people realise how  dangerous it  can be.”
 
Iterchimica
A   total rethink of the design of a 9km-long section of the A53 in Italy   has led to a more durable pavement structure, while requiring   significantly less materials and slashing the number of days spent   laying pavements layers by 130 days.
     
The   scope of works on the A53 between Pavia and Berguado encompassed   several things: upgrades to guard rails to meet current safety   standards; the widening of the road to accommodate the new barriers at   either side and centrally; new lighting; a new wastewater system; and a   new tollgate at Berguado. 
     
Concession-holder   Milano Serravalle-Milabo Tangenziali worked with Professor Maurizio   Crispino of Politecnico di Milano and specialist additive supplier   Iterchimica to challenge and update the design of the pavement. The   result is a road construction that is 90mm less deep than the original   design, has reused and rejuvenated material taken from the original   road, and that exhibits better performance characteristics.
 
“We   like to get involved at an early stage because it means we can    understand our customer’s needs better and propose a range of    solutions,” said Iterchimica’s chief executive Federica Giannattasio.    “Our customer gets a more efficient approach and can leverage our    extensive knowledge and consultancy value.”
     
The    original design comprised a 200mm of stabilised layer, a 200mm    cement-bound layer, a 150mm HMA base layer, 60mm of HMA binder and a    50mm wearing course. The new solution comprises 300mm of super-compacted    subgrade; a 300mm cement-bound layer mixed in-situ with Iterchimica’s    ITER PPS 1000CS, polypropylene fibres and polymetric compound, 30% of    RAP and anti-stripping agent ITERLENE ACF1000S/115; an 80mm  high-modulus   base binder layer, also with 30% RAP and the Iterchimica  additives;  and  finally a 90mm high-modulus semi-draining bituminous  wearing course   with 20% RAP and the additives.
     
Fatigue    tests showed that that the new mix performed better than the original    one which should mean that the road lasts longer. In terms of    environmental benefits, the new design meant that contractor    Itinera-Caffù JV saved 4,000 lorry journeys equating to 72,000litres of    diesel. Around 18,000m3 of bituminous materials were saved together   with  40,000m3 of stabilised and cement-bound mix.
 
FM Conway
In    an unusual move, UK contractor FM 
     
“One of the    things we are very keen on is collecting lots of data,” said FM Conway’s    director of development David Smith. “We are investing around £1    million to provide a new laboratory at our Gravesend facility where we    can do our own sophisticated testing.”
     
FM    Conway is using SBS polymers from Kraton to create its PMB. “We’ve  had   technical input from Kraton and we have also been working with the    supplier of the PMB plant, Benninghoven,” said Smith.
 
There    is a growing awareness among clients such  as national roads authority    Highways England and Transport for London  that PMB can increase the   life  of roads. “When you get to some of  the other local authorities,   the  impact of budget reductions means  that they don’t have any in-house    materials engineer expertise. That  means you end up with a client who   is  inexperienced and de facto  becomes risk-averse.”
     
Currently     PMBs are used mostly in the surfacing layers of roads in the UK.     However, FM Conway is keen to investigate its use in lower layers and is     working on a research project with Nottingham University and the     University of New Hampshire in the US to investigate the impact of PMBs     on durability of roads.
     
FM     Conway has an ethos of self-delivery. Starting out as a contractor,    the  firm now has a design business, five asphalt plants including two    with  parallel heating drums for recycled asphalt and a plant fleet    which  includes two bitumen tankers with a third under order. In 2014,    it  started up its own bitumen storage terminal at Gravesend, South  East    England, with a capacity of 7,500tonnes.
     
“We     believe we are the only asphalt manufacturer in the UK that has its    own  bitumen import terminal,” said Smith. “The reason we did it was    because  we wanted independence, and long-term security of supply.    There’s a  decline in European refineries and that will continue.
     
Refineries     are being upgraded to produce higher-value products than bitumen and     older refineries that would cost too much to upgrade are being shut     down. Because FM Conway works only in London and the South East, this     one terminal can service all its asphalt plants.
     
FM     Conway currently has a long-term supply contract with Shell Bitumen.     “We still like to have our bitumen coming from Europe where possible     because the short sea journey makes it easier to control our  stocks,”    said Smith. FM Conway also supplies bitumen to Nynas which  services its    customers in the South from the Gravesend terminal. 
 
     
         
         
         
        


