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posted by jelizondo on Tuesday January 06, @06:19PM   Printer-friendly

Strengthening asphalt roads with a unique green ingredient: Algae:

Snow and ice can damage paved surfaces, leading to frost heaves and potholes. These become potential hazards for drivers and pedestrians and are expensive to fix. Now, researchers propose in ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering a figurative and literal green solution to improve the durability of roads and sidewalks: an algae-derived asphalt binder. For temperatures below freezing, results  indicated that the algae binder reduced asphalt  cracks  when  compared to  a  conventional,  petroleum-based binder.

"Algae-derived compounds can improve moisture resistance, flexibility and self-healing behavior in asphalt, potentially extending pavement life and reducing maintenance costs," says research team lead Elham Fini. "In the long term, algae asphalt could help create more sustainable, resilient and environmentally responsive roadways."

Currently, asphalt is held together with bitumen: a thick, glue-like substance made from crude oil. Bitumen binds the sand and rocks that make up paved surfaces and allows the asphalt to expand and contract in hot and cold conditions, respectively. However, when the temperature rapidly drops below freezing, the binder becomes brittle and can crack, leading to roadway damage. To improve asphalt's flexibility and durability at subzero temperatures, Fini and colleagues developed a sustainable and rubbery binder from algae oil.

Fini's previous studies showed that oil extracted from algae can make a bitumen-like product that is particularly durable at low temperatures. Continuing this work, Fini and colleagues used computer models to evaluate oils from four algae species for their abilities to produce bitumen-like products that mixed well with asphalt solids and retained functionality in freezing temps. Of the four algal species, oil from the freshwater green microalga Haematococcus pluvialis appeared to impart the most resistance to permanent deformation under simulated traffic-induced stress, as well as enhanced resistance to moisture-induced damage.

In laboratory demonstrations that mimicked road traffic and freezing cycles, H. pluvialis algae-asphalt samples created by the researchers showed up to a 70% improvement in deformation recovery compared to pavement made with a crude oil-based binder. In addition to strengthening roads, the team estimates that substituting 1% of the petroleum-based binder with algae-based binder would cut net carbon emissions from asphalt by 4.5%. At around 22% algae-based binder, asphalt could potentially become carbon neutral. The researchers say this approach paves the way toward high-performance, cost-effective and sustainable pavement infrastructure.

Journal Reference: Mohammadjavad Kazemi, Farideh Pahlavan, Andrew J. Schmidt, et al., ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering 2025 13 (45), 19496-19510 https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.5c03860


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Rich on Thursday January 08, @06:04PM

    by Rich (945) on Thursday January 08, @06:04PM (#1429105) Journal

    Ever since Bauhaus got enamored with the look of flat roofs, German flat roof building dwellers suffer from all kinds of devious water ingress. Much of this can be attributed to bitumen based roofing material, which is installed through a process best described in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVY6g8-b6CM [youtube.com].

    Originally, the sheeting material was little more than bitumen-soaked cardboard, which over the years was enhanced with all kinds of stuff, gravel coatings, all kinds of fabric or fibre reinforcement, softeners, or even polymer additives. I had the experience of moving into one of the affected buildings and can attest that once the softeners have evaporated, it gets nasty in the most displeasing ways. The matter is made worse through quick-fix-quacks whose services a previous owner had used. After seriously having had enough (which included mastering the process from the video), I slapped a layer of EPDM rubber sheet on top, and it's been worry free ever since (well, except for where my workmanship, I'm not a roofer, was shoddy. but I could easily rectify that).

    That stuff persists, even under direct UV from the sun. Over many years I have taken little samples and they are as rubbery as ever. I have since come to the conclusion that the entire trade school of bitumen based roofing is hardly more than a method to dump refinery waste while making the disposal places pay for it.

    The failure mode comes from the different method of softening. Bitumen plus softener is a mixture. Once the softener is gone, and/or the bitumen molecules break up, it will degrade to crumbs. Whereas the rubber based material has fllexible atomic bonds (sulphur, I think) and unless the molecule breaks up (which seems to be a rare thing), it stays elastic forever.

    Maybe they could learn something for building roads?

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