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RILEM interlaboratory study on the mechanical properties of asphalt mixtures modified with polyethylene waste

Journal of Cleaner Production 2022 48 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lily D. Poulikakos, Emiliano Pasquini, Nunzio Viscione, Marjan Tušar, Nunzio Viscione, Nikhil Saboo, David Hernando, Di Wang, Peter Mikhailenko, Lily D. Poulikakos, Marco Pasetto, Andrea Baliello, Nunzio Viscione, Augusto Cannone Falchetto, Di Wang, Miomir Miljković, Marko Оrešković, Nunzio Viscione, Nikhil Saboo, Gabriel Orozco, Éric Lachance-Tremblay, Michel Vaillancourt, Muhammad Rafiq Kakar, Nicolas Bueche, Jan Stoop, Lacy Wouters, Lacy Wouters, Davide Dalmazzo, Gustavo Pinheiro, Kamilla Vasconcelos, Fernando Moreno-Navarro

Summary

An international round-robin laboratory study tested the mechanical properties of asphalt mixtures modified with polyethylene waste across 11 laboratories on four continents, finding that PE waste can improve asphalt performance at the mixture scale. The study addressed stability and homogeneity challenges encountered when PE waste is blended into asphalt binders.

Polymers

This research aims to determine if the observed improvements using polyethylene (PE) waste in asphalt binder translate into better performance at the asphalt mixture scale in the laboratory environment while overcoming the stability and homogeneity issues experienced at the binder level. This is accomplished through a round-robin multinational experimental program covering four continents, with the active participation of eleven laboratories within the RILEM TC 279-WMR. PE modified AC16 mixtures were prepared employing the dry process using local materials with the PE waste provided by one source. Various mechanical tests were performed to investigate the compactability, strength, moisture sensitivity, stiffness and permanent deformation. Compared to the control mixtures, the following observations were made for PE modified mixtures: easier to compact, lower time dependence of stiffness, higher elastic behavior, lower creep rate, and higher creep modulus. Furthermore, cyclic compression test results showed that the resistance to permanent deformation is improved when using PE in asphalt mixtures, whereas the wheel tracking tests showed relatively similar or better results when 1.5% PE was added to the control mixture. The wheel tracking test results in water showed an increase in deformation with increasing PE content. The interlaboratory investigation showed that the use of PE as a performance-enhancing additive in asphalt pavements is a viable, environmentally friendly option for recycling waste plastic and could potentially reduce the use of polymer additives in asphalt.

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