Towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies

Reclaimed Asphalt (RA) has shown great potential to be reused in new asphalt mixtures, however its incorporation in top asphalt pavement layers is still very limited (10-30%). In fact, despite the advantages that its use implies, RA content in road pavement surface courses is still restricted in mos...

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Main Authors: Lo Presti, Davide, Jiménez del Barco Carrión, Ana, Airey, Gordon, Hajj, Elie
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33563/
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author Lo Presti, Davide
Jiménez del Barco Carrión, Ana
Airey, Gordon
Hajj, Elie
author_facet Lo Presti, Davide
Jiménez del Barco Carrión, Ana
Airey, Gordon
Hajj, Elie
author_sort Lo Presti, Davide
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Reclaimed Asphalt (RA) has shown great potential to be reused in new asphalt mixtures, however its incorporation in top asphalt pavement layers is still very limited (10-30%). In fact, despite the advantages that its use implies, RA content in road pavement surface courses is still restricted in most countries due to mainly legislation limitations, but also some technical issues. This paper aims at being a step further to improve the latter by providing a methodology that allows producing fundamental inputs for confidently performing mix design of asphalt mixtures incorporating up to 100% RA. The methodology consists in an advanced preliminary binder’s blend design that can be used with any type of RA and also in presence of rejuvenators. This procedure includes in the production of blending charts and laws that considers the uncertainties on accounting the extent of final binder content, Degree of Blending and Replaced Virgin Binder. The description of the methodology is accompanied with results of two extreme case studies consisting in the preliminary design of binders for asphalt mixtures with high content of two types of RA corresponding to extreme cases: the short-term aged RA (STA-RA), having a very soft residual binder (Pen> 20dmm) and the long-term aged RA, having a much harder residual binder (Pen <10dmm). As a result, the proposed methodology allowed assessing the feasibility of using up to 90% of RA and determining whether the use of rejuvenating agents was needed.
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spelling nottingham-335632024-08-15T15:20:18Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33563/ Towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies Lo Presti, Davide Jiménez del Barco Carrión, Ana Airey, Gordon Hajj, Elie Reclaimed Asphalt (RA) has shown great potential to be reused in new asphalt mixtures, however its incorporation in top asphalt pavement layers is still very limited (10-30%). In fact, despite the advantages that its use implies, RA content in road pavement surface courses is still restricted in most countries due to mainly legislation limitations, but also some technical issues. This paper aims at being a step further to improve the latter by providing a methodology that allows producing fundamental inputs for confidently performing mix design of asphalt mixtures incorporating up to 100% RA. The methodology consists in an advanced preliminary binder’s blend design that can be used with any type of RA and also in presence of rejuvenators. This procedure includes in the production of blending charts and laws that considers the uncertainties on accounting the extent of final binder content, Degree of Blending and Replaced Virgin Binder. The description of the methodology is accompanied with results of two extreme case studies consisting in the preliminary design of binders for asphalt mixtures with high content of two types of RA corresponding to extreme cases: the short-term aged RA (STA-RA), having a very soft residual binder (Pen> 20dmm) and the long-term aged RA, having a much harder residual binder (Pen <10dmm). As a result, the proposed methodology allowed assessing the feasibility of using up to 90% of RA and determining whether the use of rejuvenating agents was needed. Elsevier 2016-09-10 Article PeerReviewed Lo Presti, Davide, Jiménez del Barco Carrión, Ana, Airey, Gordon and Hajj, Elie (2016) Towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies. Journal of Cleaner Production, 131 . pp. 43-51. ISSN 1879-1786 Reclaimed Asphalt; rejuvenator; binder design; blending chart; replaced virgin binder; recycling http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652616305571 doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2016.05.093 doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2016.05.093
spellingShingle Reclaimed Asphalt; rejuvenator; binder design; blending chart; replaced virgin binder; recycling
Lo Presti, Davide
Jiménez del Barco Carrión, Ana
Airey, Gordon
Hajj, Elie
Towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies
title Towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies
title_full Towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies
title_fullStr Towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies
title_full_unstemmed Towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies
title_short Towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies
title_sort towards 100 % recycling of reclaimed asphalt in road surface courses: binder design methodology and case studies
topic Reclaimed Asphalt; rejuvenator; binder design; blending chart; replaced virgin binder; recycling
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33563/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33563/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33563/