Skip to main content

Rejuvenating RAP

Adding specially designed rejuvenating additives to mixes containing RAP leads to better performance than more traditional measures of adding virgin bitumen or flux oils, according to research detailed in a paper by asphalt additive specialist Iterchimica
December 15, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Adding specially designed rejuvenating additives to mixes containing RAP leads to better performance than more traditional measures of adding virgin bitumen or flux oils, according to research detailed in a paper by asphalt additive specialist 252 Iterchimica


“When it comes to the recycling and reuse of RAP, flux oils are often considered at the same level as rejuvenating additives, but this is not true,” said Iterchmica’s technical director Loretta Venturini. “The two products have a very different impact on the bituminous mixtures in which they are used, but this aspect is often underestimated, even ignored.”

The bitumen in RAP has been subjected to ageing, which means that it will have lost some of its oils, resins and asphaltenes that provide workability, ductility and elasticity to the bitumen. These elements are lost through a variety of means including evaporation, absorption by the aggregates and oxidisation.

In the paper, Iterchimica points out that just because a ‘rejuvenated’ bitumen meets the technical specification, does not mean it will perform as required: “Bitumen with high penetration and low softening point (Ring & Ball) provides the correct viscosity to allow manufacturing and siting, but it cannot compensate the missing chemical compounds and, therefore, it cannot guarantee the useful life of the new pavement.”

Iterchimica engineers carried out a range of tests earlier this year on mixes containing 40% RAP. They compared the properties of a sample with virgin bitumen added, one with added flux oil and a third treated with Iterchimica’s Iterlow-RS, a vegetal-based additive with anti-stripping agent added which can be used at lower temperatures.

Tests with a gyratory compactor showed that the mixture with rejuvenator was more workable than that containing the neat bitumen, whereas the flux oil mixture showed excessive workability. Looking at strength, the mixture with rejuvenator showed small reductions when compared to the neat bitumen mix, whereas the mixture with flux oils was much lower.

Dynamic modulus tests (ITSM) showed that both rejuvenator and flux oil reduced the stiffness of the pavements. Fatigue tests showed the mixture with flux oil achieved load cycles five times higher than the mixture with neat bitumen, and the mix with rejuvenator achieved cycles 10 times higher.

Iterchimica’s report concludes: “The use of a proper rejuvenator increases the service life of the pavement in comparison with the simple use of virgin bitumen.” It goes on to say that where RAP is to be used in a mix, designers must specify adequate technical specifications at an early stage of the design process so that the right form of rejuvenation can be provided. And testing that helps determine the bitumen’s actual properties should be employed.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • High-density polyethylene as a plastic additive
    November 18, 2021
    Using recycled plastic in a hot-mix asphalt requires choosing the right plastic with the appropriate mixing method, as Simon Tetley* in South Africa explains
  • Looking around the world with bitumen technology
    March 4, 2015
    Russia needs polymer-modified bitumen; the UK is embracing US-style pavement preservation technology and gearing up to import more bitumen; and Italy prepares to export innovative modifying technology; plus a look at the market in Asia Pacific and the Middle East – Kristina Smith reports. The Total Group has announced two recent deals which underline the changing bitumen market around the world. In Moscow, it is constructing a new type of polymer-modified bitumen (PMB) plant in joint venture with Gazprom Ne
  • Sripath’s ReLIXER® Helps Use of High-RAP Mixes in Ireland
    October 1, 2023
    ReLIXER®, an Asphalt Rejuvenator or Recycling Agent, developed and marketed by Sripath Technologies®, was successfully used to pave a 60% high-RAP mix on a roadway in Dublin, Ireland
  • New tests for modified bitumens and mixes with RAP
    December 19, 2014
    This month we learn about a new test which is helping to predict the performance of asphalt mixtures containing recycled materials and modifiers, and we showcase some of the new testing equipment recently launched - writes Kristina Smith Researchers in the US have come up with a new test to help owners and contractors better predict the performance of their roads. “The problem is that the current tests cannot determine the performance of new materials,” said Dr Haleh Azari, manager of the AASHTO Advanced P